
Xiaomi Motor
When 400 Chinese EV brands collapsed, Xiaomi committed ¥100B of its own capital, compressed five-year development to 36 months, and priced its first sedan below the Tesla Model 3. Result: 50,000 orders in 27 minutes, 600,000 deliveries in 22 months, and a 25.5% gross margin built on a 624-million-device ecosystem no pure automaker can copy.
Transformation Arc
When 400 Chinese electric vehicle brands collapsed and even Apple abandoned its decade-long car project, a smartphone company launched an electric sedan that received 50,000 orders in 27 minutes. Xiaomi Motor (小米汽车) reached 600,000 deliveries in 22 months — the fastest ramp in automotive history — by treating a car not as a standalone product but as the next device in a 624-million-gadget ecosystem that no pure automaker can replicate.
The bet no phone company should have survived
The arithmetic of China’s electric vehicle market in 2021 was merciless. Of roughly 487 brands that had registered to build EVs since 2018, fewer than 130 would survive to see 2024. WM Motor, once valued at $7 billion, filed for bankruptcy. HiPhi, backed by $9 billion in investment, ceased operations. Neta collapsed. The price war that consumed these companies was not a correction — it was an extinction event, driven by overcapacity, subsidy cuts, and a consumer base that treated brand loyalty as an afterthought. Into this carnage, in March 2021, Xiaomi announced it would build cars.
The decision was not born of ambition. It was born of fear. Two months earlier, the US Department of Defense had placed Xiaomi on a blacklist in the final days of the Trump administration. An emergency board meeting convened within hours. One board member posed the question that redirected the entire company: if you cannot make phones anymore, what happens to 40,000 employees? That afternoon, for the first time, senior management discussed automotive.
The company that entered this conversation was not a naive disruptor. Xiaomi had already survived its own near-death experience. In 2014, it was China’s top smartphone maker — 61 million units shipped, 227 percent growth, a $45 billion valuation. By 2016, shipments had collapsed 36 percent to 41.5 million. Market share fell from 15.9 percent to 8.9 percent. Analysts declared that no phone company had ever recovered from such a decline. The root cause was structural: Xiaomi’s online-only distribution model failed in a market where 92 percent of retail was still offline, and OPPO and Vivo had blanketed China’s lower-tier cities with brick-and-mortar stores while Xiaomi remained invisible outside the largest metros. The recovery — hundreds of Mi Home stores, a personal takeover of supply chain management by Lei Jun, and a surge to 92.4 million units by 2017 — gave the company a crisis playbook it would deploy again for automotive. IMD Business School later titled its case study “How Xiaomi Broke Every Law of Corporate Death.”
The Hong Kong IPO in July 2018, raising $4.72 billion, cemented the company’s financial foundation. At the listing, Lei Jun made a public pledge that became a brand covenant: hardware profit margins would never exceed five percent. That constraint — which sounded like a concession to investors — was in fact a strategic weapon. It locked Xiaomi into a business model where the installed base, not the individual product margin, was the source of value. Every subsequent pricing decision, including the SU7’s launch price, would follow from this principle.
When the automotive division was approved in March 2021, Lei Jun committed ¥100 billion over ten years and rejected $10 billion in outside venture capital. The reasoning was structural: a decade-long project with external investors would create impossible alignment problems. Xiaomi would pay every yuan itself and bear every risk alone.
The 21-day argument that built a car
Xiaomi compressed a process that typically takes five to seven years into 29 months. The team received 380,000 job applications. Over 3,400 engineers were dedicated to the SU7 sedan. Key designers came from BMW — chief designer Li Tianyuan and strategic consultant Chris Bangle, the former BMW design chief who had reshaped the brand’s visual language a generation earlier. The internal benchmark was explicit: Porsche quality at Xiaomi pricing.
The process was not smooth. In late 2021, the first product review failed and the entire vehicle plan was scrapped. Lei Jun cancelled all other commitments and gathered core engineers for a meeting that lasted 21 consecutive days. Arguments ran from nine in the morning to nine at night. Individual design decisions consumed entire sessions. The SU7 Ultra variant was proposed in December 2021, cancelled in February 2022, then restarted in May 2022. This was not indecision — it was the organizational metabolism of a software company learning, at painful speed, that physical products do not iterate like firmware updates.
The factory decision proved equally consequential. When Xiaomi signed the Beijing Yizhuang agreement in November 2021 for a two-phase plant with 300,000-unit annual capacity, it chose owned manufacturing over the contract assembly model that most new EV entrants preferred. Contract assembly is cheaper and faster. Owned manufacturing is a bet on control — over quality tolerances, over production scheduling, over the gross margins that determine whether an automaker lives or dies. That bet would pay off: by Q3 2025, Xiaomi’s automotive gross margin reached 25.5%, a figure most Chinese EV startups never approach.
When three students died
On March 28, 2024, the SU7 launched at ¥215,900 — roughly $4,000 below the Tesla Model 3 in China — with 800-volt architecture, a self-developed 21,000 RPM motor, and the HyperOS ecosystem running natively across phone, car, and home devices. Fifty thousand orders arrived in 27 minutes. Rival CEOs attended the launch event in person. First deliveries began six days later. By November, Xiaomi had reached 100,000 units in 230 days — faster than any comparable new brand in EV history.
