approach that is capable of suppressing Joule heating is highly desirable from an energy perspective.Under this background, electric-field control of magnetism emerges in the field of multiferroics, which is expected to reduce the energy consumption of information storage by several orders of magnitude, to fJ bit −1 or even aJ bit −1 . [4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11] In single-phase multiferroic materials, which consists of more than one ferroic order, if there is coupling among different ferroic orders, for example, the magnetoelectric coupling between the ferroelectric (FE) and FM orders, the magnetism can be conveniently controlled by electrical switching of the ferroelectricity, such as in YMnO 3 , BiFeO 3 , and TbMnO 3 . However, the magnetic order in these materials is typically antiferromagnetic, which is difficult to detect, and the magnetoelectric coupling is rather weak; [12][13][14] moreover, intrinsic single-phase multiferroic materials are rare because of contradicting symmetry and physical requirements. [15] All these factors prevent single-phase multiferroic materials from practical device applications.Alternatively, the electric-field control of magnetism can be achieved in heterostructures via other means: (1) in FM/FE composite heterostructures, the magnetism of the FM thin films can be modulated by the piezoelectric strain triggered by electric fields applied onto the ferroelectric substrates; [8] (2) in FM/dielectric composite heterostructures with ultrathin FM thin films, the magnetism can be tailored by the electrostatic doping; [8] (3) in FM/multiferroic composite heterostructures, the magnetism of the FM thin film layers can be varied by electric fields through the interfacial magnetic exchange coupling, such as in Co 0.9 Fe 0.1 /BiFeO 3 heterostructures. [16] Typically, the modulation of magnetism by electric fields in multiferroic heterostructures results in variations in the magnetization, coercivity fields, or magnetic anisotropy of the ferromagnetic materials. In addition, the key scientific issue of controlling magnetic properties using an electric field has been carefully elaborated in previous Reviews. [17,18] Among them, the change of magnetization (ΔM) upon external electric fields (ΔE) yields the simplified magnetoelectric coupling coefficient (strictly speaking, the magnetoelectric coupling coefficient should be described as a tensor; please refer to the previous Reviews) [17,18] α = μ 0 ΔM/ΔE, where μ 0 is the permittivity of free space. Compared with single-phase multiferroics, α in multiferroic heterostructures can be significantly greater, for example, it reaches 1.08 × 10 −7 s m −1 Using an electric field instead of an electric current (or a magnetic field) to tailor the electronic properties of magnetic materials is promising for realizing ultralow-energy-consuming memory devices because of the suppression of Joule heating, especially when the devices are scaled down to the nanoscale. Here, recent results on giant magnetization and resistivity modulation in a metamagnetic inte...