In recent years, Chinese automakers have shifted from merely exporting vehicles to establishing production bases worldwide, building complete supply chains, and truly going global. Here’s a detailed look at the overseas factory strategies of major Chinese automakers.
1. Great Wall Motors: Heavy Investment + Brand Expansion
Great Wall Motors (GWM) has led the way in overseas expansion with factories across Asia, Europe, South America, and Africa.
-
Southeast Asia: A wholly-owned plant in Rayong, Thailand started production in 2024 with an annual capacity of 135,000 vehicles. GWM also uses joint ventures (JV) and knock-down (KD) assembly in Pakistan, Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan to localize production.
-
Europe: The Tula, Russia plant, operational since 2019, produces 150,000 vehicles per year with 65% local parts localization.
-
South America: São Paulo, Brazil factory launched in August 2024 as a Latin American EV hub; Ecuador hosts a KD plant for nearby markets.
-
Africa: Tunisia focuses on pickup trucks and Haval SUVs.

GWM’s heavy investment strategy may bring short-term burdens but builds a strong competitive moat for the long term.
2. BAIC Group: Multi-Point Expansion + Commercial Vehicles First
BAIC takes a steady approach, prioritizing factory networks before volume.
-
Global Reach: KD and JV plants in Russia, Mexico, South Africa, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brazil.
-
Product Focus: Light, medium, and heavy-duty trucks, commercial vehicles, and EVs.
-
Strategy: KD and JV modes reduce tariffs and leverage local partner channels.
BAIC targets regions with unmet industrial demand for practical vehicles, emphasizing gradual penetration.

3. BYD: Heavy Investment “Lightning Strategy”
BYD has aggressively expanded globally, establishing factories across Asia, Europe, North and South America, and Africa.
-
Asia: Rayong, Thailand plant built in just one year; Uzbekistan, Indonesia, and Turkey plants are underway.
-
Europe: Szeged, Hungary plant (40 billion EUR investment, 300,000 units/year); Komárom plant for electric buses and trucks.
-
South America: Bahia, Brazil hosts three factories producing EVs, buses, and batteries (initial capacity 150,000 units, planned 300,000 by 2026).
BYD’s strategy emphasizes full local supply chains, tax reduction, and local recognition, signaling a shift from selling cars to manufacturing globally.

4. Dongfeng Motor: Light Investment + Steady Expansion
Dongfeng prefers JV + CKD/KD models for flexible global growth.
-
Asia: Vietnam, Malaysia, Pakistan, and Indonesia plants produce micro trucks, light trucks, and EVs.
-
Europe: Lipetsk, Russia CKD plant produces the EV Evolute I-Pro.
-
Africa: Tunisia and Egypt factories produce SUVs, sedans, and EVs.
This approach reduces capital risk and adapts quickly to local markets but limits brand influence.

5. Geely: Multi-Brand, Multi-JV Penetration
Geely relies on acquisitions and JV networks.
-
Asia: South Korea, Malaysia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Vietnam, Iran — production via partnerships or KD assembly.
-
Europe: Acquired Volvo and Lotus plants in the UK, Belgium, Sweden.
-
Africa & South America: Egypt, Algeria, Uruguay host assembly plants.
-
North America: Volvo’s South Carolina plant produces EX90, Polestar 3, and future XC60, mitigating tariffs.
Geely’s network is flexible and risk-controlled but lacks BYD’s sheer capacity advantage.

6. SAIC Motor: Key Markets + Localization + Export Hubs
SAIC builds production nodes in strategic markets:
-
Asia: Thailand, Vietnam, India, Pakistan, Indonesia host factories producing MG models and EVs.
-
Europe: Spain plant (planned 2027) to serve 10% of Southern European EV market.
-
Americas & Africa: Mexico and Egypt plants cover both passenger cars and EVs, acting as export hubs.
SAIC emphasizes local production and supply chains while supporting exports.

7. JAC Motors: Early Expansion + Dual-Line Strategy
JAC has a long overseas history, producing both commercial and passenger vehicles:
-
Asia: Vietnam, Pakistan, Indonesia — light trucks and micro trucks.
-
Central Asia: Kazakhstan plant captures 40% of the local market.
-
South America: Brazil, Mexico produce EVs and passenger cars.
-
Africa: Ethiopia and Nigeria serve heavy-duty and passenger vehicle markets.
JAC’s dual-line strategy balances commercial and passenger vehicles for steady overseas growth.

8. Chery: Fast Expansion + Regional Reach
Chery combines exports with localized production:
-
Southeast Asia: Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam — EVs and ICE vehicles.
-
Middle East: Iran — light passenger cars.
-
Europe: Russia and Spain — EVs and ICE cars.
-
South America & Africa: Brazil, Argentina, Egypt, Algeria.
-
North America: Mexico plant (planned 400,000 units/year) for EVs and hybrids.
Chery’s strategy ensures presence across multiple continents with local production nodes.

9. FAW Group: Commercial Vehicles First, EVs Next
FAW focuses on commercial vehicles while gradually introducing EVs:
-
Asia: Iran, Pakistan, Vietnam — heavy-duty trucks and EV commercial vehicles.
-
Africa: South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria — trucks and EVs.
-
Europe & Latin America: Russia, Mexico — heavy-duty trucks, increasing localization.
FAW’s “trucks first” strategy provides a first-mover advantage in emerging markets.

10. Changan Automobile: Steady Global Expansion + Three-Track Strategy
Changan follows a methodical approach:
-
Southeast Asia: Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia — EV passenger cars.
-
Central Asia: Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan — local supply and market coverage.
-
Europe & North America: Russia, Egypt, Mexico — exports and premium markets.
Changan’s three-track strategy balances regional specialization and long-term global presence.
