Nissan
1 รุ่น · 1 เทรนด์ · Japan
1 รุ่น · 1 เทรนด์ · Japan
- Importer
- Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. (wholly-owned subsidiary of Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. Yokohama; originally founded 1962 as the JV "Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd."; renamed in April 2009. Two adjacent vehicle plants in Bang Sao Thong, Samut Prakan — Plant 1 opened 1975, Plant 2 opened 2014)
- Distributors
- Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd.Wholly-owned subsidiary of Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (Yokohama). Direct sales, marketing, distribution, aftersales, and CKD vehicle assembly. TH since 1962 as Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd. JV; renamed in April 2009 after Renault-Nissan Alliance restructuring.Siam Motors Co., Ltd.Legacy 1962 JV partner (Phornprapha family conglomerate). Now distributor / dealer-operator only via Siam Nissan dealers (no equity in Nissan Motor Thailand).
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- 2026-12-31subsidy changeEV3.5 local-production offset deadline (1:2 by end-2027)
Final deadline for EV3.5 participants to meet the 1:2 local-production offset (one EV imported in 2024 → two produced locally by end-2027). Determines whether brands can keep EV3.5 pricing in the years that follow.
- 2026-08-31subsidy changeEV3.5 1:1 local-production deadline for 2024 imports
Manufacturers who imported CBU EVs under EV3.5 in 2024 must complete 1:1 local production by 31 December 2026 to avoid penalties. Some brands extending the deadline. Affects pricing of locally-assembled vs CBU stock through 2026.
- 2025-11-10subsidy change80% annual road-tax discount for BEV expires
The 80% reduction on annual road tax for new factory-built BEVs registered between 1 Oct 2022 and 10 Nov 2025 stops accepting new entrants. Existing registrations keep the discount for the remaining year of validity.
- 2025-07-22subsidy changeEV Board adjusts EV3 / EV3.5 to favour exports
BoI/EV Board updates measures to encourage Thailand-built EV exports as cumulative supply-chain investment passes ฿137 billion. Local-production offset rules tightened. BEV registrations reported up 59% YoY for the first 9 months of 2025; cumulative EV3/EV3.5 registrations exceed 238,000 vehicles.
- 2024-02-01subsidy changeThailand EV3.5 subsidy package takes effect
Replaces EV3.0 — reduced per-vehicle subsidies and tighter local-production requirements through 2027.
- 2024-01-02subsidy changeEV3.5 effective date
EV3.5 measures legally take effect. EV3.0 subsidies sunset for new applicants; existing EV3.0 commitments still valid. Thai EV market sees inventory clearance pricing as manufacturers pivot.
- 2024-01-01subsidy changeExcise-tax cut for BEV ≤฿7M extended through 2027
Battery EVs priced up to ฿7,000,000 continue paying 2% excise (down from 8%) under EV3.5, extending the EV3.0 baseline.
- 2023-12-19subsidy changeCabinet approves EV3.5 — successor scheme
Successor 4-year package replacing EV3.0. Subsidy bands tightened: passenger BEV ≤฿2M with battery ≥50kWh receives ฿50,000–100,000; <50kWh receives ฿20,000–50,000; pickups ฿50,000–100,000; motorcycles ฿5,000–10,000. Excise stays at 2% for BEVs ≤฿7M. CBU import duty reduced up to 40% in 2024–2025. Local production offset: 1:2 by 2026, 1:3 by 2027.
- 2022-03-21subsidy changeEV3.0 takes effect — first subsidies disbursed
EV3.0 measures legally in force. Manufacturers begin signing MOUs with the Excise Department to access subsidies; passed-through to customer-facing prices over the following months.
- 2022-02-15subsidy changeEV3.0 package approved by Thai cabinet
Initial 3-year EV incentive package: per-unit subsidy of ฿70,000–150,000 for passenger BEVs based on battery size, excise tax cut from 8% to 2%, import-duty reduction up to 40% for CBUs, with 1:1 local-production offset by 2024 (extended to end-2025).
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Nissan in Thailand
Canonical research doc. Source-of-truth for every Nissan BEV fact used by seed scripts, the brand page, and the AI advisor. Cite every claim inline. Mark
[unverified]rather than guess.Scope: BEV only. Nissan Thailand's electrified strategy is dominated by e-POWER series-hybrid technology (Kicks e-POWER, X-Trail e-POWER e-4ORCE, Serena e-POWER, and the new locally-built Kicks e-POWER produced at Samut Prakan from April 2026). e-POWER is NOT a BEV — it uses an ICE generator to feed electricity to the drive motor with a small buffer battery, and refuels with petrol. These models are out of evth Phase 1 BEV scope and are excluded from this document.
Only fully-battery-electric models on nissan.co.th's TH price list as of May 2026 are documented here. That is currently a single nameplate: Nissan LEAF (2nd-generation ZE1 Minorchange, CBU-Japan).
Range-standard hygiene (LOAD-BEARING). Nissan publishes NEDC range for the Leaf in Thailand (311 km). The Leaf was originally certified to JC08/NEDC and never received a WLTP figure for TH-market disclosure. WLTP-equivalent range for the ZE1 40 kWh is ~270 km (per Nissan Europe data) — apply only as
[unverified]derived estimate; the canonical Thai range figure is the 311 km NEDC number on the dealer brochure.Sub-brand naming. Unlike Toyota (bZ), Hyundai (Ioniq) or BMW (i), Nissan has no dedicated BEV sub-brand — Leaf and Ariya are positioned within the main Nissan lineup. Globally Nissan markets its electrified portfolio under the umbrella tagline "Nissan Intelligent Mobility", which spans BEV (Leaf, Ariya), e-POWER series-hybrid (Kicks, X-Trail, Serena, Note), and Nissan ProPILOT ADAS — but no separate dealer channel or naming convention for pure BEVs. In Thailand specifically, the marketing emphasis is overwhelmingly e-POWER, not BEV.
The TH BEV picture (May 2026):
- Leaf ZE1 Minorchange — sole production BEV on sale. CBU- Japan, 40 kWh, 311 km NEDC, ฿1,590,000. This is the 2018- vintage 2nd-gen platform that has been on Thai sale since Nov 2018 (originally ฿1,990,000), discounted to ฿1,490,000 in March 2020, then Minorchange-relaunched at ฿1,590,000 in August 2023. No CHAdeMO-to-CCS2 transition — the Leaf in TH still uses the legacy CHAdeMO DC fast-charge connector, a unique and increasingly orphaned standard in the TH market.
- Leaf Mk3 (3rd-generation, global launch 2025-06-17) — not confirmed for Thailand as of May 2026. Nissan's official global launch communications stated the Mk3 is initially "confirmed for Europe, America, and Japan." No Nissan Thailand press release or dealer indication of a TH-spec Mk3 Leaf. The current ฿1,590,000 listing on ZigWheels TH and Nissan TH labelled as "2026 Leaf" is the carryover ZE1 Minorchange, not the all-new Mk3 (CMF-EV platform).
- Ariya — never launched in Thailand. The Hyper Tourer EV concept (autonomous minivan) was displayed at BIMS 2024 as Nissan's electric showcase — but no production Ariya has been announced for the Thai market through May 2026.
Why so little BEV. Nissan Thailand's strategic bet is on e-POWER as the bridge technology rather than pure BEV — a reflection of the parent company's global EV stumbles (2025 Honda merger talks collapsed; +US$1 bn EV battery plant cancelled in May 2025; Plant 1 in Samut Prakan ceasing vehicle assembly to consolidate into Plant 2). Where BYD, MG, GWM, Tesla, Zeekr, Hyundai, BMW, Mercedes, and Volvo are all actively expanding their TH BEV portfolio, Nissan TH is retrenching to ICE + hybrid and betting that e-POWER's "EV-feel without charging anxiety" pitch wins more middle-market Thai buyers than a competitive BEV would. This positions Nissan as a legacy BEV brand in TH — present, historically pioneering (the Leaf was the first mass-market Japanese BEV in Thailand in 2018), but no longer a strategic BEV player in the 2026 market.
At a glance
- Distributor model: Wholly-owned subsidiary. Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. is 100% owned by Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (Yokohama). The company's roots trace to the 1962 JV "Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd." with Siam Motors (the Phornprapha family's conglomerate) — making Nissan the first Japanese automaker to build a plant in Thailand. Nissan progressively took full control during the 2000s, with the JV renamed Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. in April 2009 after Renault-Nissan Alliance restructuring. (Wikipedia — Automotive industry in Thailand; Siam Motors Group — Nissan Motor Thailand; Bloomberg profile)
- Entered Thailand: 1962 as Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd. JV. First plant at Soi Srichan, Sukhumvit 67, Bangkok — 120 employees, 4 cars/day initial capacity. Today the same legacy site has expanded to two adjacent plants in Bang Sao Thong, Samut Prakan province, immediately south-east of Bangkok.
- First BEV in TH: Nissan LEAF ZE1 — debuted at Motor Expo 2018 (Challenger Hall, IMPACT Muang Thong Thani) on 2018-11-28 at ฿1,990,000 CBU-Japan. Thailand was the first ASEAN market for the 2nd-generation Leaf, ahead of Malaysia (2019) and Singapore. The launch was framed as Nissan's flagship demonstration of "Intelligent Mobility" — but commercial uptake was extremely limited (HeadLightMag's full review was sub-titled "Why Thai customer Leave it on the showroom?"). (HeadLightMag launch; HeadLightMag full review; InsideEVs Doi Inthanon trip 2019)
- Models on sale (May 2026): 1 BEV nameplate — LEAF Minorchange (ZE1 2nd-gen, 40 kWh, CHAdeMO). Single trim. CBU- Japan. Listed on nissan.co.th's product page and ZigWheels TH. No Ariya. No Leaf Mk3. (Nissan TH — Leaf page; ZigWheels — Leaf 2026)
- Total current BEV trims on sale (May 2026): 1 — the Leaf Minorchange single trim. By a substantial margin Nissan has the smallest BEV lineup of any major brand active in Thailand, far behind BYD (11+ trims across 6 models), MG (8+ across 4 models), Tesla (5+), BMW (10+), and Zeekr (10 across 3 models).
- Current BEV price band: ฿1,590,000 (single trim, no spread).
- CKD vs CBU split (May 2026): CBU-Japan only. The Leaf is imported fully-built from Nissan Oppama plant (Yokosuka, Japan). No BEV is currently CKD-assembled in Thailand at either Samut Prakan plant — they manufacture ICE/Navara/Almera/Note/Kicks e-POWER and (from April 2026) the new-generation Kicks e-POWER for export across ASEAN. (MarkLines — Nissan TH e-POWER Bangkok Motor Show 2026)
- Local plant: Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. — Samut
Prakan complex (Plant 1 + Plant 2 adjacent in Bang Sao Thong
district, Samut Prakan province). Plant 1 (opened 1975) is
Nissan's oldest in Thailand and was for decades the primary
vehicle-assembly site. Plant 2 (opened 2014) is the newer,
larger facility built originally to support the eco-car programme.
