Chinese electric vans are becoming a serious option for Singapore fleets that want lower running costs, simpler city operation, and a more accessible path into commercial EV ownership. ABLINK stocks several Chinese electric van models, including the Maxus e-Deliver 5, Maxus e-Deliver 7, BYD ET3, and Foton iBlue V6. These vans suit city delivery, service fleets, and businesses that want an electric cargo van in Singapore without jumping straight to higher-priced European EV brands. Start by matching the van size to your daily loads, then confirm the cargo space, range, charging, and current price on each live listing.
⚡ Adding an electric van to your Singapore fleet? Browse the full goods van range for current Chinese electric van models, prices, and COE packages.
- Maxus: compare the compact e-Deliver 5 and the larger e-Deliver 7.
- BYD: the ET3 is a compact electric van from one of the world's largest EV manufacturers. [web:81]
- Foton: the iBlue V6 gives fleets another value-focused electric van option. [web:76]
- Confirm everything: check the cargo space, payload, range, charging setup, COE package, and current price on each listing.
Chinese Electric Vans in Singapore
Chinese brands now play a visible role in Singapore's electric commercial vehicle market, especially in the light van segment where fleet buyers care about running cost, usable range, and purchase value. Maxus has expanded quickly in Singapore's commercial EV scene, while BYD brings strong EV brand recognition and Foton adds a more budget-focused alternative. [web:72][web:81][web:76] ABLINK's Chinese electric van line-up gives buyers a practical shortlist if the goal is to find an electric delivery van for Singapore routes without overpaying for badge alone.
| Van | Brand | General role | Live listing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maxus e-Deliver 5 | Maxus | Compact electric van for city delivery | View listing |
| Maxus e-Deliver 7 | Maxus | Larger electric cargo van | View listing |
| BYD ET3 | BYD | Compact electric van for fleet work | View listing |
| Foton iBlue V6 | Foton | Value-focused electric van | View listing |
These size labels are only a practical guide for shortlisting. For the exact cargo volume, rated payload, driving range, charging speed, and current price with COE, always open the live ABLINK listing before deciding.
Which Electric Van Fits Your Fleet
The right Chinese electric van for Singapore depends less on brand hype and more on route pattern, payload, charging access, and how often the van returns to base. Some fleets need a compact electric van that is easy to park and load in dense urban areas, while others need a larger van for bulkier deliveries. Choose by size first, then compare brand, charging, and price.
Maxus e-Deliver 5 and e-Deliver 7
Start with the Maxus e-Deliver 5 if you want a compact electric van for Singapore city deliveries, estate service work, and short recurring fleet routes. The Maxus e-Deliver 7 is the stronger shortlist when your operation needs more cargo capacity or a larger electric van body. Maxus has built a growing presence in Singapore's electric commercial vehicle segment, and the eDeliver 5 has been marketed locally with strong cargo and range claims for daily logistics work. [web:72][web:74][web:80] Confirm the actual cargo volume, payload, charging spec, and current ABLINK pricing on each listing before you commit.
BYD ET3 Singapore
Open the BYD ET3 listing if you want a compact electric cargo van from a manufacturer with deep EV expertise and established battery technology. BYD's Singapore brochure describes the eT3 as using the brand's LFP Blade Battery and quotes a driving range of up to 280km on a single charge, which makes it a relevant option for short-to-medium fleet routes depending on usage conditions. [web:81] For Singapore fleet buyers, the ET3 is most attractive when you want a compact commercial EV from a globally recognised EV-first brand and prefer to compare battery-led engineering rather than just body size.
Foton iBlue V6 Singapore
See the Foton iBlue V6 listing for another Chinese electric van aimed at practical fleet buyers. Public Singapore-market listings describe the iBlue V6 with a WLTP range figure of 195km, making it a candidate for shorter fixed routes where charging access is predictable and cost control matters most. [web:76] This makes the Foton especially relevant for businesses that want an entry-level electric van in Singapore and are happy to optimise routes around real charging patterns.
What to Check on Every Listing
The listing carries the specifications that actually determine whether an electric van fits your business. Before shortlisting any Chinese electric van in Singapore, check the cargo volume, rated payload, range on a full charge, charging type, and the current body price with COE package. Those numbers matter more than brand positioning.
Cargo space and payload
Cargo space decides whether the van works for your parcels, tools, crates, or service equipment. Check the listed load volume, floor length, rear opening, and rated payload against your real daily goods. A compact electric van can be ideal for tight Singapore delivery routes, but a larger electric cargo van may save you repeat trips if your loads are growing. Use your actual cargo pattern, not just badge preference, to shortlist correctly.
Range, charging, and depot fit
Range only matters if it fits your real route, traffic, payload, and charging plan. The Maxus eDeliver 5 has been promoted in Singapore with up to 300km per full charge on ABLINK's own product page and up to 489km WLTP-City in launch coverage, while the BYD eT3 brochure quotes up to 280km and public Foton iBlue V6 listings quote 195km WLTP. [web:70][web:74][web:81][web:76] Because test cycles, duty cycles, and payload all affect real-world use, treat published figures as a shortlist filter and confirm the exact spec on the live listing or with the ABLINK team before buying.
What to Confirm Before You Buy
Electric vans change not just fuel cost, but also route planning, charging behaviour, and uptime management. Before you commit to a Chinese electric van in Singapore, confirm these points with the listing or the ABLINK team.
