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Hyundai Kona Reviews

You'll find all our Hyundai Kona reviews right here. Hyundai Kona prices range from $32,500 for the Kona to $71,000 for the Kona Electric Premium N Line.

Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.

The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Hyundai dating back as far as 2017.

Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Hyundai Kona, you'll find it all here.

Hyundai Kona 2024 review: Electric Premium Extended Range
By Emily Agar · 29 May 2024
The top electric Hyundai Kona proves it still has the looks, space and passenger comfort but how does it compete against its heavyweight rivals in an increasingly competitive EV market?
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Hyundai Kona 2024 review: Long-term | Part 3
By Andrew Chesterton · 19 Mar 2024
I had a fascinating chat with some executives at Toyota Australia recently, who reckon that, in a few short years, the HiLux will probably no longer be competing at the top of our best-seller charts.And I know what you’re thinking, but no, that doesn’t mean it will be left in the dust by the Ford Ranger, or the Isuzu D-Max. What they meant is that the time of dual-cab dominance might be coming to an end.The cause, they reckon, is that the days of diesel will soon be behind us, fuelled by the incoming New Vehicle Emissions Standard (NVES) and a global shift away from the fuel type.Removing the tax breaks that come with buying a new ute if you hold an ABN, should that happen, won’t help either.So, why am I telling you all this when you should be reading about the Hyundai Kona? Because a) I thought it was interesting (but then, I am something of a car nerd) and b) because of what will likely replace them at the top of the sales tree.According to the people who would know, the era of the SUV is upon us, with families reverting back to the body style and leaving utes for the people who would actually use them for work or play.And so it’s through that lens that I’ve been viewing my Hyundai Kona over the final month of my (kind of) ownership.Could a small SUV, even one that’s big for its segment, really perform family duties for the vast majority of Aussie households?The good news is that I’m not going to make you wait for an answer. Because yes, it absolutely can.In much the same way the biggest, toughest utes are often driven by people with no real-world intention of putting them to the off-road test (and how their 3.5-tonne towing capacity is often used to drag nothing more than ego behind them), so too are large SUVs, even those with seven seats, routinely driven by people that just don’t need, or use, the space.And if you’re in the camp that is rallying against the NVES, I’m sorry, but you’ve got nobody to blame but yourself.If we all drove the vehicles we actually need our nation’s automotive emissions would be but a fraction of what they are now, and we might not need a new standard at all.Take my trusty Kona, which has proven more than big enough for absolutely everything I’ve needed to do over the past three months or so.My fuel use has averaged between eight and nine litres per 100km. And mine isn’t the fancy hybrid one, or the electric one, but the cheapest petrol-powered model.Yes, that’s above the 6.6L/100km claim, but it’s not outrageous, and it’s a damn site better than I’d be getting in a bigger SUV. Hyundai reckons the hybrid Kona will use more like 3.9L/100km, too. I recently climbed out of a brand new diesel-powered dual-cab and could only manage a figure somewhere north of 10 litres per hundred, which doesn’t sound like a huge difference, but becomes a more significant one when you consider that diesel is usually somewhere north of $2 per litre. And I just finished testing the twin-turbo-V6 powered Lexus GX in the USA, and its fuel use was more like 15 litres per hundred kilometres.So, I think we can probably agree that buying a reasonably sized SUV will save you money on the sticker price, and at the fuel pump. And, for most of us at least, will likely be all the vehicle you actually need.The big question, then, is the Hyundai Kona the SUV you should be looking at? Having now spent three months behind the wheel, I can honestly say there’s nothing here you need to be on the lookout for, and the longer you spend behind the wheel, the more the Kona slips effortlessly into your life.My gripes remain — namely the annoyance of the overzealous safety-system chiming, the refinement, or lack of it, from the engine and CVT under heavy acceleration, and the fact you can’t trust the cruise control to not exceed the limit on longer road-trips. But they fade to the most minor of annoyances over time.And I would still shop at the entry-level of the Kona range, given how well-equipped the cheapest models are, rather than springing for a more expensive model.But, and this is important for you new-car shoppers, I would definitely — definitely — look at dropping the extra $4K required to get this same specification with a hybrid powertrain, which won’t just halve your fuel use (and thus fuel bill) but also addresses one the key gripes with this model, given it swaps our car’s constantly variable transmission for a proper six-speed dual-clutch automatic.And it’s more powerful to boot, with a 1.6-litre turbo-petrol producing 104kW/265Nm, compared to 110kW but just 180Nm from our car’s 2.0-litre petrol. Acquired: October, 2023Distance travelled this month: 1207kmOdometer: 9042 kmAverage energy consumption this month: 9/.1L/100km
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Hyundai Kona 2024 review: Long-term | Part 2
By Andrew Chesterton · 17 Feb 2024
The Hyundai Kona is a small SUV that Chesto reckons is plenty big enough for most, if not nearly all, people. He puts the entry-level petrol-powered model to the test to prove it.
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Hyundai Kona 2024 review: Long-term | Part 1
By Andrew Chesterton · 02 Feb 2024
The Hyundai Kona can be had in so many flavours its dizzying. There's petrol, hybrid, fully electric and N-Line models, all competing for your attention. But Chesto has got his hands on the cheapest variant, the entry-level petrol Kona, to see if it is actually the pick of the the bunch.
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Hyundai Kona 2024 review: Electric
By Andrew Chesterton · 19 Jan 2024
You can have your Hyundai Kona in a Baskin Robbins-rivalling number of powertrains, but there's a chance this all-electric version might be the pick of the bunch.Why? Because the last-generation Kona Electric was one our favourite unsung-hero EVs, and Hyundai's top brass reckons this new one only improves the formula.But are they right? We put the 2024 Kona Electric to the test to find out.
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Hyundai Kona Hybrid vs GWM Haval Jolion Hybrid 2024 comparison review
By Tom White · 04 Jan 2024
You want a hybrid small SUV but you don't want to wait for a Toyota? We've put two of the most promising alternatives head-to-head to find out which saves you more money at the pump.
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Hyundai Kona 2024 review: Hybrid
By Andrew Chesterton · 01 Dec 2023
Hybrids are a big deal in Australia, and with this new Kona Hybrid, Hyundai has a vehicle that can finally take the fight to models like the Toyota Corolla Cross and C-HR Hybrids. We out this small SUV to the test to see how it measures up.
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Hyundai Kona 2024 review: 2.0 Premium
By Emily Agar · 24 Sep 2023
The small SUV market is fiercely defended by some strong competition but the new design of the Hyundai Kona may be what gives it a podium finish.
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Hyundai Kona Premium 2023 review: snapshot
By James Cleary · 09 Jul 2023
As the name implies, the Premium is the flagship grade in Hyundai’s new second-generation  Kona line-up. At just over 4.3m long, 1.8m wide and close to 1.6m tall, the technically 'small' SUV is appreciably bigger on the outside and prices range from $39,500, before on-road costs, for the 2.0-litre four-cylinder petrol model, through $42,500 for an N Line version of the same car and finally $46,500
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Hyundai Kona 2023 review
By James Cleary · 07 Jul 2023
Futuristic looks underpinned by an all-new 'EV-led' platform mark Hyundai's bigger second-generation Kona as one to watch in the small SUV category. Launching initially with a choice of petrol engines in front- and all-wheel drive across multiple grades, there are hybrid and EV models scheduled to arrive in the second half of 2023. We've driven the purely petrol-powered cars on the local launch.
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