As part of Nissan's 2025–2026 line-integration restructuring,
Plant 1 has ceased vehicle assembly and now houses body,
plastic, press shops, and logistics; all car assembly has
consolidated into Plant 2. Total combined site capacity:
~370,000 units/yr
[unverified — exact current capacity not publicly disclosed post-integration]. (Bangkok Post — Nissan commits to Thai production; Nation Thailand — denies factory closure, streamlining; ASEAN Nissan press — line integration) - Battery plant: None. No EV battery assembly in Thailand. Nissan announced in May 2025 that it was cancelling a planned US$1 bn+ battery plant as part of global restructuring (location: Kyushu, Japan — not TH). Thai BEV battery packs remain fully imported in the Leaf CBU. (Electrek — Nissan cancels battery plant 2025)
- e-POWER investment: ฿10.96 billion committed to expanding e-POWER series-hybrid production at Samut Prakan Plant 2, with the all-new Kicks e-POWER (P15 facelift) entering local production April 2026 and debuting at BIMS 2026 as a TH-built export model for ASEAN and beyond. This is Nissan TH's actual electrification strategy — not BEV. (Zigwheels PH — Kicks e-POWER TH production; MarkLines — new e-POWER model BIMS 2026)
- Showrooms (May 2026): 257 authorised Nissan dealers across
168 cities in Thailand, plus 144 service centres across 118
cities (ZigWheels directory data). Major dealer groups include
Siam Nissan Body & Service (legacy Phornprapha family),
Siam Nissan Automobile, plus the Nissan Retail Concept –
NEXT new-store format (first TH NEXT showroom opened 2024,
Bangkok; first Northeast Thailand NEXT store opened 2025). All
dealers carry the full Nissan lineup; EV-certified dealers are
a subset
[unverified count — Nissan TH does not publish a separate EV-dealer list]. (ZigWheels — Nissan TH dealers; ZigWheels — service centres; 9CarThai — Nissan dealers all; Nissan ASEAN press — NEXT Bangkok 2024) - Sales context: Nissan Thailand's total passenger-vehicle
sales have declined sharply through 2024–2025 amid Chinese-brand
pressure and ageing lineup. Specific BEV sales (Leaf) are
unpublished but estimated at <50 units/year based on DLT
registration data and HeadLightMag's commentary that the Leaf
"sits on the showroom floor" — a structural contrast to BYD
Atto 3's ~10,000-unit annual peak
[unverified specific Leaf registration count]. Nissan won 4 of the Car of the Year 2026 awards — but all 4 were for e-POWER models (Kicks, X-Trail, Serena), not the Leaf. (Nissan ASEAN — COTY 2026)
Nissan occupies a distinctive but diminished position in Thailand's BEV market. Three things make Nissan's TH BEV story distinct. First, Nissan was the first-mover among Japanese brands — the Leaf launched in TH in November 2018, four years before Toyota brought the bZ4X and five years before Honda's e:N1 TH debut. Second, Nissan is the only legacy brand still selling a CHAdeMO-connector EV in Thailand — the Leaf retains the original Japanese DC fast-charge standard that the rest of the TH market has abandoned in favour of CCS2. This makes the Leaf operationally awkward (only a subset of TH public DC chargers offer CHAdeMO, and new networks like Sharge / EleX / EVolt typically install CCS2-only). Third, Nissan's electrification pivot has gone wholly to e-POWER series-hybrid, not BEV — the parent company globally cancelled its 1bn-USD battery plant in May 2025 and has signalled retrenchment from pure-BEV development, instead positioning e-POWER as "the EV-feel for petrol drivers." Thailand's local strategy mirrors this: ฿10.96bn invested in Samut Prakan for e-POWER production, zero new investment announced for BEV CKD or battery assembly.
The competitive context: the Leaf's ฿1,590,000 list price puts it
in an awkward middle-band. Below it sit the BYD Atto 3
(฿899,900–959,900), MG ES (฿870,000), Neta V-II (฿549,000),
GWM Ora 03 (฿799,000–899,000), and the brand-new BYD Dolphin
(฿699,900–799,900) — all offering more range, CCS2 charging, and
fresher platforms for less money. At similar price sit the
BYD Atto 3 Extended (฿1,099,000), MG4 (฿789,000–1,069,000), Volvo
EX30 (฿1,549,000–1,749,000 CKD), and Tesla Model 3 LR (฿1.85m).
The Leaf's only remaining commercial argument is Nissan's legacy
service network (257 dealers) and the brand-trust premium of a
Japanese carmaker — but with the 40 kWh battery, 311 km NEDC
(realistic ~250 km), and orphan CHAdeMO connector, the value
proposition has eroded sharply since 2018.
The 2025–2026 Leaf Mk3 question is unresolved. Globally the all-new 3rd-generation Leaf (June 2025 reveal, CMF-EV platform shared with Ariya, ~75 kWh battery, ~600 km WLTP) is a wholesale reset for the nameplate — but Nissan's launch communication explicitly confirmed only Europe, North America, and Japan as initial markets. No Thai-spec Mk3 Leaf has been announced as of May 2026. The Mk3 would require CCS2 retrofit (it ships with CCS2 globally and adds NACS support in North America). If Nissan TH does eventually bring the Mk3, it would likely replace the ZE1 Minorchange rather than supplement it — but for now the ZE1 remains the sole BEV on the price list.
Distribution & business
Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. is the in-country sales, marketing, distribution, and aftersales subsidiary of Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (Yokohama). Headquartered in Bangkok. The President of Nissan Motor Thailand as of May 2026 is [unverified — Nissan TH does not prominently publish the current MD/President on the public site]. The company traces its roots to the 1962 JV with Siam Motors (the Phornprapha family conglomerate that also owns Siam Toyota, KIA Thailand, Siam Hitachi, etc.) — at founding it was Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd., a 50:50 JV with Siam Motors distributing and Nissan supplying CKD kits. Renault-Nissan Alliance formation in 1999 began the gradual unwinding; by April 2009 the JV was rebranded Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. with full Nissan operational control, although Siam Motors retains a residual dealer network presence through Siam Nissan dealers.
Unlike BMW (vertically-integrated subsidiary + own plant), BYD (third-party distributor Rêver Automotive), or Mercedes (subsidiary
- third-party CKD via TAAP), Nissan Thailand is a direct subsidiary that also owns its CKD plants — the closest comparator is Toyota Motor Thailand or Honda Automobile Thailand, both also wholly- owned manufacturer-subsidiaries with in-house plants. This vertical integration was unusual in 1962 but standard for the Big Three Japanese OEMs by the 1990s.
Corporate structure
| Entity | Role | Founded | Ownership |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. | Sales, marketing, distribution, aftersales, vehicle assembly | 1962 (as JV); 2009 renamed | 100 % Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. |
| Siam Motors Co., Ltd. | Legacy JV partner — now distributor / dealer-operator only | 1952 | Phornprapha family (independent) |
| Siam Nissan Body & Service | Bodywork / paint repair operator | [unverified founding] |
Siam Motors Group |
Comparative distribution model
| Brand | Distribution model | TH assembly | Local equity holder |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nissan | Direct subsidiary + wholly-owned CKD | Samut Prakan Plant 1 + 2 (Nissan-owned) | None (Siam Motors retains dealer network only) |
| Toyota | Direct subsidiary + wholly-owned CKD | Samrong / Gateway / Ban Pho | None |
| Honda | Direct subsidiary + wholly-owned CKD | Ayutthaya / Prachinburi | None |
| BMW | Direct subsidiary + wholly-owned CKD | BMW Manufacturing TH (Rayong, BMW-owned) | None |
| Mercedes-Benz | Subsidiary + third-party CKD | TAAP (Thai-family) | Thonburi Group (assembler) |
| Tesla | Direct subsidiary | None — CBU only | None |
| BYD | Single Thai distributor | Rayong (BYD-owned) | Siam Motors family (distributor only) |
Manufacturing — Nissan Samut Prakan complex
- Site: Soi Srichan / Theparak Road, Bang Sao Thong district, Samut Prakan province, ~25 km south-east of central Bangkok. Two adjacent plants on the same site.
- Plant 1 — opened 1975 (originally relocated/expanded from the 1962 Soi Srichan site). Historically the primary vehicle assembly facility for Navara, Almera, March, Note, Sunny, Sentra, X-Trail, Teana. As of 2025, ceased vehicle assembly and converted to body / plastic / press / logistics. (Nation Thailand — line integration)
- Plant 2 — opened 2014. Newer expansion site, built originally for the Eco-Car Phase II programme. All vehicle assembly is now consolidated here post-2025 line-integration. Produces Almera, Navara, Note, Kicks e-POWER, and (from April 2026) the new- generation Kicks e-POWER for ASEAN export. (Zigwheels PH — Kicks production launch)
- Owner: Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. — 100 % Nissan Motor Co., Ltd.
- Models historically CKD-assembled: Bluebird (1962–90s), Sunny,
Sentra, Cefiro, Teana, March, Almera, Note, Navara, Frontier,
Sylphy, Pulsar, X-Trail, Kicks (P15, e-POWER), Leaf
[Leaf was NOT CKD-assembled in Thailand — confirmed CBU-Japan throughout the ZE1 lifecycle]. - First BEV model assembled (CKD): None. No Nissan BEV has ever been CKD-assembled in Thailand. This contrasts sharply with Toyota (bZ4X plans), Honda (e:N1 CKD), and the Chinese brands (BYD, MG, GWM, Neta, GAC Aion — all CKD in TH).
- Annual output (post-integration): ~150,000–200,000 vehicles/
year combined
[unverified — Nissan does not publicly disclose post-restructuring Samut Prakan unit volume; pre-2025 capacity was ~370,000 across both plants]. - Battery plant: None. Globally Nissan cancelled its US$1bn+ battery plant project in May 2025 (Kyushu, Japan). No battery assembly is planned for Thailand. Leaf CBU includes the fully-imported 40 kWh battery pack from Japan.
Showrooms / service / parts
| Metric | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Nissan Authorised Dealers (May 2026) | 257 across 168 cities | ZigWheels — Nissan TH |
| Nissan Service Centres | 144 across 118 cities | ZigWheels — Service Centres |
| Bangkok dealer count | 10 | ZigWheels Bangkok |
| Cities covered | 168 | ZigWheels |
| Dealer model | Multi-dealer authorised retail + service, "Nissan Retail Concept – NEXT" upgrade format rolling out | Nissan ASEAN — NEXT Bangkok 2024 |
| Online showroom | nissan.co.th (limited e-commerce; reservation flow only) | Nissan TH |
| EV-certified dealers | [unverified — Nissan TH does not publish a separate EV-dealer list; Leaf service-trained dealers are a subset] |
— |
Nissan Thailand has by far the largest service footprint of any
BEV-selling brand in the country — 257 dealers vs ~29 for BMW, ~24
for Tesla, ~46 for BYD via Rêver. This is the legacy moat Nissan
inherits from 60+ years of ICE-market presence. The trade-off: very
few of those 257 dealers are EV-fluent. Siam Motors Group dealers
(legacy Phornprapha-family franchise) dominate the southern provinces
and Isan; Yontrakit Group has strong Bangkok central presence;
Greenwich Auto covers Chiang Mai north. The Nissan Retail
Concept – NEXT programme (launched 2024) is Nissan's global
showroom refresh — modular interior, digital configurators, EV-charge
demo bays — currently rolled out to a handful of flagship stores
with full ASEAN rollout planned through 2027 [unverified specific TH NEXT-store count].
Charging network partnerships
- PEA Volta / PEA Volta Verse — Nissan signed an MoU with the Provincial Electricity Authority (PEA) for joint EV charging service development, focused on PEA Volta Verse (the PEA's public-charging app). Target was 263 PEA charging touchpoints by end-2023 across highways, secondary routes, and tourist areas. Nissan supplies Leaf data + co-research; PEA operates the charging hardware. This is Nissan TH's only formal charging partnership. (Nissan ASEAN — PEA MoU; ETN News coverage)
- CHAdeMO connector availability — the Leaf is the only
current TH-market BEV that requires CHAdeMO. CHAdeMO-equipped
public DC fast-chargers in TH are a shrinking subset, available
at EleX by EGAT (some stations dual-port CCS2 + CHAdeMO),
PEA Volta (some stations), and a handful of legacy stations.
Newer networks (Sharge, EVolt, EA Anywhere / EleX
partner sites, EV Station PluZ by OR) are typically
CCS2-only — meaning Leaf owners have meaningfully fewer
fast-charge options than CCS2 EV owners.
[unverified — exact count of CHAdeMO public chargers in TH as of May 2026; estimated 100–200 across the country versus 3,000+ CCS2 ports]. - No home wallbox partnership — Nissan TH does not bundle a
home wallbox with Leaf purchase (a notable gap versus BMW's
free 11 kW Wallbox, Mercedes's MBSP charger, BYD's home charger
included). Buyers source third-party hardware.
[unverified — may have changed; not confirmed on May 2026 Nissan TH offers page].
