Well, that did not take long. After a teaser on May 22, BYD Sime Motors has confirmed that the updated BYD Atto 3 would be launched in Malaysia on June 5.
The date was revealed through BYD Cars Malaysia’s Facebook and Instagram channels, giving the brand a fresh draw for the Kuala Lumpur International Mobility Show 2026 (KLIMS 2026) later this month.
The teaser image also clears up one important point. The SUV shown is still recognisably from the first-generation Atto 3 export line, with the familiar compact body, side glass shape and overall stance. It is not the larger China-market third-generation Yuan Plus.
The Atto 3 story is split in two overseas directions for now: a lighter facelift, as seen in Hong Kong, and the more heavily reworked Atto 3 Evo now offered in Europe.
China’s Yuan Plus has moved further with a new-generation model, with a larger body, BYD’s e-Platform 3.0 Evo, rear-wheel drive, higher motor outputs and new battery options. Malaysia’s June 5 car sits on a different path: an update of the existing export-market Atto 3 line.
The question is how far that update goes.
Hong Kong already has a 2026 Atto 3 facelift that keeps the familiar front-wheel-drive, 400V layout with a 150 kW (204 PS) motor and 60.48 kWh battery. Europe’s Atto 3 Evo is the heavier mechanical update, with rear-wheel drive, 800V architecture, a larger 74.8 kWh battery, quicker charging and a 101-litre frunk.
Rumours of rear-wheel drive and a 230 kW (313 PS) motor would put the Malaysia-bound car closer to the European Atto 3 Evo RWD than Hong Kong’s lighter facelift.
BYD Sime Motors’ teaser line of “faster, further and smarter” also points in that direction, but final Malaysia specifications have not been confirmed. A 330kW AWD version is also offered in Europe.
The timing is also interesting. The June 5 launch comes just weeks before new Ministry of Investment, Trade and Industry of Malaysia (Miti) rules begin reshaping the business case for fully imported EVs.
Whether that policy window influenced the schedule has not been confirmed. Still, an early launch gives BYD Sime Motors room to show the car, collect orders and position the updated Atto 3 before the July 1 shift.
There may also be a stock-planning angle. If units have already been allocated, shipped or cleared under the existing framework, launching earlier would help BYD move the updated model without waiting for the new rules to take effect. That remains unverified, so it should be treated as a logical possibility rather than a confirmed reason.
The broader message is continuity. A quick Malaysia launch tells buyers and dealers that BYD’s most familiar EV here is not being left in limbo, even as fully imported EV plans become harder to price and position.












