A creak from the door, a rattle from the dash, a whistle at highway speed — in a car as quiet as the BYD Atto 3, the smallest sound gets amplified. The good news is that most Atto 3 cabin noises are minor, well understood, and fixable at home in a few minutes, and the ones that aren't are usually a build-quality issue your dealer will sort under warranty.
This guide covers the noises Australian and New Zealand owners actually report — loose trim clips, the sunroof, door seals and strikers, and road noise — with a clear way to pinpoint each one and fix it without a service booking where you can.
Why Rattles Stand Out in an Atto 3
An EV's silence is a selling point, but it's a double-edged one: with no engine to mask them, small sounds that you'd never hear in a petrol car become obvious. That's why cabin rattles, wind whistle and door creaks are such a common talking point among Atto 3 owners.
The sources are well documented for this car. Australian owners and repairers most often report rattles from the A-pillars, the panoramic sunroof and the door "guitar string" trim — usually loose trim clips or panels rubbing, which dealers have fixed under warranty by adding felt tape at the contact points. It's a build-quality quirk of early cars, not a sign of anything serious, and it's very fixable.
Work Out What You're Actually Hearing
Before you fix anything, identify the noise. A high-pitched whistle at 80–110km/h almost always points to a door-seal or window-seal gap. A dull clunk or thud over bumps is usually loose trim or a suspension component transmitting through the body — not the door latch itself. And a constant drone on coarse roads is tyre and road noise, which is the Atto 3's genuine weak spot rather than a fault.
Isolating the sound is half the battle: test the car on smooth roads, bumpy roads, through corners and under braking, and note when the noise appears. A rattle from a door card needs a different fix to a creak from the hinges or a whistle from the weatherstrip — the sections below take them in order.
The 5-Minute Door Seal Inspection
Most Atto 3 noise comes from loose trim clips, the sunroof, or door seals and strikers that need adjusting — and most fixes are free. Start with the seal "paper test", reseat any lifted weatherstrip, and adjust the striker if the door feels loose. Tighten trim clips and add felt tape for rattles. Escalate to your dealer for sunroof or suspension noise under warranty, and record intermittent noises so you can prove them.
Before reaching for tools, a quick look and feel over the door seals often finds the problem — it's the easiest diagnostic there is, and it solves a big share of wind-noise complaints. Open each door and trace the whole rubber gasket around both the frame and the door, looking for anywhere it's pinched, twisted, flattened or pulled out of its channel. Pay particular attention to the upper corners where it turns sharply.
The Paper Test
A visual check isn't always enough, so test the seal's compression with a sheet of A4. Close the door gently onto the paper, then pull it out — you should feel firm, even resistance the whole way along the seal.
If the paper slides free with little resistance, you've found a gap: that's where wind noise starts and water can get in. Mark those spots with masking tape and repeat every 15–20cm around the whole door.
Reseating and Wear
Look for shiny or worn patches on the rubber, which show poor contact or rubbing; a well-seated seal has a uniform, dull finish. Significant tearing means a replacement, but more often a lifted seal just needs pressing back into its track. If a door needs a hard shove to close or drops when opened, that's sagging hinges — a job better left to a professional.
Don't use sharp tools on the seals
Never reseat weatherstrip with a screwdriver or blade — it's easy to nick the rubber and make the leak worse. Use your fingers or a soft plastic trim tool.
Striker Plate Adjustment: The Most Common Free Fix
If the seals look fine but you still get a rattle or clunk, check the striker plate — the U-shaped bracket on the door jamb that the latch grabs to pull the door tight. Tell-tale signs are a door that's hard to close, one that bounces slightly after latching, or one sitting proud of the surrounding panels.
How to Adjust It
You'll usually need a Torx bit. First, trace the striker's current position with a non-permanent marker so you can always return to the starting point. Loosen the bolts just enough to move it under firm pressure, then nudge it in small steps — around 1–2mm at a time — testing the door after each move.
Once it's right, tighten the bolts to the figure in your service manual (don't over-torque, or you'll strip the thread), then put a little white lithium grease or silicone paste on the striker and latch to stop metal-on-metal creaking.
| Symptom | Move the striker |
|---|---|
| Door rattle / loose fit | Inward (1–2mm) |
| Hard to close | Outward (1–2mm) |
| Door sits low | Upward (1–2mm) |
| Door sits high | Downward (1–2mm) |
Trim Clips, the Sunroof and the "Guitar Strings"
This is where most genuine Atto 3 rattles live. The cabin's plastic trim — around the A-pillars, across the dash, and the Atto 3's signature stringed door-card trim — can work loose over time, and a single loose clip is enough to buzz on a coarse road.