Warranty terms (Nissan Leaf TH)
- Vehicle warranty: 3 years / 100,000 km (one of the shortest in the segment — BMW gives 4 yrs, Volvo gives 5 yrs, BYD gives 6 yrs vehicle warranty in TH).
- High-voltage battery warranty: 8 years / 160,000 km (industry-standard; covers capacity loss below 9 of 12 bars on the dashboard battery-state-of-health gauge).
- EV system warranty: 5 years / 100,000 km (motor, inverter, on-board charger, BMS).
- Roadside assistance: 3 years (matches vehicle warranty).
- Wallbox warranty: N/A — no wallbox bundled with the Leaf purchase.
Sources for warranty + ownership package: HeadLightMag — official launch 2018; HeadLightMag — Minorchange 2023; Autolifethailand — Minorchange 2023
[unverified — current TH-market warranty terms may have been extended; the above reflect 2018 launch + 2023 Minorchange disclosures, not confirmed for May 2026 carryover]
LEAF — C-segment electric hatchback (ZE1 Minorchange)
Nissan's flagship BEV — and globally the best-selling EV of all time until 2020 (when overtaken by Tesla Model 3 cumulative sales). The Leaf is a C-segment 5-door hatchback on the dedicated Leaf platform shared with the original 2010 1st-generation Leaf. The 2nd-generation ZE1 was introduced globally in 2017 (TH: 2018), received a mid-life Minorchange facelift in 2023 that updated the V-Motion grille, LED lighting, and infotainment, and continues to be sold in Thailand through May 2026 as the only Nissan BEV available.
The Leaf competes directly against the BYD Atto 3 (LFP, more range,
฿700k less), MG ES (฿700k less), GWM Ora 03 (฿700k less), and at
the upper end the MG4 Long Range (฿500k less). At its current
price point, it has effectively no defensible competitive advantage
other than the Nissan service network — the platform is 8+ years old,
the battery (40 kWh) is half the size of mainstream 2026 BEVs, the
CHAdeMO connector is an orphan standard, and the range (311 km NEDC,
~250 km real-world) is below the segment.
Lineage & platform
- Generation: ZE1 — 2nd generation, global debut 2017-09, Thailand launch 2018-11-28. Minorchange (facelift) globally launched 2022-09, TH-spec Minorchange launched 2023-08-09.
- Platform: Nissan EV Platform (dedicated, derived from Renault-Nissan B-platform) — predecessor to the modern CMF-EV platform that underpins the Ariya and the 3rd-generation Leaf Mk3.
- Shared with: No other current Nissan model — the ZE1 platform is Leaf-exclusive globally.
- Architecture: 400 V
- Battery technology: AESC NMC pouch cells (Automotive Energy Supply Corp — Nissan's original battery JV with NEC; now owned by Envision AESC Group). 40 kWh gross / ~37 kWh usable. Air-cooled (no liquid cooling — a known limitation in hot Thai climate, can lead to charge-rate throttling and faster long-term degradation).
- Origin (TH): CBU-Japan — built at Nissan Oppama Plant, Yokosuka, Kanagawa.
Lineup events / timeline
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 2018-11-28 (TH launch) | Leaf 2018 ฿1,990,000 debut at Motor Expo at Challenger Hall, IMPACT Muang Thonburi. Single trim, CBU-Japan, 40 kWh, NEDC 311 km. 3-year / 100,000 km vehicle warranty; 8 yr / 160,000 km battery; 5 yr / 100,000 km EV-system warranty. (HeadLightMag launch; Sanook) |
| 2020-03 (price-cut) | Special price ฿1,490,000 (−฿500,000 / −25 %). Nissan TH's response to weak commercial uptake. Same spec, same ZE1, just discounted MSRP. (HeadLightMag special price; TimeOut Bangkok) |
| 2023-08-09 | Leaf Minorchange ฿1,590,000 — facelift relaunch with new V-Motion grille, full-LED matrix headlamps, LED DRL + fog, refreshed interior trim, updated 8" infotainment with Apple CarPlay / Android Auto. Same 40 kWh battery, same NEDC 311 km range, same CHAdeMO. Price uplifted ฿100k from 2020 discounted level. (HeadLightMag Minorchange; Autolifethailand Minorchange) |
| 2025-06-17 (global Mk3 reveal) | 3rd-generation Leaf (CMF-EV) revealed globally — fundamentally new platform shared with Ariya, ~75 kWh battery options, CCS2 + NACS (North America), ~600 km WLTP. Launch markets: Europe, North America, Japan only. No Thai-spec Mk3 announced. (Nation Thailand — Mk3 reveal; Nissan Global press) |
| 2026 carryover | ZigWheels TH lists "Leaf 2026 ฿1,590,000" — confirmed via spec (40 kWh, 311 km NEDC) to be the ZE1 Minorchange carryover, not the Mk3. No update or replacement announced. (ZigWheels — Leaf 2026; Nissan TH page) |
Trims
Leaf Minorchange — leaf (single trim, MY2024–2026 carryover) ฿1,590,000
| Spec | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Launch MSRP (2018-11-28) | ฿1,990,000 | HeadLightMag launch |
| Discounted MSRP (2020-03) | ฿1,490,000 | HeadLightMag |
| Minorchange MSRP (2023-08-09) | ฿1,590,000 | HeadLightMag Minorchange |
| Current MSRP (May 2026, carryover) | ฿1,590,000 | ZigWheels 2026 |
| Battery (kWh) gross / usable | 40 / ~37 | HeadLightMag |
| Battery chemistry | NMC (lithium-ion pouch, AESC) | HeadLightMag launch |
| Cell supplier | AESC (Envision AESC Group, ex Nissan-NEC JV) | derived; AESC supplies all global Leafs |
| Voltage architecture | 400 V (~360 V nominal) | EV-Database (global) |
| Cell format | Pouch, air-cooled (no liquid TMS) | derived |
| Range (NEDC) | 311 km | HeadLightMag Minorchange |
| Range (WLTP equivalent) | ~270 km [unverified — derived from Nissan Europe ZE1 40kWh data; not TH-certified] |
Nissan Europe Leaf 40kWh |
| Real-world range estimate | ~220–260 km mixed driving [unverified — owner reports] |
community |
| Drive | FWD | HeadLightMag |
| Front motor | 110 kW / 150 PS / 320 Nm (EM57 synchronous AC) | HeadLightMag; Autolifethailand |
| Rear motor | — (FWD single-motor) | — |
| Combined power | 110 kW (150 PS) | same |
| Combined torque | 320 Nm | same |
| 0–100 km/h | 7.9 s | Autolifethailand |
| Top speed | 155 km/h | same |
| AC charging | 6.6 kW (Type 2; NOT 11 kW — a notable spec limitation versus mainstream BEVs) | HeadLightMag Minorchange |
| AC charge 0–100 % | ~6 hours at 6.6 kW | same |
| DC charging peak | ~50 kW (CHAdeMO) [verify TH spec — global ZE1 40 kWh peaks at 46–50 kW CHAdeMO] |
EV-Database |
| DC connector | CHAdeMO (NOT CCS2 — orphan standard in TH) | HeadLightMag |
| DC 10–80 % | ~40–60 min (varies with temperature; air-cooled pack throttles in heat) | derived |
| V2L / V2H output | None (the ZE1 internationally supported CHAdeMO V2X via dedicated unit but no TH V2L kit is bundled) | [unverified] |
| Connectors | Type 2 (AC) + CHAdeMO (DC) | HeadLightMag |
| Seats | 5 | HeadLightMag |
| Wheels | 17″ alloy | Autolifethailand |
| Tire spec | 215/50 R17 [unverified — derived from global ZE1 Minorchange] |
derived |
| L × W × H | 4,490 × 1,790 × 1,540 mm | Autolifethailand |
| Wheelbase | 2,700 mm | same |
| Ground clearance | ~150 mm [unverified] |
derived |
| Curb weight | ~1,580 kg | EV-Database (global 40 kWh) |
| Trunk capacity | 435 L (under-floor charging-cable storage) | Nissan TH spec page |
| Frunk capacity | None | derived |
| Towing capacity | Not rated for towing | derived |
| Drag coefficient (Cd) | 0.28 | Nissan global press |
| Origin (May 2026) | CBU-Japan (Nissan Oppama Plant, Yokosuka) | derived |
Standard equipment (Leaf Minorchange)
- V-Motion front grille (Minorchange redesign — blank closed panel with chrome accent)
- Full-LED headlamps with auto high-beam assist + LED DRL + LED fog
- 8-inch touchscreen infotainment with Apple CarPlay (wired) and Android Auto (wired)
- 7-inch digital cluster (TFT) + analogue speedometer hybrid
- Around View Monitor (AVM) — Nissan's 360° camera system
- ProPILOT Level 2 ADAS — Intelligent Cruise Control + Steering Assist (single-lane only, not multi-lane like Tesla AP)
- Intelligent Emergency Braking with Pedestrian Detection
- Intelligent Lane Intervention (active lane-keep)
- Intelligent Driver Alertness (drowsiness alert)
- Blind Spot Warning + Rear Cross Traffic Alert
- e-Pedal — one-pedal driving mode (regen up to 0.2g, full stop)
- Synthetic-leather seats with 6-way manual driver / 4-way
manual passenger
[verify if heated] - Climate control — automatic single-zone
- Heat pump —
[unverified — Nissan ZE1 Minorchange globally offered heat pump as standard in cold-climate markets; TH-spec may have it deleted given no cold-climate use case] - Wireless smartphone charging pad —
[unverified TH spec] - 6.6 kW Mode 3 AC charging cable (Type 2) — included
- CHAdeMO DC charging — supported (cable purchased separately or accessed at public chargers)
Distinctive features (vs the global Leaf e+ 62 kWh, NOT sold in TH)
- 40 kWh battery, not 62 kWh — Thailand never received the Leaf e+ variant (also known as Leaf Plus / Leaf 62 kWh) with the larger 62 kWh battery and 215 km / 217 hp powertrain. Only the base 40 kWh spec has ever been sold in TH.
- CHAdeMO — the global Leaf supports CHAdeMO worldwide; in markets like Europe and North America there are large CHAdeMO networks; in Thailand CHAdeMO is rare and shrinking.
- No e-4ORCE AWD — TH only ever received the single-motor FWD spec; no AWD or rear-motor option.
