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Low-key facelift aims to keep fashionable electric family SUV near the top of the pile

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Being technologically and stylistically progressive, the Kia EV6 was a badge of honour for its maker when it came along in 2021 – and a key indicator that the time of the midmarket electric car had arrived.

It became the first Korean winner of the European Car of the Year award in 2022. And it advanced our expectations of how spacious and innovatively packaged an EV at its size and price could be, but also how engaging to drive, thanks to assertive performance and a fairly agile rear-drive chassis. 

Thankfully, Kia's new-age design language doesn’t include too many fake grilles. This top one is ornamental, but the one lower on the valance actually does cool the battery.

Standards have developed quickly among mid-sized EVs since then, of course. So now to scrutinise Kia’s response to the competition that the EV6 has attracted since 2021, represented by cars as different as the Renault Scenic E-Tech and regrettably short-lived Fisker Ocean.

Kia's aim with this revision is mostly to bring the EV6 into line, technically and visually, with the newer Kia EV9 flagship SUV - and EVs -3, -4 and -5 that will follow over the coming months

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DESIGN & STYLING

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kia ev6 facelift front 2024 jh 1

The EV6 remains an eye-catching car three years after its introduction. This update is a fairly minor one that preserves this status, but while it may look like little more than a fresh set of lights and bumpers, there’s actually quite a lot more to it than that.

As evidence, consider this: Kia’s new fourth-generation nickel-manganese-cobalt battery pack – 8% more energy-dense than the one it replaces, yet a kilogram lighter, with a usable capacity up to 84kWh – extends range by a significant margin from a maximum of 328 miles to 361 miles, depending on trim level. And yet our test car is 80kg heavier than its pre-facelift equivalent, as part of a mechanical update that has altered the EV6’s body-in-white chassis, suspension specification and standard equipment level.

The EV6 is covered with unusual shapes and surfaces. The sloping rear and wraparound tail-lights might be its most peculiar features. Distinctiveness is good, of course, but the blindspot created by the rear quarter panels isn’t.

It rides on the EV-specific Electric-Global Modular Platform, or E-GMP, and, as with the Volkswagen Group’s MEB, the battery pack is carried within the floor of the car and powers one big motor in the rear and an optional motor in the front. All versions share the same suspension layout: MacPherson struts at the front and a five-link axle at the rear.

In familiar style, Kia has found a way to reinforce the car’s chassis, by adding thickness to the B-pillars, which no doubt accounts for some of that added weight. It’s an unusual move for a car in mid-cycle, and Kia hasn’t explained it, so we can only assume it had good reason for it.

Elsewhere among the revisions to the car’s hardware are new frequency-selective passive dampers for the suspension, and improved noise and vibration isolation for the main, rear-mounted electric motor, which still produces 225bhp and 258lb ft. Peak power for those who prefer a dual-motor all-wheel-drive model remains 321bhp. 

The car’s exterior design has been updated by new 19in and 20in alloy wheels, by revised bumpers front and rear, and perhaps most notably by the ‘star map’ headlights also shown on the EV9 and EV3 (there is a new LED light bar spanning the gap between the headlights too).

As is common with Kias, you don’t get a lot of choice in the model range or options, and all EV6s have a 84kWh battery pack. There are just three trim levels: Air, GT-Line and GT-Line S. Every EV6 has a single 225bhp motor at the back, but GT-Line and GT-Line S cars can be ordered with an additional front motor for a total of 321bhp and all-wheel drive. Early in 2025, Kia will bring back the 911 Turbo-baiting, 577bhp Kia EV6 GT range-topper, too.

Weights and measures

INTERIOR

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kia ev6 facelift dash 2024 jh 16

A new steering wheel might be the most direct route to freshening your facelifted car’s interior. And so, in replacement of the EV6’s original oversized-looking two-spoke wheel (which always seemed needlessly bulky to us) comes a neater-looking three-spoke design with a smaller central boss. The rim is similarly dimensioned, so doesn’t impart any particular change to steering input, and its controls are mostly grouped on each lateral spoke, just as they were. 

Elsewhere around the cabin, some new materials are used on the roll-top dash, door cards and seats, and some new ambient lighting features too. But, for the most part, the EV6’s control layout and cabin configuration have been left alone, and its material quality feel and prevailing standard of fit and finish are both fairly high. 

The driving environment is unusual. It’s at once quite open thanks to the seemingly low scuttle and floating centre console, but it also evokes the feeling of a traditional sports car, with a high console and the instruments and controls canted towards the driver

This is an interior that’s usefully open and accessible in its ambience, and mostly quite spacious and practical. Taller testers bemoaned a small but notable shortage of head room in both rows, which you might not expect of a high-riding crossover, though most didn’t consider it a significant problem. According to our tape measure, our test car had 70mm less driver’s head room (940mm) than the Volkswagen Golf GTI we tested earlier this autumn, reduced still further in the second row. It’s a failing we have reported of other e-GMP-based cars, though it’s not as irksome as we found in the Hyundai Ioniq 6.