The dealer fix is simple and worth knowing: on affected cars, technicians tighten the trim clips and add felt or foam tape at the points where panels touch, which stops the rub at the source. You can do the same yourself with a plastic trim tool and a roll of automotive felt tape — gently release the offending panel, add a strip of tape to the contact face, and clip it back. If it's still under warranty, though, let the dealer do it at no cost.
Sunroof Rattles
The panoramic sunroof is another known culprit, especially a "ticking" over bumps on early cars where the rails were under-lubricated. Cleaning and re-greasing the sunroof rails with a silicone-based lubricant often quietens it — and if it persists, it's a straightforward warranty job.
Road, Suspension and Brake Noise
A good chunk of what sounds like door noise comes from below. The Atto 3's stiff body passes suspension and wheel noise straight into the quiet cabin — and its biggest genuine NVH weakness is plain road noise. Australian reviewers single out the amount of road noise it transmits on all surfaces as the one area it feels older than its rivals; the poorly-regarded original factory tyres didn't help, and owners who switched to better rubber report a quieter drive.
Is It the Suspension?
Try a simple test on speed bumps or slow corners. If the clunk or creak appears consistently as the suspension compresses over a bump or loads up in a turn, it's a suspension issue — worn bushings or mounts in the wheel-arch area — and it disappears on smooth roads. Early Atto 3 steering and suspension noises were a documented complaint that BYD addressed under warranty, so this is a dealer conversation, not a DIY one.
Brake Clunk on Take-Off
A single "clunk" as you swap from braking to accelerating is often the brake caliper shifting on its slide pins — floating calipers move slightly by design, and worn or dry pins let them move too much. The correct first fix is to clean and re-grease the slide pins; only if the pins or caliper are genuinely worn is a replacement warranted, so try servicing before buying parts.
One more to rule out: if the noise tracks exactly with the air-con — a whine or hum that comes and goes with the compressor — that points to the AC unit rather than the brakes.
Prevention: A Few Minutes Each Quarter
- Most rattles are a free fix — seal, striker or a trim clip
- Trim and sunroof noises are commonly sorted under warranty
- The quiet EV cabin makes issues easy to catch early
- Road/tyre noise is a real weak point, not a fault
- Suspension noise can be mistaken for a door rattle
- Intermittent noises are hard to reproduce at the dealer
Fixing a noise is one thing; keeping it away is another, and a few minutes each quarter does it. The main job is conditioning the door seals — the rubber dries out over time, so a dedicated silicone spray or rubber conditioner every few months keeps it soft and sealing, which matters under the Australian and NZ sun.
Each quarter, repeat the paper test for new gaps and wipe the seals with a damp cloth to clear grit that causes wear. Once a year, check the striker bolts haven't loosened and put a dab of white lithium grease on the hinges and check-straps to prevent creaks.
Catch the Intermittent Ones on Camera
Some rattles only appear under very specific conditions, which makes them maddening to diagnose — and to prove at the dealer. A dash cam that records audio is a genuinely useful tool here: capture the noise along with your speed, the road surface and the weather, and you've got clear evidence that heads off the dreaded "could not replicate".
Capture the noise, prove the claim
An Original BYD Dash Cam (AU$115.10) records audio as well as video — the easiest way to document an intermittent rattle for a warranty visit.
Browse BYD Atto 3 parts & accessories →When to Escalate to a BYD Service Centre
Most noises are simple DIY fixes, but some need the dealer — and knowing which saves you time. Structural issues like factory-misaligned hinges or a warped door frame aren't DIY-friendly, and persistent suspension or sunroof noise you've isolated from the doors is a prime warranty candidate.
To make the visit count, document the problem: a video with audio capturing the exact conditions (speed, road type, turning), plus the time of day and temperature, since some noises worsen in the cold as materials contract. That evidence is what prevents a "could not replicate" and gets a warranty claim approved.
What the Warranty Covers
Noises from manufacturing defects or component failure — misaligned doors, faulty latches, the known trim and suspension issues — are typically covered under BYD's new-vehicle warranty, and owners report BYD has been responsive to them. Wear items like rubber seals may have more limited cover. You're also backed by Australian Consumer Law and New Zealand's Consumer Guarantees Act, so if it's a genuine defect, don't hesitate to book it in — your documentation is the key to a quick resolution. For the wider picture, see our guide to common BYD Atto 3 problems and fixes.
Frequently Asked Questions