Colors (Leaf Minorchange TH)
[unverified — Nissan TH does not publicly publish the full color palette for the Leaf Minorchange. Below is the derived global ZE1 Minorchange palette; needs configurator capture to confirm TH availability]
| Name (EN / TH) | Hex [unverified — derived from Nissan global palette] |
Available on |
|---|---|---|
| Pearl White (solid) | #F0F0F0 |
Leaf (no-cost) |
| Brilliant Silver metallic | #C8C8C8 |
Leaf |
| Gun Metallic | #5F6168 |
Leaf |
| Super Black | #0B0B0F |
Leaf |
| Deep Blue Pearl | #1A2E50 |
Leaf |
| Two-tone Black/White | — | Leaf (premium option, global; TH avail [unverified]) |
Image catalogue
[unverified — no Supabase Storage hero captured yet; should pull from Nissan TH press kit + nissan.co.th gallery for canonical images. The Nissan-issued image set for the Leaf Minorchange (post- 2022 facelift) includes hero 3/4 front, side, rear, interior dash, charging port detail, ProPILOT functional demo]
Versus competitors
| Spec | Leaf Minorchange ฿1,590,000 | BYD Atto 3 Extended ฿1,099,000 | MG4 Long Range ฿1,069,000 | Volvo EX30 Single Motor Extended ฿1,549,000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Battery (kWh usable) | 37 | 60.5 (LFP Blade) | 64 | 64 |
| Range (TH-cert) | 311 km NEDC | 480 km NEDC | 530 km NEDC | 480 km WLTP |
| Power | 110 kW | 150 kW | 150 kW | 200 kW |
| DC charge peak | ~50 kW (CHAdeMO) | 80 kW (CCS2) | 140 kW (CCS2) | 153 kW (CCS2) |
| Drive | FWD | FWD | RWD | RWD |
| 0–100 km/h | 7.9 s | 7.3 s | 7.7 s | 5.7 s |
| TH origin | CBU-Japan | CKD-TH (Rayong) | CKD-TH (Chonburi) | CKD-TH (Geely Rayong) |
| Warranty (vehicle) | 3 yr | 6 yr | 4 yr | 5 yr |
| Connector | CHAdeMO ⚠ | CCS2 | CCS2 | CCS2 |
Sources
- Nissan TH — Leaf product page (TH)
- Nissan TH — Leaf product page (EN)
- Nissan TH — Leaf specifications
- HeadLightMag — Leaf official launch 2018
- HeadLightMag — Leaf special price 2020
- HeadLightMag — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- HeadLightMag — Leaf full review 2019
- Autolifethailand — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- Car250 — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- AutoStation — Leaf 2023 minor change
- Sanook — Leaf 2019 launch
- Kapook — Leaf 2019 at Motor Expo 2018
- InsideEVs — Leaf Doi Inthanon trip 2019
- ZigWheels TH — Leaf 2026
- ZigWheels TH — Leaf 2025 specs
- Wikipedia — Nissan Leaf
- EV-Database — Nissan Leaf 40 kWh (global ZE1 40 kWh)
Verification matrix
| Field | ✓/◐/✗ | Source | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current MSRP (฿1,590,000) | ✓ | ZigWheels 2026; HeadLightMag Minorchange 2023 | Confirmed via dealer + multiple Thai press sources |
| Launch MSRP (฿1,990,000 / 2018-11-28) | ✓ | HeadLightMag launch | Multiple primary sources |
| Battery kWh (40 gross) | ✓ | HeadLightMag, Autolifethailand | Global ZE1 40 kWh spec — confirmed TH |
| Battery usable kWh (~37) | ◐ | EV-Database (global) | TH-specific usable kWh not separately published; standard ZE1 figure |
| Battery chemistry (NMC, AESC) | ✓ | Nissan global press | AESC supplies all Leaf cells |
| Cell format (pouch) + air-cooled TMS | ✓ | Nissan global press | Confirmed |
| Range NEDC (311 km) | ✓ | HeadLightMag, Autolifethailand | Multiple sources |
| Range WLTP equivalent (~270 km) | ✗ | derived from Nissan Europe | NOT TH-certified; informational only |
| Front motor power (110 kW / 150 PS) | ✓ | HeadLightMag, Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| Torque (320 Nm) | ✓ | same | Confirmed |
| 0–100 km/h (7.9 s) | ✓ | Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| Top speed (155 km/h) | ✓ | Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| AC charging (6.6 kW Type 2) | ✓ | HeadLightMag Minorchange | Confirmed |
| DC charging peak (~50 kW CHAdeMO) | ◐ | EV-Database (global) | Specific TH DC peak not published; global ZE1 40 kWh figure |
| DC connector (CHAdeMO) | ✓ | HeadLightMag Minorchange | Confirmed |
| V2L/V2H | ✗ | — | No TH-bundled V2X kit confirmed |
| L × W × H (4490 × 1790 × 1540) | ✓ | Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| Wheelbase (2700 mm) | ✓ | Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| Curb weight (~1580 kg) | ◐ | EV-Database (global) | TH-specific not published |
| Trunk capacity (435 L) | ✓ | Nissan TH spec page | Confirmed |
| Cd (0.28) | ◐ | Nissan global | TH-specific not published; global ZE1 Minorchange figure |
| Wheels (17″) | ✓ | Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| Origin (CBU-Japan, Oppama) | ◐ | derived | Nissan TH confirms CBU; specific plant (Oppama) not Thai-press confirmed but is the global Leaf source plant |
| Heat pump (standard?) | ✗ | — | TH spec for heat-pump option not confirmed |
| Wireless charging pad | ✗ | — | TH spec not confirmed |
| Seat heaters | ✗ | — | TH spec not confirmed |
| Color palette | ✗ | — | TH-specific configurator palette not captured |
| Image catalogue (hero etc.) | ✗ | — | Not yet captured to Supabase Storage |
| Mk3 (3rd-gen) availability in TH | ✓ (negative) | Nissan Global launch press | Confirmed NOT launched in TH; "Europe, America, Japan only" |
ARIYA — [NOT LAUNCHED IN THAILAND]
The Nissan Ariya (D-segment electric crossover, CMF-EV platform, 2022 global launch) is Nissan's premium BEV — a 5-seat crossover positioned against the Volkswagen ID.4, Tesla Model Y, BMW iX1, Mercedes EQA, Toyota bZ4X, and Hyundai Ioniq 5. It has never been launched in Thailand.
Status
- Global launch: 2022-06 (Japan first), 2022-09 (Europe), 2023-01 (North America).
- ASEAN launch: Hong Kong + Singapore (CBU-Japan, 2024–2025). No production ASEAN market has received the Ariya through May 2026. (Wikipedia — Nissan Ariya)
- Thailand status: Not on sale. Not announced. The closest Nissan came was displaying the Hyper Tourer concept (electric autonomous minivan, not a production Ariya) at BIMS 2024 (45th Bangkok International Motor Show, 2024-03-27 to 2024-04-07, IMPACT Muang Thong Thani). Thailand was the first market outside Japan to see the Hyper Tourer — but no production Ariya has followed. (Nissan ASEAN press — Hyper Tourer BIMS 2024; Nissan TH news — Hyper Tourer)
- Pre-2022 Thai-media speculation: In 2022, Car2Day and other Thai automotive outlets reported the Ariya was "coming to Thailand in 2022 with up to 610 km range" — based on Nissan ASEAN soft- launch statements at the time. The Ariya did not actually launch in TH in 2022, 2023, 2024, or 2025. (Car2Day 2022 speculation; Autolifethailand 2022 preview)
- 2026 outlook: Globally, 2025 was the final US model year for the Ariya, with Nissan pausing 2026 MY production amid the broader EV strategy retrenchment. This makes a Thai launch increasingly unlikely in the near term. Nissan's stated TH pipeline (5 new models 2025–2027) is e-POWER-focused, not BEV. (Recharged.com — Ariya price forecast 2026; MarkLines — Nissan TH HEV focus)
Verification matrix
| Field | ✓/◐/✗ | Source | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ariya on sale in TH (May 2026) | ✓ (negative) | Nissan TH product index — no Ariya listed | Confirmed NOT on sale |
| Ariya announced for TH | ✓ (negative) | Nissan ASEAN press searches; no Thai launch press | Hyper Tourer concept only |
| BIMS 2024 Hyper Tourer display | ✓ | Nissan ASEAN | Confirmed concept display only |
Cross-model lineup history
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1962 | Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd. JV established. First Japanese automaker plant in Thailand. |
| 1975 | Samut Prakan Plant 1 opens (relocated/expanded from 1962 Soi Srichan site). |
| 2009-04 | JV renamed Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd.; Nissan takes full operational control. |
| 2014 | Samut Prakan Plant 2 opens — built for Eco-Car Phase II programme. |
| 2018-11-28 | Nissan Leaf launched in Thailand at Motor Expo, ฿1,990,000 CBU-Japan. First mass-market Japanese-brand BEV in TH. |
| 2020-03 | Leaf discounted to ฿1,490,000 (−25 %) in response to weak commercial uptake. |
| 2023-08-09 | Leaf Minorchange facelift launched at ฿1,590,000 — facelift refresh, same battery / range / connector. |
| 2024-03-27 → 04-07 | BIMS 2024 — Nissan displays Hyper Tourer EV concept (first display outside Japan) — but no production BEV launch. |
| 2025-05 | Nissan globally cancels US$1 bn battery plant project — confirms global EV retrenchment. |
| 2025-06-17 | Global Mk3 Leaf reveal — initial markets Europe / America / Japan only. No TH announcement. |
| 2025 | Plant 1 ceases vehicle assembly; all car production consolidated to Plant 2 ("line integration"). |
| 2026-04 | All-new Kicks e-POWER (P15 facelift) enters local production at Plant 2 — TH-built for ASEAN export. e-POWER, not BEV. |
| 2026 BIMS | Nissan debuts new TH-built e-POWER model. No BEV news. |
Sales / market position
- Leaf TH sales: Not separately disclosed by Nissan TH or DLT
monthly registrations. HeadLightMag's 2019 full review headlined
"Why Thai customer Leave it on the showroom?" — capturing the
commercial reality that the Leaf has been a marketing exercise
more than a volume product in TH. Estimated <50 units/year
through the ZE1 lifecycle
[unverified — needs DLT data pull]. - Notable reviews:
- HeadLightMag Full Review 2019 — exhaustive Thai-language review of the ZE1; commercially critical.
- InsideEVs — Doi Inthanon trip 2019 — Nissan TH's marketing stunt taking a fleet of Leafs to Thailand's highest mountain peak (Doi Inthanon) to demonstrate range + climbing ability.
- Autolifethailand Minorchange 2023 — facelift coverage with full spec table.
- Known incidents / recalls: No major Thai-market Leaf recalls
publicly disclosed. Globally the ZE1 has had battery-degradation
controversies (the air-cooled pack degrades faster than liquid-
cooled competitors in hot climates — a structural concern for
Thai owners) but no formal recall.
[unverified — needs Thai DLT recall data]. - Pantip / customer feedback: Pantip threads on the Leaf are
notably sparse compared to BYD / MG / Tesla — reflecting the
Leaf's small TH owner base. The dominant Pantip narrative is
"Nissan should have brought the Leaf e+ 62 kWh" plus
"CHAdeMO is becoming a problem for fast-charging".
[unverified — needs Pantip thread URL capture].
All sources
Official Nissan
- Nissan TH — homepage (TH)
- Nissan TH — homepage (EN)
- Nissan TH — Leaf product page
- Nissan TH — Leaf specs
- Nissan TH — Hyper Tourer at BIMS 2024
- Nissan TH — Offers page
- Nissan ASEAN Newsroom
- Nissan ASEAN — Hyper Tourer BIMS 2024
- Nissan ASEAN — PEA Volta Verse MoU
- Nissan ASEAN — line integration TH
- Nissan ASEAN — NEXT showroom Bangkok 2024
- Nissan ASEAN — COTY 2026 (e-POWER)
- Nissan Global press — Mk3 Leaf reveal
- Nissan Global press — bring new Leaf to TH (2018 announcement)
Thai press
- HeadLightMag — Leaf launch 2018
- HeadLightMag — Leaf special price 2020
- HeadLightMag — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- HeadLightMag — Leaf full review 2019
- HeadLightMag — line integration
- Autolifethailand — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- Autolifethailand — Ariya preview 2022
- Car250 — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- AutoStation — Leaf 2023 minor change
- Sanook — Leaf 2019 launch
- Kapook — Leaf 2019 at Motor Expo 2018
- Car2Day — Ariya 2022 preview
- Bangkok Post — Nissan commits to Thai production
- Nation Thailand — denies factory closure
- Nation Thailand — Nissan Mk3 Leaf reveal
International press
- Wikipedia — Nissan Leaf
- Wikipedia — Nissan Ariya
- Wikipedia — Automotive industry in Thailand
- Electrek — Nissan cancels battery plant 2025
- Electrek — 2026 Mk3 Leaf first drive
- Motor1 — 2026 Mk3 Leaf
- InsideEVs — Doi Inthanon Leaf trip 2019
- Recharged — Ariya price forecast 2026
- Recharged — Leaf battery warranty
- GoAuto — Ariya BEV next year
- MarkLines — Nissan TH HEV focus 2025-27
- MarkLines — Nissan TH BIMS 2026 e-POWER model
- Zigwheels PH — Kicks e-POWER TH production
- Just-Auto — Nissan commits to Thai production
- Bloomberg — Nissan Motor Thailand profile
- Siam Motors Group — Nissan Motor Thailand
- EV-Database — Nissan Leaf 40 kWh global (search Leaf 40 kWh ZE1)
Spec aggregators / dealer directories
Nissan
1 รุ่น · 1 เทรนด์ · Japan
1 รุ่น · 1 เทรนด์ · Japan
- Importer
- Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. (wholly-owned subsidiary of Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. Yokohama; originally founded 1962 as the JV "Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd."; renamed in April 2009. Two adjacent vehicle plants in Bang Sao Thong, Samut Prakan — Plant 1 opened 1975, Plant 2 opened 2014)
- Distributors
- Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd.Wholly-owned subsidiary of Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (Yokohama). Direct sales, marketing, distribution, aftersales, and CKD vehicle assembly. TH since 1962 as Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd. JV; renamed in April 2009 after Renault-Nissan Alliance restructuring.Siam Motors Co., Ltd.Legacy 1962 JV partner (Phornprapha family conglomerate). Now distributor / dealer-operator only via Siam Nissan dealers (no equity in Nissan Motor Thailand).