At any rate, by steering clear of top-level GT Line S trim, you will avoid the fitment of the sunroof that compounds the problem. And few could complain about leg room in either row, or about the EV6’s generous boot space for what is, after all, only really a big hatchback. 

Space in the rear is generous, with limousine levels of leg room. However, because of the high floor, taller adult passengers will sit with their knees in mid-air and their thighs unsupported, which can be tiring over long distances, and there isn’t much room under the front seats for feet, either. As a result, the space isn’t quite as comfortable or usable as the raw numbers would suggest. It’s a similar story with the boot: there is plenty of floor space, but because of the battery, the floor itself is rather high, and outright loading space is restricted in some ways.

A refreshed infotainment system leads the array of updated technology fitted to the car. It has extended networked navigation functionality, can update its software over the air and offers wireless smartphone mirroring for both Apple and Android phones. 

The separate touch-sensitive bar just below the main touchscreen console remains in place, and is a big aid to navigating the system – especially once you have configured its star button to take you in and out of CarPlay. Without this device, the system would involve a few too many menu levels for our liking, and rather too much prodding and swiping, to find any function without distracting you. With it, access is decently quick and easy.

Due to some recent regulatory changes, the EV6 now also requires a fairly extensive pre-flight check to ensure you’ve deactivated all the warning sirens and intrusive ‘aids’. You will likely forget one or two and then be reminded by blasting bongs a few miles later.

Irritating, but you will have it set up to your preference in seconds after a few drives, and the bong that sounds when you stray over a speed limit can now be switched off by holding down the volume button.

ENGINES & PERFORMANCE

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kia ev6 facelift pan 2024 jh 46

A single-motor EV6 that weighs 80kg more than it used to and has no more power represents a net loss of power-to-weight ratio of a little under 4%. Kia won’t shout about it, but the EV6’s claimed 0-62mph sprint has dropped from 7.3sec to 7.7sec, against a competitive backdrop in which an equivalent Polestar 2 has progressed from 7.4sec to 6.1sec for 0-62mph, and even the slowest Tesla Model Y is now more than a second quicker. Clearly, it’s going to be tougher for this car, as a single-motor operator in 2024, to claim a place among the class’s quicker-feeling options. 

A motor calibrated to ease the car into motion fairly progressively, even in Sport driving mode, makes the EV6 feel like it’s in no particular hurry to get going. The torque comes on stream more assertively from about 20mph, though, and in slightly damp conditions our timing gear verified a 7.5sec two-way-average standing start to 60mph, and 0-62mph in 7.8sec. 

It’s quick enough to keep you interested in a straight line but it’s also enjoyable in corners, with fine road-holding, good body control and a clear rear-drive dynamic vibe.

The EV6 does now feel less brisk than key rivals, but not slow in isolation. The car was three-tenths slower to 60mph when timed at less than 10% charge than it was with more than 90% showing: a bigger gap than with some EVs we have tested, but still evidence of effective power management. 

The twin-motor car, meanwhile, would still keep pace with a stabbed rat off the line, but it doesn’t have the tiresome, jolty delivery of many high-powered EVs, and stops short of delivering that regrettably familiar sort of scrabbly, sickening acceleration. It digs in hard and rears up under load, then meters out its generous reserves considerately, reeling in the horizon in a smooth and easily controllable manner, rather than booting you down the road and making you feel queasy.

Kia provides easy and wide paddle-based adjustment of brake energy regen, from a ‘one-pedal’ feel all the way back to total freewheeling. Brake pedal feel is well tuned and unproblematic, and braking stamina is robust enough to survive our fade testing with no measurable deterioration, and only some short-lived smell of hot pads.

Braking endurance

RIDE & HANDLING

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kia ev6 facelift rt 2024 jh 40

The EV6 has, since its introduction, played to a crowd more interested in its dynamic agility and zip, and its engaging athleticism, than its comfort and refinement levels. The changes that Kia has wrought on it now suggest the firm would like it to mellow ever so slightly as it ages, and reach towards a more middle-market buyer. But, on this evidence, ending up with a car that reflects that agenda may depend on plumping for the right trim level. 

Our GT Line S test car, on its 20in wheels, had the kind of ride that most EV buyers would probably call slightly noisy and firm, but offered a clear dose of handling appeal as a trade-off. Those 20in rims were occasionally guilty of clonking and thudding around as the car crossed sharper bumps, and made for a perceptible though not unprecedented amount of motorway road roar (68dBA at 70mph, compared with 66dBA for the Volvo EX30 and 70dBA for the Tesla Model Y). 

On a motorway, I rest my hands on the wheel in a relaxed way, but Kia’s lane keeping system clearly prefers a white-knuckle grip, because the EV6 constantly nagged me to keep hold of the wheel.

The car controls body movement well for something so heavy, however, and handles with a dose of rear-wheel-drive verve that also belies its weight. In that respect, it’s only on the same level now as a Polestar 2 but remains a car you can enjoy threading keenly around a tight bend or well-sighted roundabout and feel the pleasing handling balance as you accelerate. 

