Australian new-car buyers can’t trust the official fuel consumption figures for the vast majority of models now tested in the real world by the Australian Automobile Association (AAA).

Following its latest round of federal government-funded testing, Australia’s peak motoring body has now compared the actual fuel consumption and emissions of 141 new petrol, diesel and hybrid models against the official claims displayed on the window stickers of new vehicles in showrooms.

The latest results, published at realworld.org.au, show about 80 per cent of models tested couldn’t match their window-label number, with variations of up to 25 per cent.

The petrol GWM Tank 300 off-road SUV was the furthest away from its official claim, with its 11.9L/100km test result 25 per cent above its official combined fuel consumption figure of 9.5L/100km.

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Previous testing has shown even bigger variations of up to 35 per cent above official fuel consumption figures.

Diesel-powered models in the latest tests included the Kia Tasman ute – the Korean brand’s first rival for the Ford Ranger and Toyota HiLux.

The Tasman used four per cent more fuel in its real-world test, at 8.4L/100km against its official figure of 8.1L/100km.

The BYD Seal and BMW iX1 were the only electric vehicles (EVs) in the latest round of testing. Both fell well short of their claimed range on a single battery charge, with the iX1 found to fall 10 per cent short and the Seal 25 per cent off.

A total of 11 EVs have been tested so far, with results ranging from 3.0 per cent better than claimed to as much as 31 per cent worse than the official claimed range.