- Cargo volume and payload — confirm the van matches your real load, not just your preferred badge.
- Real route suitability — compare the listed range with your longest working day and traffic pattern.
- Charging setup — check whether your depot or building supports the charging method your shortlisted van uses.
- Licence class — confirm with the ABLINK team what licence class applies to each model in Singapore.
- Battery warranty and vehicle warranty — ask what coverage applies and whether servicing support is local.
- Current price and COE package — check the live listing because pricing changes with each COE exercise.
How the Main Models Compare
The main Chinese electric van choice in Singapore splits across compact versus larger body size, EV brand strength, and value positioning. Maxus gives buyers two sizes, BYD offers a compact EV-first alternative, and Foton gives a more cost-sensitive option for tighter route needs. [web:72][web:81][web:76] The right shortlist depends on whether your fleet priorities are cargo, range, charging convenience, or entry cost.
| Van | Brand | Typical fit | Live listing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maxus e-Deliver 5 | Maxus | Compact city delivery, service fleets, recurring urban routes | View listing |
| Maxus e-Deliver 7 | Maxus | Larger loads and buyers wanting more van size | View listing |
| BYD ET3 | BYD | Compact electric fleet work with strong EV brand recognition | View listing |
| Foton iBlue V6 | Foton | Value-focused fleets on shorter planned routes | View listing |
More Electric Van Options
ABLINK also lists additional Chinese electric van models for buyers who want a wider shortlist. Compare the Higer H5F and the Farizon SuperVan if you want to see more EV body options before deciding. Keep the same buying logic: check cargo, range, charging, warranty, and price on the live listing.
Chinese EV Van vs European EV or Diesel
Chinese electric vans usually win attention on value and entry price, while European electric vans often attract buyers who prioritise familiar Western badges. Diesel vans still make sense for fleets without reliable charging access or for operations that run long, irregular routes every day. Compare Chinese models against the Opel Combo-e, the Citroen e-Dispatch, or the diesel Toyota Hiace if your fleet still needs a non-EV benchmark.
How to Buy the Right Electric Van
Buying the right electric van in Singapore usually comes down to four steps. Keep the process practical and use live listing data to confirm the final shortlist.
- Size your load. Decide whether you need a compact electric van or a larger cargo van body.
- Check your route. Compare the listed range with your real daily distance, traffic conditions, and payload.
- Confirm charging and warranty. Ask ABLINK about charging compatibility, warranty coverage, and servicing support.
- Review the live listing. Confirm the exact cargo space, price, and COE package before ordering.
⚡ Ready to compare electric vans in Singapore? Browse the latest goods van range at ABLINK for current models, specifications, prices, and COE packages.
FAQ: Chinese Electric Vans Singapore
Which Chinese electric vans does ABLINK sell in Singapore?
ABLINK lists Chinese electric vans from Maxus, BYD, Foton, Higer, and Farizon, including the Maxus e-Deliver 5, Maxus e-Deliver 7, BYD ET3, and Foton iBlue V6. [web:70][web:81][web:76] Browse the goods van range or open each live listing to confirm the latest models, pricing, and COE package.
What is the difference between the Maxus e-Deliver 5 and e-Deliver 7?
The e-Deliver 5 is the more compact Maxus electric van and suits tighter city delivery work, while the e-Deliver 7 is the larger option for buyers who need more space and van size. Public Singapore launch coverage for the eDeliver 5 highlights a 64kWh battery and a class-leading cargo claim, but you should still confirm the exact ABLINK specification before deciding. [web:72][web:74]
What range do these electric vans offer?
Published range varies by model and test cycle. ABLINK's Maxus eDeliver 5 product page mentions up to 300km per full charge, Singapore launch coverage quoted up to 489km WLTP-City for the same model, the BYD eT3 brochure quoted up to 280km, and public Foton iBlue V6 listings quoted 195km WLTP. [web:70][web:74][web:81][web:76] Always verify the exact figure on the live listing and compare it against your real route and payload.
How do I check price and COE package?
The live ABLINK listing is the correct place to check body price and COE package together, because Singapore COE figures change over time. Open the listing for the exact current price or ask the ABLINK team if you want the latest offer and availability details.
Should I choose a Chinese electric van or a European EV van?
Chinese electric vans often appeal on price and fleet value, while European EV vans often appeal on brand familiarity and buyer preference. The better option depends on your load size, route, charging access, and total purchase budget. Compare the Chinese EV shortlist against the Opel Combo-e and Citroen e-Dispatch using the live ABLINK listings before deciding.
Can ABLINK help me choose the right electric van for Singapore routes?
Yes. ABLINK can help you match van size, cargo space, range, charging setup, warranty, and current pricing to your route profile and fleet use case. Use this guide to shortlist models first, then confirm the real specifications on the listing or with the ABLINK team directly.
Related Electric and Cargo Vans at ABLINK
Use these links to compare more electric vans and cargo van alternatives in Singapore.
Chinese electric vans
European EV vans and diesel alternatives
Choose Your Electric Van With ABLINK Singapore
The right Chinese electric van comes down to your route length, load size, charging access, and budget. Shortlist the Maxus, BYD, or Foton models here, then open the listing to confirm the exact cargo space, range, charging setup, current price, and COE package. ABLINK's commercial vehicle team can help Singapore businesses compare electric cargo vans against European EV vans and diesel alternatives before making the final fleet decision.