Then, on March 29, 2025 — almost exactly one year after launch — an SU7 crashed into a concrete barrier on a highway near Tongling, Anhui Province. The car’s Navigate on Autopilot had been active at 116 kilometers per hour, alerting the driver only two to three seconds before impact. Chinese guidelines recommend ten or more. All three occupants — university students — died. Xiaomi shares plunged 21% in a single week, wiping HK$125 billion from market capitalization. A second fatal crash followed in October in Chengdu, where bystanders could not open the electronic doors of a burning SU7 Ultra. Xiaomi recalled 116,887 vehicles in September 2025.
The safety crisis tested something that sales records cannot measure: whether a brand built on speed could earn trust through accountability. Lei Jun called the period “the hardest time since founding Xiaomi in 2010.” He cancelled public engagements, withdrew from social media, and ordered a systematic safety review. The crisis remains unresolved as of early 2026 — regulatory investigations continue, and the autonomous driving technology that contributed to the Tongling crash demands fundamental improvement, not incremental patches. Yet the commercial trajectory has proven remarkably resilient. The YU7 SUV, launched in June 2025 — three months after the first fatal crash — received 289,000 orders within one hour. Full-year 2025 deliveries reached 411,837 units, exceeding targets by 18 percent.
The ecosystem no automaker can copy
The conventional explanation for Xiaomi’s speed is price — a smartphone company’s ruthless efficiency applied to automotive. The conventional explanation is incomplete. Price gets a customer through the door. The ecosystem locks it behind them.
Xiaomi’s “Human × Car × Home” integration connects the SU7 and YU7 to more than 624 million IoT devices running HyperOS. Drivers control home appliances from the vehicle, precondition their cars via smart speakers, and experience seamless continuity across phones, tablets, wearables, and infotainment. The data from early SU7 buyers reveals how deep this integration runs: 99 percent already used at least one Xiaomi non-phone product before purchasing the car. More striking, 51.9 percent of buyers came from iPhone — meaning the vehicle is attracting customers beyond the existing Xiaomi base and converting them into the ecosystem.
The financial architecture reinforces the moat. Unlike EV startups that burn through venture capital hoping to reach scale before the money runs out, Xiaomi’s automotive division launched with roughly ¥100 billion in group cash reserves behind it. The parent company’s pledge — hardware margins will never exceed five percent — is not altruism. It is a pricing weapon. By accepting thin hardware margins on phones and IoT devices, Xiaomi builds an installed base so large that each new product category, including automotive, arrives with a captive audience. The car does not need to be profitable on day one because the ecosystem already is.
It became profitable anyway. By Q3 2025, the automotive division posted ¥700 million in operating profit on ¥28.3 billion in revenue, with the entire segment accounting for 25 percent of Xiaomi Group’s total. Profitability arrived roughly 18 months after first delivery — half the time Tesla required to reach the same milestone.
The distribution infrastructure scaled in parallel. By late 2025, Xiaomi operated 477 dedicated auto retail stores across 138 Chinese cities, with 264 service centers in 151 cities — a network built atop the existing ecosystem of more than 12,000 Xiaomi offline stores. The smartphone crisis of 2016 had taught the company that online-only distribution is a structural weakness. The automotive division never repeated the mistake. The three owned factory phases in Beijing Yizhuang now produce one car every 76 seconds at capacity, and the January 2026 production mix — with the YU7 representing approximately 97 percent of the month’s 39,002 deliveries — confirmed that Xiaomi’s success was a platform, not a single-model phenomenon.
The road to Munich
Xiaomi Motor’s trajectory over the next two years will test whether the fastest EV ramp in history can become a durable global business. The 2026 delivery target is 550,000 units. A refreshed SU7 arrives in April 2026. Extended-range SUVs and the 990-horsepower YU7 GT — filed with China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology in February 2026 — signal expansion into both mainstream family segments and the ultra-performance tier where the SU7 Ultra’s Nürburgring record already provides credibility. On April 1, 2025, a production SU7 Ultra lapped the Nordschleife in 7:04.957, the fastest time ever recorded by a production electric vehicle. The prototype posted 6:22.091 — the third-fastest certified lap in the circuit’s history.
European market entry, planned for 2027, will be coordinated through a Munich R&D center staffed by former BMW Motorsport engineers and a Düsseldorf office managing continental distribution. The SU7 Ultra has already been registered and road-tested in Germany. Whether European regulators — and European consumers — will embrace a Chinese EV brand with an unresolved safety record at home is the question Xiaomi must answer before it can claim global relevance.
The deeper question is whether the ecosystem moat that works in China translates to markets where Xiaomi’s IoT penetration is thinner and where no one controls their rice cooker from the driver’s seat. In China, the answer is settled: 600,000 vehicles in 22 months, delivered into the most competitive automotive market on earth, by a company that four years ago had never built a car. What remains unsettled is whether speed and scale are the same thing as safety and trust — and whether a brand that grew faster than any rival can slow down long enough to prove it deserves the road.
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