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In less than two years, Zeekr has gone from a complete unknown to a genuine contender in Australia’s EV market.

March 2026 marked a turning point. Exclusive VFACTS data due to be released next week shows more than 700 deliveries in a single month, a record for the brand, driven largely by the 7X mid-size SUV.

But the more telling detail sits behind that headline. There are already more than 3000 vehicles on the water that have effectively been spoken for.

That is not just demand. It suggests real momentum, and a level of brand pull that is starting to build.

And importantly, it’s momentum that’s not being driven by product alone, but increasingly underpinned by growing confidence in the ownership experience behind it.

We sat down with Zeekr Australia managing director Frank Li to understand how it has happened so quickly.

Aftersales: Where Zeekr is investing for the long term

If a product draws people in, aftersales is what ultimately decides whether they stay.

For emerging brands in Australia, that is where things tend to fall over. Trust is hard won and easily lost, and the ownership experience is what sticks. It’s what turns early adopters into advocates, or not.

“It’s always easy to say we give you seven years’ warranty,” says Mr Li. “But the hard thing is how you manage it when something actually happens.”

That’s the lens through which Zeekr is approaching the market. Aftersales isn’t a support function; it’s central to how the brand expects to be judged.

Rather than reacting once volume arrives, Zeekr is building its aftersales infrastructure in parallel with demand, designed to scale alongside the brand’s rapid growth.

The focus is deliberately practical: parts availability, repair timelines, and what happens when a customer is left without a car.

If Zeekr can deliver on what it has promised, it won’t just be another fast‑rising EV brand. It’ll be one that earns its place in the premium conversation.