▸ รุ่นรถ
▸ ความเคลื่อนไหวล่าสุด
- 2026-12-31subsidy changeEV3.5 local-production offset deadline (1:2 by end-2027)
Final deadline for EV3.5 participants to meet the 1:2 local-production offset (one EV imported in 2024 → two produced locally by end-2027). Determines whether brands can keep EV3.5 pricing in the years that follow.
- 2026-08-31subsidy changeEV3.5 1:1 local-production deadline for 2024 imports
Manufacturers who imported CBU EVs under EV3.5 in 2024 must complete 1:1 local production by 31 December 2026 to avoid penalties. Some brands extending the deadline. Affects pricing of locally-assembled vs CBU stock through 2026.
- 2025-11-10subsidy change80% annual road-tax discount for BEV expires
The 80% reduction on annual road tax for new factory-built BEVs registered between 1 Oct 2022 and 10 Nov 2025 stops accepting new entrants. Existing registrations keep the discount for the remaining year of validity.
- 2025-07-22subsidy changeEV Board adjusts EV3 / EV3.5 to favour exports
BoI/EV Board updates measures to encourage Thailand-built EV exports as cumulative supply-chain investment passes ฿137 billion. Local-production offset rules tightened. BEV registrations reported up 59% YoY for the first 9 months of 2025; cumulative EV3/EV3.5 registrations exceed 238,000 vehicles.
- 2024-02-01subsidy changeThailand EV3.5 subsidy package takes effect
Replaces EV3.0 — reduced per-vehicle subsidies and tighter local-production requirements through 2027.
- 2024-01-02subsidy changeEV3.5 effective date
EV3.5 measures legally take effect. EV3.0 subsidies sunset for new applicants; existing EV3.0 commitments still valid. Thai EV market sees inventory clearance pricing as manufacturers pivot.
- 2024-01-01subsidy changeExcise-tax cut for BEV ≤฿7M extended through 2027
Battery EVs priced up to ฿7,000,000 continue paying 2% excise (down from 8%) under EV3.5, extending the EV3.0 baseline.
- 2023-12-19subsidy changeCabinet approves EV3.5 — successor scheme
Successor 4-year package replacing EV3.0. Subsidy bands tightened: passenger BEV ≤฿2M with battery ≥50kWh receives ฿50,000–100,000; <50kWh receives ฿20,000–50,000; pickups ฿50,000–100,000; motorcycles ฿5,000–10,000. Excise stays at 2% for BEVs ≤฿7M. CBU import duty reduced up to 40% in 2024–2025. Local production offset: 1:2 by 2026, 1:3 by 2027.
- 2022-03-21subsidy changeEV3.0 takes effect — first subsidies disbursed
EV3.0 measures legally in force. Manufacturers begin signing MOUs with the Excise Department to access subsidies; passed-through to customer-facing prices over the following months.
- 2022-02-15subsidy changeEV3.0 package approved by Thai cabinet
Initial 3-year EV incentive package: per-unit subsidy of ฿70,000–150,000 for passenger BEVs based on battery size, excise tax cut from 8% to 2%, import-duty reduction up to 40% for CBUs, with 1:1 local-production offset by 2024 (extended to end-2025).
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▸ เกี่ยวกับ Nissan ในประเทศไทย
Nissan in Thailand
Canonical research doc. Source-of-truth for every Nissan BEV fact used by seed scripts, the brand page, and the AI advisor. Cite every claim inline. Mark
[unverified]rather than guess.Scope: BEV only. Nissan Thailand's electrified strategy is dominated by e-POWER series-hybrid technology (Kicks e-POWER, X-Trail e-POWER e-4ORCE, Serena e-POWER, and the new locally-built Kicks e-POWER produced at Samut Prakan from April 2026). e-POWER is NOT a BEV — it uses an ICE generator to feed electricity to the drive motor with a small buffer battery, and refuels with petrol. These models are out of evth Phase 1 BEV scope and are excluded from this document.
Only fully-battery-electric models on nissan.co.th's TH price list as of May 2026 are documented here. That is currently a single nameplate: Nissan LEAF (2nd-generation ZE1 Minorchange, CBU-Japan).
Range-standard hygiene (LOAD-BEARING). Nissan publishes NEDC range for the Leaf in Thailand (311 km). The Leaf was originally certified to JC08/NEDC and never received a WLTP figure for TH-market disclosure. WLTP-equivalent range for the ZE1 40 kWh is ~270 km (per Nissan Europe data) — apply only as
[unverified]derived estimate; the canonical Thai range figure is the 311 km NEDC number on the dealer brochure.Sub-brand naming. Unlike Toyota (bZ), Hyundai (Ioniq) or BMW (i), Nissan has no dedicated BEV sub-brand — Leaf and Ariya are positioned within the main Nissan lineup. Globally Nissan markets its electrified portfolio under the umbrella tagline "Nissan Intelligent Mobility", which spans BEV (Leaf, Ariya), e-POWER series-hybrid (Kicks, X-Trail, Serena, Note), and Nissan ProPILOT ADAS — but no separate dealer channel or naming convention for pure BEVs. In Thailand specifically, the marketing emphasis is overwhelmingly e-POWER, not BEV.
The TH BEV picture (May 2026):
- Leaf ZE1 Minorchange — sole production BEV on sale. CBU- Japan, 40 kWh, 311 km NEDC, ฿1,590,000. This is the 2018- vintage 2nd-gen platform that has been on Thai sale since Nov 2018 (originally ฿1,990,000), discounted to ฿1,490,000 in March 2020, then Minorchange-relaunched at ฿1,590,000 in August 2023. No CHAdeMO-to-CCS2 transition — the Leaf in TH still uses the legacy CHAdeMO DC fast-charge connector, a unique and increasingly orphaned standard in the TH market.
- Leaf Mk3 (3rd-generation, global launch 2025-06-17) — not confirmed for Thailand as of May 2026. Nissan's official global launch communications stated the Mk3 is initially "confirmed for Europe, America, and Japan." No Nissan Thailand press release or dealer indication of a TH-spec Mk3 Leaf. The current ฿1,590,000 listing on ZigWheels TH and Nissan TH labelled as "2026 Leaf" is the carryover ZE1 Minorchange, not the all-new Mk3 (CMF-EV platform).
- Ariya — never launched in Thailand. The Hyper Tourer EV concept (autonomous minivan) was displayed at BIMS 2024 as Nissan's electric showcase — but no production Ariya has been announced for the Thai market through May 2026.
Why so little BEV. Nissan Thailand's strategic bet is on e-POWER as the bridge technology rather than pure BEV — a reflection of the parent company's global EV stumbles (2025 Honda merger talks collapsed; +US$1 bn EV battery plant cancelled in May 2025; Plant 1 in Samut Prakan ceasing vehicle assembly to consolidate into Plant 2). Where BYD, MG, GWM, Tesla, Zeekr, Hyundai, BMW, Mercedes, and Volvo are all actively expanding their TH BEV portfolio, Nissan TH is retrenching to ICE + hybrid and betting that e-POWER's "EV-feel without charging anxiety" pitch wins more middle-market Thai buyers than a competitive BEV would. This positions Nissan as a legacy BEV brand in TH — present, historically pioneering (the Leaf was the first mass-market Japanese BEV in Thailand in 2018), but no longer a strategic BEV player in the 2026 market.
At a glance
- Distributor model: Wholly-owned subsidiary. Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. is 100% owned by Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (Yokohama). The company's roots trace to the 1962 JV "Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd." with Siam Motors (the Phornprapha family's conglomerate) — making Nissan the first Japanese automaker to build a plant in Thailand. Nissan progressively took full control during the 2000s, with the JV renamed Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. in April 2009 after Renault-Nissan Alliance restructuring. (Wikipedia — Automotive industry in Thailand; Siam Motors Group — Nissan Motor Thailand; Bloomberg profile)
- Entered Thailand: 1962 as Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd. JV. First plant at Soi Srichan, Sukhumvit 67, Bangkok — 120 employees, 4 cars/day initial capacity. Today the same legacy site has expanded to two adjacent plants in Bang Sao Thong, Samut Prakan province, immediately south-east of Bangkok.
- First BEV in TH: Nissan LEAF ZE1 — debuted at Motor Expo 2018 (Challenger Hall, IMPACT Muang Thong Thani) on 2018-11-28 at ฿1,990,000 CBU-Japan. Thailand was the first ASEAN market for the 2nd-generation Leaf, ahead of Malaysia (2019) and Singapore. The launch was framed as Nissan's flagship demonstration of "Intelligent Mobility" — but commercial uptake was extremely limited (HeadLightMag's full review was sub-titled "Why Thai customer Leave it on the showroom?"). (HeadLightMag launch; HeadLightMag full review; InsideEVs Doi Inthanon trip 2019)
- Models on sale (May 2026): 1 BEV nameplate — LEAF Minorchange (ZE1 2nd-gen, 40 kWh, CHAdeMO). Single trim. CBU- Japan. Listed on nissan.co.th's product page and ZigWheels TH. No Ariya. No Leaf Mk3. (Nissan TH — Leaf page; ZigWheels — Leaf 2026)
- Total current BEV trims on sale (May 2026): 1 — the Leaf Minorchange single trim. By a substantial margin Nissan has the smallest BEV lineup of any major brand active in Thailand, far behind BYD (11+ trims across 6 models), MG (8+ across 4 models), Tesla (5+), BMW (10+), and Zeekr (10 across 3 models).
- Current BEV price band: ฿1,590,000 (single trim, no spread).
- CKD vs CBU split (May 2026): CBU-Japan only. The Leaf is imported fully-built from Nissan Oppama plant (Yokosuka, Japan). No BEV is currently CKD-assembled in Thailand at either Samut Prakan plant — they manufacture ICE/Navara/Almera/Note/Kicks e-POWER and (from April 2026) the new-generation Kicks e-POWER for export across ASEAN. (MarkLines — Nissan TH e-POWER Bangkok Motor Show 2026)
- Local plant: Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. — Samut
Prakan complex (Plant 1 + Plant 2 adjacent in Bang Sao Thong
district, Samut Prakan province). Plant 1 (opened 1975) is
Nissan's oldest in Thailand and was for decades the primary
vehicle-assembly site. Plant 2 (opened 2014) is the newer,
larger facility built originally to support the eco-car programme.
