Under an Australian summer sun, a parked Haval turns into an oven fast. RACV testing has clocked car interiors past 70°C when it's only 30°C outside — hot enough to fade and crack a dashboard, dry out the seats and cook the touchscreen over time. With the H6, Jolion and H9 all running big glass roofs and dark cabins, they feel it more than most.
The good news: a few cheap, simple steps keep the worst heat out and protect your interior for years. This guide covers why the cabin gets so hot, what the sun does to it over time, and the fixes that actually work in our climate — starting with a A$19 sun shade.
Why Big Glass Roofs and Dark Cabins Trap So Much Heat
This isn't a Haval-specific flaw — it's physics that hits any modern SUV built around a big panoramic roof and a dark interior, and the Haval range leans into exactly that airy, glassy look. The trade-off is thermal: more glass and darker surfaces mean more solar heat gets in and stays in.
The panoramic roof is the biggest culprit. On higher trims it's a large expanse of glass overhead, and where it relies on a thin fabric blind rather than an infrared-blocking laminate, a lot of heat still radiates straight through. Add a standard all-black dashboard — positioned right where sun streams through the raked windscreen — and you've got a surface that superheats and then re-radiates warmth into the cabin.
Dark Interiors and Factory Glass
The dark synthetic-leather seats common across Haval trims behave like heat sinks: they absorb solar energy and keep radiating it long after you've parked. Lighter cloth or perforated trim stays cooler, but most H6 and Jolion cabins are finished in black or charcoal.
Factory glass plays a part too. The standard tint is a dyed film aimed at privacy, not heat rejection, so it lets plenty of infrared through — and the windscreen, the single largest piece of glass on the car, usually has no solar-reflective coating at all. The result is a cabin that heats quickly and holds that heat.
Just How Hot Does It Get?
An Australian Haval left in the sun can top 70°C inside, cooking the dashboard, seats and screen over time. The cheapest, most effective protection is a reflective windscreen sun shade (about A$19), backed by quality ceramic tint, reflective seat covers, and smart parking. None of it makes a parked car safe for kids or pets — but it keeps your interior from baking.
The mechanism is the greenhouse effect: shortwave sunlight passes easily through the glass, is absorbed by the dash, seats and carpet, and is re-radiated as longwave heat that can't get back out. The cabin then races past the outside temperature.
The numbers are sobering. RACV testing found car interiors can exceed 70°C within minutes when it's only 30°C outside, and a dark dashboard or steering wheel can run around 20°C hotter still — well past the point where plastics degrade and surfaces are too hot to touch.
Never leave people or pets in a parked car
Because the cabin can pass 70°C in minutes, a parked car is dangerous for children, older people and pets even on a mild day and even in the shade. Sun shades and tint slow the heat and protect your interior — they do not make a closed car safe. Never leave anyone in the car.
What the Sun Does to Your Interior Over Time
Baking in the sun isn't just uncomfortable — over a summer or two it causes cumulative, often permanent damage that eats into your car's value. The most common is dashboard warping and cracking: the ABS plastic expands and contracts with the heat until stress fractures appear, especially around the thin plastic near the demister vents.
The seats are next. UV breaks down the protective topcoat on synthetic leather, fading the colour and stiffening the material until it cracks — damage a conditioner can no longer fix. Steering wheels and door cards suffer the same way, and a delaminating leather wrap can turn sticky and start to peel.
Screens and Electronics
The large central touchscreen is vulnerable too. Sustained extreme heat can damage the LCD — showing up as dead pixels, delamination between layers, or patchy touch response — and a replacement infotainment unit is one of the pricier interior repairs there is. Keeping the direct sun off the dash is the simplest way to protect it.
Windscreen Sun Shades: The Cheap First Line of Defence
The single most cost-effective defence is a quality windscreen sun shade. It won't make a parked car cool — as RACQ testing notes, shades slow the temperature rise more than they change the final cabin air temperature — but it does something just as valuable: it blocks direct sun from hitting the dashboard, wheel and screen, which is exactly what prevents the fading and cracking.
A reflective shade works by bouncing solar radiation back out before it's absorbed and trapped. Reflective mylar or bubble-style shades are far more effective than flimsy fabric or cardboard, and a proper fit with no gaps is what makes the difference.
Choosing the Right Shade for Your Haval
Fit is everything — the right size seals the whole windscreen. As a rough guide for the popular models:
- Haval H6: approx. 1400mm × 800mm
- Haval Jolion: approx. 1350mm × 750mm
- Haval H9: approx. 1450mm × 850mm
A properly sized shade tucks behind the sun visors to hold firmly against the glass. Our Front Windscreen Sun Shade (A$19.19) comes in solid and patterned options and is the first accessory we'd fit to any Haval parked outdoors in summer.
Ceramic Tint vs Factory Glass
A sun shade protects you while parked; upgrading your window tint protects you while driving too. The factory tint is a dyed privacy film that rejects very little infrared heat. Aftermarket ceramic film is a real step up — nano-ceramic particles block heat wavelengths while staying visually clear.
A quality ceramic tint blocks up to around 99% of UV and rejects a large share of infrared heat, cutting cabin heat and easing the load on your air-con — without needing to go dark. It also won't interfere with phone or GPS signals the way old metallic films could.
Mind the tint laws
Australian rules cap how dark you can legally go. Most states require front side windows to keep at least 35% VLT, and the windscreen can't be tinted below the top visor strip. Ceramic film lets you reject heat while staying legal — always confirm your state's VLT limits before booking an installer.
More Ways Haval Owners Keep It Cool
A shade and good tint are the one-two punch, but a few extra habits go a long way in the Australian heat:
- Reflective seat covers — light-coloured covers over dark leatherette keep the seat surface cooler and shield it from UV, so it doesn't dry out and crack.
- A dashboard cover or mat — a physical barrier over the ABS plastic takes the direct sun and UV, and cuts glare while you drive.
- Crack the windows — a 2–3cm gap lets the hottest air escape by convection and takes the edge off the peak build-up.
- Park rear-to-sun — the rear glass is far smaller than the raked windscreen, so facing away from the sun cuts the main entry point for heat.
- Pre-cool with remote start — if your Haval has it, running the air-con for a few minutes before you get in eases the thermal stress on the cabin.
- Clip-on solar fans — small window-mounted fans keep a little air moving while you're parked.
Looking After the Interior in a Hot Climate
Prevention is also a routine. Every month or so, wipe a quality UV-protectant over the dash, door cards and wheel — it forms a sacrificial layer that takes the UV instead of the plastic. Each quarter, clean and condition the seats with a pH-neutral product to keep the synthetic leather supple and crack-free.
Twice a year, check the rubber seals around the sunroof and doors — heat dries and shrinks them, which can lead to leaks — and make sure the sunroof drain tubes are clear. Watch for the early warning signs of heat damage: sticky surfaces, discolouration or a faint chemical smell all mean the plastics are starting to break down.
Beat the heat for under twenty bucks
The cheapest way to protect your dash, seats and screen from the Aussie sun. Our pick: the Front Windscreen Sun Shade (A$19.19), sized for the H6, Jolion and H9.
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