The 2026 JAC Hunter dual-cab is set to become the cheapest plug-in hybrid (PHEV) ute available in Australia, undercutting not only the top-selling BYD Shark 6, but the GWM Cannon Alpha PHEV and Ford Ranger PHEV.

JAC says the Hunter will be priced from “under $50,000” before on-road costs when local order books open at 5:00pm AEST today (May 5, 2026), ahead of first Australian deliveries in the third quarter of this year (July to September).

That would make it cheaper than the current price leader, the PHEV-only Shark 6 dual-cab, which was introduced in February 2025 with a single-spec ‘Premium’ pickup priced at $57,900 before on-road costs, before additional variants – including the Dynamic cab/chassis at $55,900 plus on-roads and the more powerful Performance flagship at $62,900 plus ORCs – joined the range last month.

It would also undercut the GWM Cannon Alpha PHEV, which is currently priced from $54,490 drive-away for the entry-level Lux variant.

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The four-grade Ford Ranger PHEV lineup remains the most expensive, despite recent price cuts of about $10,000 for outgoing 2026 model-year (MY26) vehicles, and is now advertised from $62,000 drive-away.

“Our focus was simple: deliver a truly work-ready ute with class-leading power, serious towing capability and outstanding efficiency, without the premium price tag,” JAC Motors Australia managing director Ahmed Mahmoud said in a statement.

The first 1000 customers to reserve a Hunter PHEV will receive either a home charger or a $500 JAC genuine accessories voucher.

The Hunter PHEV will be the second JAC model in Australian showrooms, joining the diesel-powered T9 dual-cab ute, and has undergone local powertrain validation and chassis testing.