As part of Nissan's 2025–2026 line-integration restructuring,
Plant 1 has ceased vehicle assembly and now houses body,
plastic, press shops, and logistics; all car assembly has
consolidated into Plant 2. Total combined site capacity:
~370,000 units/yr
[unverified — exact current capacity not publicly disclosed post-integration]. (Bangkok Post — Nissan commits to Thai production; Nation Thailand — denies factory closure, streamlining; ASEAN Nissan press — line integration) - Battery plant: None. No EV battery assembly in Thailand. Nissan announced in May 2025 that it was cancelling a planned US$1 bn+ battery plant as part of global restructuring (location: Kyushu, Japan — not TH). Thai BEV battery packs remain fully imported in the Leaf CBU. (Electrek — Nissan cancels battery plant 2025)
- e-POWER investment: ฿10.96 billion committed to expanding e-POWER series-hybrid production at Samut Prakan Plant 2, with the all-new Kicks e-POWER (P15 facelift) entering local production April 2026 and debuting at BIMS 2026 as a TH-built export model for ASEAN and beyond. This is Nissan TH's actual electrification strategy — not BEV. (Zigwheels PH — Kicks e-POWER TH production; MarkLines — new e-POWER model BIMS 2026)
- Showrooms (May 2026): 257 authorised Nissan dealers across
168 cities in Thailand, plus 144 service centres across 118
cities (ZigWheels directory data). Major dealer groups include
Siam Nissan Body & Service (legacy Phornprapha family),
Siam Nissan Automobile, plus the Nissan Retail Concept –
NEXT new-store format (first TH NEXT showroom opened 2024,
Bangkok; first Northeast Thailand NEXT store opened 2025). All
dealers carry the full Nissan lineup; EV-certified dealers are
a subset
[unverified count — Nissan TH does not publish a separate EV-dealer list]. (ZigWheels — Nissan TH dealers; ZigWheels — service centres; 9CarThai — Nissan dealers all; Nissan ASEAN press — NEXT Bangkok 2024) - Sales context: Nissan Thailand's total passenger-vehicle
sales have declined sharply through 2024–2025 amid Chinese-brand
pressure and ageing lineup. Specific BEV sales (Leaf) are
unpublished but estimated at <50 units/year based on DLT
registration data and HeadLightMag's commentary that the Leaf
"sits on the showroom floor" — a structural contrast to BYD
Atto 3's ~10,000-unit annual peak
[unverified specific Leaf registration count]. Nissan won 4 of the Car of the Year 2026 awards — but all 4 were for e-POWER models (Kicks, X-Trail, Serena), not the Leaf. (Nissan ASEAN — COTY 2026)
Nissan occupies a distinctive but diminished position in Thailand's BEV market. Three things make Nissan's TH BEV story distinct. First, Nissan was the first-mover among Japanese brands — the Leaf launched in TH in November 2018, four years before Toyota brought the bZ4X and five years before Honda's e:N1 TH debut. Second, Nissan is the only legacy brand still selling a CHAdeMO-connector EV in Thailand — the Leaf retains the original Japanese DC fast-charge standard that the rest of the TH market has abandoned in favour of CCS2. This makes the Leaf operationally awkward (only a subset of TH public DC chargers offer CHAdeMO, and new networks like Sharge / EleX / EVolt typically install CCS2-only). Third, Nissan's electrification pivot has gone wholly to e-POWER series-hybrid, not BEV — the parent company globally cancelled its 1bn-USD battery plant in May 2025 and has signalled retrenchment from pure-BEV development, instead positioning e-POWER as "the EV-feel for petrol drivers." Thailand's local strategy mirrors this: ฿10.96bn invested in Samut Prakan for e-POWER production, zero new investment announced for BEV CKD or battery assembly.
The competitive context: the Leaf's ฿1,590,000 list price puts it
in an awkward middle-band. Below it sit the BYD Atto 3
(฿899,900–959,900), MG ES (฿870,000), Neta V-II (฿549,000),
GWM Ora 03 (฿799,000–899,000), and the brand-new BYD Dolphin
(฿699,900–799,900) — all offering more range, CCS2 charging, and
fresher platforms for less money. At similar price sit the
BYD Atto 3 Extended (฿1,099,000), MG4 (฿789,000–1,069,000), Volvo
EX30 (฿1,549,000–1,749,000 CKD), and Tesla Model 3 LR (฿1.85m).
The Leaf's only remaining commercial argument is Nissan's legacy
service network (257 dealers) and the brand-trust premium of a
Japanese carmaker — but with the 40 kWh battery, 311 km NEDC
(realistic ~250 km), and orphan CHAdeMO connector, the value
proposition has eroded sharply since 2018.
The 2025–2026 Leaf Mk3 question is unresolved. Globally the all-new 3rd-generation Leaf (June 2025 reveal, CMF-EV platform shared with Ariya, ~75 kWh battery, ~600 km WLTP) is a wholesale reset for the nameplate — but Nissan's launch communication explicitly confirmed only Europe, North America, and Japan as initial markets. No Thai-spec Mk3 Leaf has been announced as of May 2026. The Mk3 would require CCS2 retrofit (it ships with CCS2 globally and adds NACS support in North America). If Nissan TH does eventually bring the Mk3, it would likely replace the ZE1 Minorchange rather than supplement it — but for now the ZE1 remains the sole BEV on the price list.
Distribution & business
Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. is the in-country sales, marketing, distribution, and aftersales subsidiary of Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (Yokohama). Headquartered in Bangkok. The President of Nissan Motor Thailand as of May 2026 is [unverified — Nissan TH does not prominently publish the current MD/President on the public site]. The company traces its roots to the 1962 JV with Siam Motors (the Phornprapha family conglomerate that also owns Siam Toyota, KIA Thailand, Siam Hitachi, etc.) — at founding it was Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd., a 50:50 JV with Siam Motors distributing and Nissan supplying CKD kits. Renault-Nissan Alliance formation in 1999 began the gradual unwinding; by April 2009 the JV was rebranded Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. with full Nissan operational control, although Siam Motors retains a residual dealer network presence through Siam Nissan dealers.
Unlike BMW (vertically-integrated subsidiary + own plant), BYD (third-party distributor Rêver Automotive), or Mercedes (subsidiary
- third-party CKD via TAAP), Nissan Thailand is a direct subsidiary that also owns its CKD plants — the closest comparator is Toyota Motor Thailand or Honda Automobile Thailand, both also wholly- owned manufacturer-subsidiaries with in-house plants. This vertical integration was unusual in 1962 but standard for the Big Three Japanese OEMs by the 1990s.
Corporate structure
| Entity | Role | Founded | Ownership |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. | Sales, marketing, distribution, aftersales, vehicle assembly | 1962 (as JV); 2009 renamed | 100 % Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. |
| Siam Motors Co., Ltd. | Legacy JV partner — now distributor / dealer-operator only | 1952 | Phornprapha family (independent) |
| Siam Nissan Body & Service | Bodywork / paint repair operator | [unverified founding] |
Siam Motors Group |
Comparative distribution model
| Brand | Distribution model | TH assembly | Local equity holder |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nissan | Direct subsidiary + wholly-owned CKD | Samut Prakan Plant 1 + 2 (Nissan-owned) | None (Siam Motors retains dealer network only) |
| Toyota | Direct subsidiary + wholly-owned CKD | Samrong / Gateway / Ban Pho | None |
| Honda | Direct subsidiary + wholly-owned CKD | Ayutthaya / Prachinburi | None |
| BMW | Direct subsidiary + wholly-owned CKD | BMW Manufacturing TH (Rayong, BMW-owned) | None |
| Mercedes-Benz | Subsidiary + third-party CKD | TAAP (Thai-family) | Thonburi Group (assembler) |
| Tesla | Direct subsidiary | None — CBU only | None |
| BYD | Single Thai distributor | Rayong (BYD-owned) | Siam Motors family (distributor only) |
Manufacturing — Nissan Samut Prakan complex
- Site: Soi Srichan / Theparak Road, Bang Sao Thong district, Samut Prakan province, ~25 km south-east of central Bangkok. Two adjacent plants on the same site.
- Plant 1 — opened 1975 (originally relocated/expanded from the 1962 Soi Srichan site). Historically the primary vehicle assembly facility for Navara, Almera, March, Note, Sunny, Sentra, X-Trail, Teana. As of 2025, ceased vehicle assembly and converted to body / plastic / press / logistics. (Nation Thailand — line integration)
- Plant 2 — opened 2014. Newer expansion site, built originally for the Eco-Car Phase II programme. All vehicle assembly is now consolidated here post-2025 line-integration. Produces Almera, Navara, Note, Kicks e-POWER, and (from April 2026) the new- generation Kicks e-POWER for ASEAN export. (Zigwheels PH — Kicks production launch)
- Owner: Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd. — 100 % Nissan Motor Co., Ltd.
- Models historically CKD-assembled: Bluebird (1962–90s), Sunny,
Sentra, Cefiro, Teana, March, Almera, Note, Navara, Frontier,
Sylphy, Pulsar, X-Trail, Kicks (P15, e-POWER), Leaf
[Leaf was NOT CKD-assembled in Thailand — confirmed CBU-Japan throughout the ZE1 lifecycle]. - First BEV model assembled (CKD): None. No Nissan BEV has ever been CKD-assembled in Thailand. This contrasts sharply with Toyota (bZ4X plans), Honda (e:N1 CKD), and the Chinese brands (BYD, MG, GWM, Neta, GAC Aion — all CKD in TH).
- Annual output (post-integration): ~150,000–200,000 vehicles/
year combined
[unverified — Nissan does not publicly disclose post-restructuring Samut Prakan unit volume; pre-2025 capacity was ~370,000 across both plants]. - Battery plant: None. Globally Nissan cancelled its US$1bn+ battery plant project in May 2025 (Kyushu, Japan). No battery assembly is planned for Thailand. Leaf CBU includes the fully-imported 40 kWh battery pack from Japan.
Showrooms / service / parts
| Metric | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Nissan Authorised Dealers (May 2026) | 257 across 168 cities | ZigWheels — Nissan TH |
| Nissan Service Centres | 144 across 118 cities | ZigWheels — Service Centres |
| Bangkok dealer count | 10 | ZigWheels Bangkok |
| Cities covered | 168 | ZigWheels |
| Dealer model | Multi-dealer authorised retail + service, "Nissan Retail Concept – NEXT" upgrade format rolling out | Nissan ASEAN — NEXT Bangkok 2024 |
| Online showroom | nissan.co.th (limited e-commerce; reservation flow only) | Nissan TH |
| EV-certified dealers | [unverified — Nissan TH does not publish a separate EV-dealer list; Leaf service-trained dealers are a subset] |
— |
Nissan Thailand has by far the largest service footprint of any
BEV-selling brand in the country — 257 dealers vs ~29 for BMW, ~24
for Tesla, ~46 for BYD via Rêver. This is the legacy moat Nissan
inherits from 60+ years of ICE-market presence. The trade-off: very
few of those 257 dealers are EV-fluent. Siam Motors Group dealers
(legacy Phornprapha-family franchise) dominate the southern provinces
and Isan; Yontrakit Group has strong Bangkok central presence;
Greenwich Auto covers Chiang Mai north. The Nissan Retail
Concept – NEXT programme (launched 2024) is Nissan's global
showroom refresh — modular interior, digital configurators, EV-charge
demo bays — currently rolled out to a handful of flagship stores
with full ASEAN rollout planned through 2027 [unverified specific TH NEXT-store count].
Charging network partnerships
- PEA Volta / PEA Volta Verse — Nissan signed an MoU with the Provincial Electricity Authority (PEA) for joint EV charging service development, focused on PEA Volta Verse (the PEA's public-charging app). Target was 263 PEA charging touchpoints by end-2023 across highways, secondary routes, and tourist areas. Nissan supplies Leaf data + co-research; PEA operates the charging hardware. This is Nissan TH's only formal charging partnership. (Nissan ASEAN — PEA MoU; ETN News coverage)
- CHAdeMO connector availability — the Leaf is the only
current TH-market BEV that requires CHAdeMO. CHAdeMO-equipped
public DC fast-chargers in TH are a shrinking subset, available
at EleX by EGAT (some stations dual-port CCS2 + CHAdeMO),
PEA Volta (some stations), and a handful of legacy stations.
Newer networks (Sharge, EVolt, EA Anywhere / EleX
partner sites, EV Station PluZ by OR) are typically
CCS2-only — meaning Leaf owners have meaningfully fewer
fast-charge options than CCS2 EV owners.
[unverified — exact count of CHAdeMO public chargers in TH as of May 2026; estimated 100–200 across the country versus 3,000+ CCS2 ports]. - No home wallbox partnership — Nissan TH does not bundle a
home wallbox with Leaf purchase (a notable gap versus BMW's
free 11 kW Wallbox, Mercedes's MBSP charger, BYD's home charger
included). Buyers source third-party hardware.
[unverified — may have changed; not confirmed on May 2026 Nissan TH offers page].