The electronic stability controls are completely switchable but, in its limit handling, the EV6 doesn’t mask its weight quite as cleverly, running out of grip a little suddenly, and handling a bit scruffily beyond that limit, but remaining benign and controllable enough.

Ride comfort and isolation

The ride and handling compromise that Kia’s chassis engineers have chosen for the car is definitely tuned on the sporty side. It’s not crashy thanks to good damping and generously sidewalled tyres, so it’s not uncomfortable as such, but it always feels busy and firm, whether you’re in town, on rural roads or on the motorway.

The trade-off will be worth it for some people and less so for others. As with the interior, this is a pronounced point of differentiation compared with the Hyundai Ioniq 5, which is much more comfortable and luxurious-feeling, but also more ponderous to drive.

MPG & RUNNING COSTS

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kia ev6 facelift front corner 2024 jh 40

Kia claims an 8% improvement in DC rapid charging for the EV6’s new 84kWh battery, peaking at 258kW. Across three different charging attempts (all at installations offering 250kW or more), our test car failed to reproduce that. The 125kW weighted average charging speed it recorded on the fastest of our three attempts is a respectable result in any case, faster than several key competitors (Polestar 2 Long Range Single Motor, Tesla Model 3, Skoda Enyaq 85), but it won’t be what either Kia or existing EV6 owners expected. 

Prices start at a little over £45,500 for an EV6 Air, rising to just above £57,000 for a dual-motor GT Line S. Less than £1000 has been added to the sticker price of either example and, while some opponents can look cheaper, they no longer do once they are fitted with de rigueur options. On the EV6, the only cost options remain paint and a heat pump (which by now ought to be standard on upper-trim cars). 

The test range proved broadly competitive, but not class-leading. On our motorway touring efficiency test, our EV6 demonstrated a range of 244 miles (Polestar 2 Long Range Single Motor: 269 miles, Renault Scenic E-Tech Long Range: 261 miles, Tesla Model Y Long  Range: 248 miles).

As for servicing, Kia prescribes a routine workshop visit every 20,000 miles or 48 months. If something were to go wrong, the EV6 has a seven-year/100,000-mile warranty - but the battery, whose capacity is also warranted up to 70% of its original factory state – is warrantied up to eight years.

Running efficiency

DC rapid charging test

 

VERDICT

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kia ev6 facelift static 2024 jh 50

The advance of EV class standards is bringing us better, longer-legged, more affordable cars. Once an Autocar class favourite, the EV6 has receded a little from its prized position of 2021. Even after this revision, rivals now offer stronger performance, better efficiency and range, a more comfortable ride and comparable handling appeal. 

And yet the best reasons to choose an EV6 - its distinctive looks, spaciousness and keen handling - remain key selling points. As you would expect from a Kia, it’s honestly priced and easy to drive and use too, and it enriches the EV class by its presence.

Spec advice? A rear-driven GT-Line is brisk enough and provides a happy medium of kit and price. The only option is a heat pump, which is a good idea if you want to preserve range while keeping warm

It was disappointing not to be able to verify the car's advertised rapid charging potential on test; more predictable, perhaps, to see the mid-sized EV field catch this car up in other competitive respects. But the EV6 remains a leading contender in its class.

 

Jonathan Bryce

Jonathan Bryce
Title: Editorial Assistant

Jonathan is an editorial assistant working with Autocar. He has held this position since March 2024, having previously studied at the University of Glasgow before moving to London to become an editorial apprentice and pursue a career in motoring journalism. 

His role at work involves running Autocar's sister title Move Electric, which is most notably concerned with electric cars. His other roles include writing new and updating existing new car reviews, and appearing on Autocar's social media channels including Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube.

Felix Page

Felix Page
Title: Deputy editor

Felix is Autocar's deputy editor, responsible for leading the brand's agenda-shaping coverage across all facets of the global automotive industry - both in print and online.

He has interviewed the most powerful and widely respected people in motoring, covered the reveals and launches of today's most important cars, and broken some of the biggest automotive stories of the last few years. 

Matt Saunders

Matt Saunders Autocar
Title: Road test editor

As Autocar’s chief car tester and reviewer, it’s Matt’s job to ensure the quality, objectivity, relevance and rigour of the entirety of Autocar’s reviews output, as well contributing a great many detailed road tests, group tests and drive reviews himself.

Matt has been an Autocar staffer since the autumn of 2003, and has been lucky enough to work alongside some of the magazine’s best-known writers and contributors over that time. He served as staff writer, features editor, assistant editor and digital editor, before joining the road test desk in 2011.

Since then he’s driven, measured, lap-timed, figured, and reported on cars as varied as the Bugatti Veyron, Rolls-Royce PhantomTesla RoadsterAriel Hipercar, Tata Nano, McLaren SennaRenault Twizy and Toyota Mirai. Among his wider personal highlights of the job have been covering Sebastien Loeb’s record-breaking run at Pikes Peak in 2013; doing 190mph on derestricted German autobahn in a Brabus Rocket; and driving McLaren’s legendary ‘XP5’ F1 prototype. His own car is a trusty Mazda CX-5.

Kia EV6 First drives