The top edge of your Haval's rear bumper takes a quiet beating — every bag of shopping slid across it, every parcel dropped on it, every kerb tap and car-park door adds a little scuff. It's one of the few spots on the car that gets touched almost daily, and once the finish is scratched through, a tidy touch-up turns into a full respray. A little protection up front keeps that from ever happening.
Why the Rear Bumper Wears First

The rear bumper's vulnerability isn't bad luck — it's simply the busiest painted surface on the car. That top lip is a loading zone: you slide groceries, luggage and gear across it constantly, and each contact leaves fine micro-scratches that slowly cut through the clear coat. Add the low-speed realities of parking — kerb taps, trolley knocks, the neighbouring car's door — and it's easy to see why the rear takes the most cosmetic damage.
Australia's climate speeds up the ageing, too. ARPANSA notes Australia gets some of the highest UV levels in the world, and that constant sun gradually hardens and dulls exposed paint and plastic, so a finish that's already scuffed fades and chips faster.
Bumper scuffs usually aren't covered by warranty
Manufacturers almost always class cosmetic bumper damage as normal "wear and tear", which means it's excluded from your new-car warranty — the repair bill lands on you. Preventing the first scratch is far cheaper than a respray and colour-match later.
Your Two Main Protection Options
Most owners use one or both of these, and they solve different problems:
| Option | Protects against | How it fits |
|---|---|---|
| Door bumper strips | Corner scuffs and car-park door dings | Small adhesive rubber/silicone pieces — easy DIY |
| Rear bumper guard / protector | Scratches on the top loading surface from bags and gear | Larger plate (plastic, steel or aluminium), adhesive or bolt-on |
| Paint protection film (PPF) | Fine scratches while keeping the paint visible | Clear film, best applied professionally |
A rear bumper guard is the workhorse for the loading-zone problem, giving a tough sacrificial surface you can slide things across. Door strips are the cheap insurance against the dings you can't control in a car park. Many owners fit both.
Choosing a Sensor-Safe Guard
The single most important buying decision is fitment. Buy a guard made specifically for your Haval model and year, so it has the correct cut-outs for your factory parking sensors. A generic guard that partly covers a sensor causes constant false alerts — one of the most common regrets with cheap, ill-fitting products.
Material matters for durability. Look for a flexible design or high-grade, UV-stabilised ABS plastic, which resists the cracking that can come from repeated heat-and-cool cycles in the Australian sun. Steel and aluminium guards are tougher still for heavy-duty use.
Buy for your exact model — not "universal"
Sensor cut-outs, contours and mounting points differ between Haval models and even model years. A guard listed as universal, or made for a different model, may misalign, cover a sensor, or sit proud of the panel. Confirm it's specified for your car before you buy.
Fitting It Without Creating New Problems
Good fitting is mostly about preparation. For any adhesive-backed part, the biggest cause of failure is a poor bond — wax, ceramic coatings and road grime stop the adhesive gripping. Wipe the area bare with an isopropyl-alcohol prep pad right before you apply it, and fit it on a mild day (roughly 15–25°C) so the adhesive cures properly rather than in extreme heat or cold.
For bolt-on guards that need drilling, seal every mounting hole with automotive-grade silicone — unsealed holes let water in behind the guard and start rust on the body. And after fitting, reverse slowly near a wall to confirm the parking sensors still read correctly. If anything looks misaligned or a sensor misbehaves, stop and re-check before relying on it.
Warranty and Resale
Fitting an aftermarket guard won't void your warranty. Under Australian Consumer Law, an aftermarket part can only affect a claim if it's shown to have directly caused the specific fault — a quality, well-fitted bumper guard has no bearing on your paint or structural warranty. If anything, it helps at trade-in time: a clean, scratch-free bumper presents far better than a scuffed one and signals a well-cared-for car, which supports a stronger resale price.
| Product | What it does |
|---|---|
| GWM Haval Rear Bumper Protector | Model-specific guard for the top loading surface, with sensor cut-outs |
| Door Bumper Strips | Adhesive corner and edge protection against car-park dings |
| GWM Haval accessories | Mud flaps, liners and more, made to fit your Haval |
Protect your Haval's paint before the damage is done
A model-specific rear bumper guard and door strips are a cheap way to keep the loading zone scratch-free — with the correct cut-outs for your parking sensors.
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