Warranty terms (Nissan Leaf TH)
- Vehicle warranty: 3 years / 100,000 km (one of the shortest in the segment — BMW gives 4 yrs, Volvo gives 5 yrs, BYD gives 6 yrs vehicle warranty in TH).
- High-voltage battery warranty: 8 years / 160,000 km (industry-standard; covers capacity loss below 9 of 12 bars on the dashboard battery-state-of-health gauge).
- EV system warranty: 5 years / 100,000 km (motor, inverter, on-board charger, BMS).
- Roadside assistance: 3 years (matches vehicle warranty).
- Wallbox warranty: N/A — no wallbox bundled with the Leaf purchase.
Sources for warranty + ownership package: HeadLightMag — official launch 2018; HeadLightMag — Minorchange 2023; Autolifethailand — Minorchange 2023
[unverified — current TH-market warranty terms may have been extended; the above reflect 2018 launch + 2023 Minorchange disclosures, not confirmed for May 2026 carryover]
LEAF — C-segment electric hatchback (ZE1 Minorchange)
Nissan's flagship BEV — and globally the best-selling EV of all time until 2020 (when overtaken by Tesla Model 3 cumulative sales). The Leaf is a C-segment 5-door hatchback on the dedicated Leaf platform shared with the original 2010 1st-generation Leaf. The 2nd-generation ZE1 was introduced globally in 2017 (TH: 2018), received a mid-life Minorchange facelift in 2023 that updated the V-Motion grille, LED lighting, and infotainment, and continues to be sold in Thailand through May 2026 as the only Nissan BEV available.
The Leaf competes directly against the BYD Atto 3 (LFP, more range,
฿700k less), MG ES (฿700k less), GWM Ora 03 (฿700k less), and at
the upper end the MG4 Long Range (฿500k less). At its current
price point, it has effectively no defensible competitive advantage
other than the Nissan service network — the platform is 8+ years old,
the battery (40 kWh) is half the size of mainstream 2026 BEVs, the
CHAdeMO connector is an orphan standard, and the range (311 km NEDC,
~250 km real-world) is below the segment.
Lineage & platform
- Generation: ZE1 — 2nd generation, global debut 2017-09, Thailand launch 2018-11-28. Minorchange (facelift) globally launched 2022-09, TH-spec Minorchange launched 2023-08-09.
- Platform: Nissan EV Platform (dedicated, derived from Renault-Nissan B-platform) — predecessor to the modern CMF-EV platform that underpins the Ariya and the 3rd-generation Leaf Mk3.
- Shared with: No other current Nissan model — the ZE1 platform is Leaf-exclusive globally.
- Architecture: 400 V
- Battery technology: AESC NMC pouch cells (Automotive Energy Supply Corp — Nissan's original battery JV with NEC; now owned by Envision AESC Group). 40 kWh gross / ~37 kWh usable. Air-cooled (no liquid cooling — a known limitation in hot Thai climate, can lead to charge-rate throttling and faster long-term degradation).
- Origin (TH): CBU-Japan — built at Nissan Oppama Plant, Yokosuka, Kanagawa.
Lineup events / timeline
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 2018-11-28 (TH launch) | Leaf 2018 ฿1,990,000 debut at Motor Expo at Challenger Hall, IMPACT Muang Thonburi. Single trim, CBU-Japan, 40 kWh, NEDC 311 km. 3-year / 100,000 km vehicle warranty; 8 yr / 160,000 km battery; 5 yr / 100,000 km EV-system warranty. (HeadLightMag launch; Sanook) |
| 2020-03 (price-cut) | Special price ฿1,490,000 (−฿500,000 / −25 %). Nissan TH's response to weak commercial uptake. Same spec, same ZE1, just discounted MSRP. (HeadLightMag special price; TimeOut Bangkok) |
| 2023-08-09 | Leaf Minorchange ฿1,590,000 — facelift relaunch with new V-Motion grille, full-LED matrix headlamps, LED DRL + fog, refreshed interior trim, updated 8" infotainment with Apple CarPlay / Android Auto. Same 40 kWh battery, same NEDC 311 km range, same CHAdeMO. Price uplifted ฿100k from 2020 discounted level. (HeadLightMag Minorchange; Autolifethailand Minorchange) |
| 2025-06-17 (global Mk3 reveal) | 3rd-generation Leaf (CMF-EV) revealed globally — fundamentally new platform shared with Ariya, ~75 kWh battery options, CCS2 + NACS (North America), ~600 km WLTP. Launch markets: Europe, North America, Japan only. No Thai-spec Mk3 announced. (Nation Thailand — Mk3 reveal; Nissan Global press) |
| 2026 carryover | ZigWheels TH lists "Leaf 2026 ฿1,590,000" — confirmed via spec (40 kWh, 311 km NEDC) to be the ZE1 Minorchange carryover, not the Mk3. No update or replacement announced. (ZigWheels — Leaf 2026; Nissan TH page) |
Trims
Leaf Minorchange — leaf (single trim, MY2024–2026 carryover) ฿1,590,000
| Spec | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Launch MSRP (2018-11-28) | ฿1,990,000 | HeadLightMag launch |
| Discounted MSRP (2020-03) | ฿1,490,000 | HeadLightMag |
| Minorchange MSRP (2023-08-09) | ฿1,590,000 | HeadLightMag Minorchange |
| Current MSRP (May 2026, carryover) | ฿1,590,000 | ZigWheels 2026 |
| Battery (kWh) gross / usable | 40 / ~37 | HeadLightMag |
| Battery chemistry | NMC (lithium-ion pouch, AESC) | HeadLightMag launch |
| Cell supplier | AESC (Envision AESC Group, ex Nissan-NEC JV) | derived; AESC supplies all global Leafs |
| Voltage architecture | 400 V (~360 V nominal) | EV-Database (global) |
| Cell format | Pouch, air-cooled (no liquid TMS) | derived |
| Range (NEDC) | 311 km | HeadLightMag Minorchange |
| Range (WLTP equivalent) | ~270 km [unverified — derived from Nissan Europe ZE1 40kWh data; not TH-certified] |
Nissan Europe Leaf 40kWh |
| Real-world range estimate | ~220–260 km mixed driving [unverified — owner reports] |
community |
| Drive | FWD | HeadLightMag |
| Front motor | 110 kW / 150 PS / 320 Nm (EM57 synchronous AC) | HeadLightMag; Autolifethailand |
| Rear motor | — (FWD single-motor) | — |
| Combined power | 110 kW (150 PS) | same |
| Combined torque | 320 Nm | same |
| 0–100 km/h | 7.9 s | Autolifethailand |
| Top speed | 155 km/h | same |
| AC charging | 6.6 kW (Type 2; NOT 11 kW — a notable spec limitation versus mainstream BEVs) | HeadLightMag Minorchange |
| AC charge 0–100 % | ~6 hours at 6.6 kW | same |
| DC charging peak | ~50 kW (CHAdeMO) [verify TH spec — global ZE1 40 kWh peaks at 46–50 kW CHAdeMO] |
EV-Database |
| DC connector | CHAdeMO (NOT CCS2 — orphan standard in TH) | HeadLightMag |
| DC 10–80 % | ~40–60 min (varies with temperature; air-cooled pack throttles in heat) | derived |
| V2L / V2H output | None (the ZE1 internationally supported CHAdeMO V2X via dedicated unit but no TH V2L kit is bundled) | [unverified] |
| Connectors | Type 2 (AC) + CHAdeMO (DC) | HeadLightMag |
| Seats | 5 | HeadLightMag |
| Wheels | 17″ alloy | Autolifethailand |
| Tire spec | 215/50 R17 [unverified — derived from global ZE1 Minorchange] |
derived |
| L × W × H | 4,490 × 1,790 × 1,540 mm | Autolifethailand |
| Wheelbase | 2,700 mm | same |
| Ground clearance | ~150 mm [unverified] |
derived |
| Curb weight | ~1,580 kg | EV-Database (global 40 kWh) |
| Trunk capacity | 435 L (under-floor charging-cable storage) | Nissan TH spec page |
| Frunk capacity | None | derived |
| Towing capacity | Not rated for towing | derived |
| Drag coefficient (Cd) | 0.28 | Nissan global press |
| Origin (May 2026) | CBU-Japan (Nissan Oppama Plant, Yokosuka) | derived |
Standard equipment (Leaf Minorchange)
- V-Motion front grille (Minorchange redesign — blank closed panel with chrome accent)
- Full-LED headlamps with auto high-beam assist + LED DRL + LED fog
- 8-inch touchscreen infotainment with Apple CarPlay (wired) and Android Auto (wired)
- 7-inch digital cluster (TFT) + analogue speedometer hybrid
- Around View Monitor (AVM) — Nissan's 360° camera system
- ProPILOT Level 2 ADAS — Intelligent Cruise Control + Steering Assist (single-lane only, not multi-lane like Tesla AP)
- Intelligent Emergency Braking with Pedestrian Detection
- Intelligent Lane Intervention (active lane-keep)
- Intelligent Driver Alertness (drowsiness alert)
- Blind Spot Warning + Rear Cross Traffic Alert
- e-Pedal — one-pedal driving mode (regen up to 0.2g, full stop)
- Synthetic-leather seats with 6-way manual driver / 4-way
manual passenger
[verify if heated] - Climate control — automatic single-zone
- Heat pump —
[unverified — Nissan ZE1 Minorchange globally offered heat pump as standard in cold-climate markets; TH-spec may have it deleted given no cold-climate use case] - Wireless smartphone charging pad —
[unverified TH spec] - 6.6 kW Mode 3 AC charging cable (Type 2) — included
- CHAdeMO DC charging — supported (cable purchased separately or accessed at public chargers)
Distinctive features (vs the global Leaf e+ 62 kWh, NOT sold in TH)
- 40 kWh battery, not 62 kWh — Thailand never received the Leaf e+ variant (also known as Leaf Plus / Leaf 62 kWh) with the larger 62 kWh battery and 215 km / 217 hp powertrain. Only the base 40 kWh spec has ever been sold in TH.
- CHAdeMO — the global Leaf supports CHAdeMO worldwide; in markets like Europe and North America there are large CHAdeMO networks; in Thailand CHAdeMO is rare and shrinking.
- No e-4ORCE AWD — TH only ever received the single-motor FWD spec; no AWD or rear-motor option.
