The biggest shocks and surprises for the CarExpert team in 2025


Our editorial team’s predictions for 2025 included a cooling of the electric vehicle (EV) market (check), new-car price cuts (check), and the rise of hybrids (check).

This time last year, we also tipped cheaper EVs (hello BYD Atto 1 for $23,990 plus on-roads – check) and said Toyota would confirm new sports cars (checkmate) … although we predicted it would lock in both a Celicaand an MR2 (close).

Looking back, we’re pretty chuffed.

What we didn’t predict was Full Self-Driving (supervised) arriving in Australia in 2025, nor did we expect to be seduced by a luxury Chinese people-mover and a Japanese electric supercar.

Here’s what raised eyebrows – for better or worse – for the CarExpert crew in 2025.

CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal.

Sean Lander: Mazda CX-60 G25’s pointless petrol power

I had a diesel Mazda CX-60 for a few months as a long-term vehicle and hopped straight out of that into the G25.

Why Mazda put a naturally aspirated four-cylinder engine into such a large SUV is beyond me.

Compared to the six-cylinder diesel, the fuel economy is poor, the engine feels gutless and the NVH is atrocious. The CX-60 is a great car, it just needs the right engine.

Marton Pettendy: Surprised at Kia’s surprise

The fact Kia appears surprised by slow Tasman sales is surprising in itself.