Honda Malaysia is extending hybrid warranty coverage to 10 years, a move that gives its e:HEV range a stronger ownership pitch at a time when Chinese brands are pushing hard in Malaysia with sharp pricing, long warranties and heavy showroom activity.
From May 1, buyers of new Honda e:HEV models will receive a 10-year hybrid battery and components warranty with unlimited mileage.
The coverage applies to the City e:HEV, City Hatchback e:HEV, HR-V e:HEV, Civic e:HEV and the latest CR-V e:HEV, according to a statement from Honda Malaysia.
The upgrade does not only cover new buyers. Existing e:HEV owners, as well as owners of previous-generation i-DCD hybrids such as the Jazz, City and HR-V, will also get their hybrid battery warranty extended from eight years to 10 years.
Selected hybrid components now get up to 10 years of coverage too, compared with five years previously.
Honda Malaysia is also extending the coverage to used-car buyers.
Second-hand e:HEV and i-DCD owners remain eligible for the hybrid battery and components warranty when ownership is transferred, valid up to the 10th year of the warranty period.
The timing is hard to ignore. Malaysia’s car market is no longer the old fight between national brands, Toyota and Honda.
Chinese players have upset the old order. They are moving fast, especially in SUVs, hybrids, plug-in hybrids and EVs.
JPJ registration data for 2025 showed Omoda | Jaecoo finishing fifth overall and BYD sixth, while Honda was fourth but down 11.3% year-on-year by JPJ count.
Honda Malaysia still has a strong base. It sold 72,301 vehicles in 2025, taking an 8.8% market share and retaining its No.1 position in the non-national passenger vehicle segment for the 12th straight year. But that was lower than the 81,600 units recorded in 2024, which shows how much harder the field has become.
The newer Chinese brands are competing on more than equipment count.
Chery Malaysia’s own promotion material lists rebates of up to RM15,000 and a complimentary 10-year/200,000km battery warranty for its Tiggo PHEV models, while Omoda & Jaecoo Malaysia lists an optional extended engine warranty package of up to 10 years or 1,000,000km for the Jaecoo J7 ICE.
That makes Honda’s move more than a routine after-sales announcement. It is a defensive play, but also a sensible one.
Hybrids remain a key part of Honda’s Malaysian range, especially for buyers who want lower fuel consumption without charging concerns. A longer warranty gives those buyers one less reason to be tempted by newer names with louder offers.