Colors (Leaf Minorchange TH)
[unverified — Nissan TH does not publicly publish the full color palette for the Leaf Minorchange. Below is the derived global ZE1 Minorchange palette; needs configurator capture to confirm TH availability]
| Name (EN / TH) | Hex [unverified — derived from Nissan global palette] |
Available on |
|---|---|---|
| Pearl White (solid) | #F0F0F0 |
Leaf (no-cost) |
| Brilliant Silver metallic | #C8C8C8 |
Leaf |
| Gun Metallic | #5F6168 |
Leaf |
| Super Black | #0B0B0F |
Leaf |
| Deep Blue Pearl | #1A2E50 |
Leaf |
| Two-tone Black/White | — | Leaf (premium option, global; TH avail [unverified]) |
Image catalogue
[unverified — no Supabase Storage hero captured yet; should pull from Nissan TH press kit + nissan.co.th gallery for canonical images. The Nissan-issued image set for the Leaf Minorchange (post- 2022 facelift) includes hero 3/4 front, side, rear, interior dash, charging port detail, ProPILOT functional demo]
Versus competitors
| Spec | Leaf Minorchange ฿1,590,000 | BYD Atto 3 Extended ฿1,099,000 | MG4 Long Range ฿1,069,000 | Volvo EX30 Single Motor Extended ฿1,549,000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Battery (kWh usable) | 37 | 60.5 (LFP Blade) | 64 | 64 |
| Range (TH-cert) | 311 km NEDC | 480 km NEDC | 530 km NEDC | 480 km WLTP |
| Power | 110 kW | 150 kW | 150 kW | 200 kW |
| DC charge peak | ~50 kW (CHAdeMO) | 80 kW (CCS2) | 140 kW (CCS2) | 153 kW (CCS2) |
| Drive | FWD | FWD | RWD | RWD |
| 0–100 km/h | 7.9 s | 7.3 s | 7.7 s | 5.7 s |
| TH origin | CBU-Japan | CKD-TH (Rayong) | CKD-TH (Chonburi) | CKD-TH (Geely Rayong) |
| Warranty (vehicle) | 3 yr | 6 yr | 4 yr | 5 yr |
| Connector | CHAdeMO ⚠ | CCS2 | CCS2 | CCS2 |
Sources
- Nissan TH — Leaf product page (TH)
- Nissan TH — Leaf product page (EN)
- Nissan TH — Leaf specifications
- HeadLightMag — Leaf official launch 2018
- HeadLightMag — Leaf special price 2020
- HeadLightMag — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- HeadLightMag — Leaf full review 2019
- Autolifethailand — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- Car250 — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- AutoStation — Leaf 2023 minor change
- Sanook — Leaf 2019 launch
- Kapook — Leaf 2019 at Motor Expo 2018
- InsideEVs — Leaf Doi Inthanon trip 2019
- ZigWheels TH — Leaf 2026
- ZigWheels TH — Leaf 2025 specs
- Wikipedia — Nissan Leaf
- EV-Database — Nissan Leaf 40 kWh (global ZE1 40 kWh)
Verification matrix
| Field | ✓/◐/✗ | Source | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current MSRP (฿1,590,000) | ✓ | ZigWheels 2026; HeadLightMag Minorchange 2023 | Confirmed via dealer + multiple Thai press sources |
| Launch MSRP (฿1,990,000 / 2018-11-28) | ✓ | HeadLightMag launch | Multiple primary sources |
| Battery kWh (40 gross) | ✓ | HeadLightMag, Autolifethailand | Global ZE1 40 kWh spec — confirmed TH |
| Battery usable kWh (~37) | ◐ | EV-Database (global) | TH-specific usable kWh not separately published; standard ZE1 figure |
| Battery chemistry (NMC, AESC) | ✓ | Nissan global press | AESC supplies all Leaf cells |
| Cell format (pouch) + air-cooled TMS | ✓ | Nissan global press | Confirmed |
| Range NEDC (311 km) | ✓ | HeadLightMag, Autolifethailand | Multiple sources |
| Range WLTP equivalent (~270 km) | ✗ | derived from Nissan Europe | NOT TH-certified; informational only |
| Front motor power (110 kW / 150 PS) | ✓ | HeadLightMag, Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| Torque (320 Nm) | ✓ | same | Confirmed |
| 0–100 km/h (7.9 s) | ✓ | Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| Top speed (155 km/h) | ✓ | Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| AC charging (6.6 kW Type 2) | ✓ | HeadLightMag Minorchange | Confirmed |
| DC charging peak (~50 kW CHAdeMO) | ◐ | EV-Database (global) | Specific TH DC peak not published; global ZE1 40 kWh figure |
| DC connector (CHAdeMO) | ✓ | HeadLightMag Minorchange | Confirmed |
| V2L/V2H | ✗ | — | No TH-bundled V2X kit confirmed |
| L × W × H (4490 × 1790 × 1540) | ✓ | Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| Wheelbase (2700 mm) | ✓ | Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| Curb weight (~1580 kg) | ◐ | EV-Database (global) | TH-specific not published |
| Trunk capacity (435 L) | ✓ | Nissan TH spec page | Confirmed |
| Cd (0.28) | ◐ | Nissan global | TH-specific not published; global ZE1 Minorchange figure |
| Wheels (17″) | ✓ | Autolifethailand | Confirmed |
| Origin (CBU-Japan, Oppama) | ◐ | derived | Nissan TH confirms CBU; specific plant (Oppama) not Thai-press confirmed but is the global Leaf source plant |
| Heat pump (standard?) | ✗ | — | TH spec for heat-pump option not confirmed |
| Wireless charging pad | ✗ | — | TH spec not confirmed |
| Seat heaters | ✗ | — | TH spec not confirmed |
| Color palette | ✗ | — | TH-specific configurator palette not captured |
| Image catalogue (hero etc.) | ✗ | — | Not yet captured to Supabase Storage |
| Mk3 (3rd-gen) availability in TH | ✓ (negative) | Nissan Global launch press | Confirmed NOT launched in TH; "Europe, America, Japan only" |
ARIYA — [NOT LAUNCHED IN THAILAND]
The Nissan Ariya (D-segment electric crossover, CMF-EV platform, 2022 global launch) is Nissan's premium BEV — a 5-seat crossover positioned against the Volkswagen ID.4, Tesla Model Y, BMW iX1, Mercedes EQA, Toyota bZ4X, and Hyundai Ioniq 5. It has never been launched in Thailand.
Status
- Global launch: 2022-06 (Japan first), 2022-09 (Europe), 2023-01 (North America).
- ASEAN launch: Hong Kong + Singapore (CBU-Japan, 2024–2025). No production ASEAN market has received the Ariya through May 2026. (Wikipedia — Nissan Ariya)
- Thailand status: Not on sale. Not announced. The closest Nissan came was displaying the Hyper Tourer concept (electric autonomous minivan, not a production Ariya) at BIMS 2024 (45th Bangkok International Motor Show, 2024-03-27 to 2024-04-07, IMPACT Muang Thong Thani). Thailand was the first market outside Japan to see the Hyper Tourer — but no production Ariya has followed. (Nissan ASEAN press — Hyper Tourer BIMS 2024; Nissan TH news — Hyper Tourer)
- Pre-2022 Thai-media speculation: In 2022, Car2Day and other Thai automotive outlets reported the Ariya was "coming to Thailand in 2022 with up to 610 km range" — based on Nissan ASEAN soft- launch statements at the time. The Ariya did not actually launch in TH in 2022, 2023, 2024, or 2025. (Car2Day 2022 speculation; Autolifethailand 2022 preview)
- 2026 outlook: Globally, 2025 was the final US model year for the Ariya, with Nissan pausing 2026 MY production amid the broader EV strategy retrenchment. This makes a Thai launch increasingly unlikely in the near term. Nissan's stated TH pipeline (5 new models 2025–2027) is e-POWER-focused, not BEV. (Recharged.com — Ariya price forecast 2026; MarkLines — Nissan TH HEV focus)
Verification matrix
| Field | ✓/◐/✗ | Source | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ariya on sale in TH (May 2026) | ✓ (negative) | Nissan TH product index — no Ariya listed | Confirmed NOT on sale |
| Ariya announced for TH | ✓ (negative) | Nissan ASEAN press searches; no Thai launch press | Hyper Tourer concept only |
| BIMS 2024 Hyper Tourer display | ✓ | Nissan ASEAN | Confirmed concept display only |
Cross-model lineup history
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1962 | Siam Motors and Nissan Co., Ltd. JV established. First Japanese automaker plant in Thailand. |
| 1975 | Samut Prakan Plant 1 opens (relocated/expanded from 1962 Soi Srichan site). |
| 2009-04 | JV renamed Nissan Motor (Thailand) Co., Ltd.; Nissan takes full operational control. |
| 2014 | Samut Prakan Plant 2 opens — built for Eco-Car Phase II programme. |
| 2018-11-28 | Nissan Leaf launched in Thailand at Motor Expo, ฿1,990,000 CBU-Japan. First mass-market Japanese-brand BEV in TH. |
| 2020-03 | Leaf discounted to ฿1,490,000 (−25 %) in response to weak commercial uptake. |
| 2023-08-09 | Leaf Minorchange facelift launched at ฿1,590,000 — facelift refresh, same battery / range / connector. |
| 2024-03-27 → 04-07 | BIMS 2024 — Nissan displays Hyper Tourer EV concept (first display outside Japan) — but no production BEV launch. |
| 2025-05 | Nissan globally cancels US$1 bn battery plant project — confirms global EV retrenchment. |
| 2025-06-17 | Global Mk3 Leaf reveal — initial markets Europe / America / Japan only. No TH announcement. |
| 2025 | Plant 1 ceases vehicle assembly; all car production consolidated to Plant 2 ("line integration"). |
| 2026-04 | All-new Kicks e-POWER (P15 facelift) enters local production at Plant 2 — TH-built for ASEAN export. e-POWER, not BEV. |
| 2026 BIMS | Nissan debuts new TH-built e-POWER model. No BEV news. |
Sales / market position
- Leaf TH sales: Not separately disclosed by Nissan TH or DLT
monthly registrations. HeadLightMag's 2019 full review headlined
"Why Thai customer Leave it on the showroom?" — capturing the
commercial reality that the Leaf has been a marketing exercise
more than a volume product in TH. Estimated <50 units/year
through the ZE1 lifecycle
[unverified — needs DLT data pull]. - Notable reviews:
- HeadLightMag Full Review 2019 — exhaustive Thai-language review of the ZE1; commercially critical.
- InsideEVs — Doi Inthanon trip 2019 — Nissan TH's marketing stunt taking a fleet of Leafs to Thailand's highest mountain peak (Doi Inthanon) to demonstrate range + climbing ability.
- Autolifethailand Minorchange 2023 — facelift coverage with full spec table.
- Known incidents / recalls: No major Thai-market Leaf recalls
publicly disclosed. Globally the ZE1 has had battery-degradation
controversies (the air-cooled pack degrades faster than liquid-
cooled competitors in hot climates — a structural concern for
Thai owners) but no formal recall.
[unverified — needs Thai DLT recall data]. - Pantip / customer feedback: Pantip threads on the Leaf are
notably sparse compared to BYD / MG / Tesla — reflecting the
Leaf's small TH owner base. The dominant Pantip narrative is
"Nissan should have brought the Leaf e+ 62 kWh" plus
"CHAdeMO is becoming a problem for fast-charging".
[unverified — needs Pantip thread URL capture].
All sources
Official Nissan
- Nissan TH — homepage (TH)
- Nissan TH — homepage (EN)
- Nissan TH — Leaf product page
- Nissan TH — Leaf specs
- Nissan TH — Hyper Tourer at BIMS 2024
- Nissan TH — Offers page
- Nissan ASEAN Newsroom
- Nissan ASEAN — Hyper Tourer BIMS 2024
- Nissan ASEAN — PEA Volta Verse MoU
- Nissan ASEAN — line integration TH
- Nissan ASEAN — NEXT showroom Bangkok 2024
- Nissan ASEAN — COTY 2026 (e-POWER)
- Nissan Global press — Mk3 Leaf reveal
- Nissan Global press — bring new Leaf to TH (2018 announcement)
Thai press
- HeadLightMag — Leaf launch 2018
- HeadLightMag — Leaf special price 2020
- HeadLightMag — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- HeadLightMag — Leaf full review 2019
- HeadLightMag — line integration
- Autolifethailand — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- Autolifethailand — Ariya preview 2022
- Car250 — Leaf Minorchange 2023
- AutoStation — Leaf 2023 minor change
- Sanook — Leaf 2019 launch
- Kapook — Leaf 2019 at Motor Expo 2018
- Car2Day — Ariya 2022 preview
- Bangkok Post — Nissan commits to Thai production
- Nation Thailand — denies factory closure
- Nation Thailand — Nissan Mk3 Leaf reveal
International press
- Wikipedia — Nissan Leaf
- Wikipedia — Nissan Ariya
- Wikipedia — Automotive industry in Thailand
- Electrek — Nissan cancels battery plant 2025
- Electrek — 2026 Mk3 Leaf first drive
- Motor1 — 2026 Mk3 Leaf
- InsideEVs — Doi Inthanon Leaf trip 2019
- Recharged — Ariya price forecast 2026
- Recharged — Leaf battery warranty
- GoAuto — Ariya BEV next year
- MarkLines — Nissan TH HEV focus 2025-27
- MarkLines — Nissan TH BIMS 2026 e-POWER model
- Zigwheels PH — Kicks e-POWER TH production
- Just-Auto — Nissan commits to Thai production
- Bloomberg — Nissan Motor Thailand profile
- Siam Motors Group — Nissan Motor Thailand
- EV-Database — Nissan Leaf 40 kWh global (search Leaf 40 kWh ZE1)
