Test Drive: 2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

 

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced in Cardiff Green (A $500 option)

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

ClassPremium Compact SUV

Miles driven: 447

Fuel used: 21.5 gallons

CG Report Card
   
   
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance B
Fit and Finish A
Fuel Economy C+
Value A
   
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
   
Big & Tall Comfort
   
Big Guy A
Tall Guy A
   
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
   
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 300-hp 2.5L
Engine Type Turbo 4-cylinder
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels All-wheel drive

Real-world fuel economy: 20.8 mpg

Driving mix: 65% city, 35% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 22/28/24 (mpg city, highway, combined)

Fuel typePremium gas recommended

Base price: $41,000 (not including $1045 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Cardiff Green paint ($500), Select Package ($4000), Advanced Package ($4150)

Price as tested: $50,695

Quick Hits

The great: Posh, comfortable cabin; quietness; long list of available comfort and convenience features

The good: Respectable acceleration from 4-cylinder engine; confident, distinctive styling; competitive pricing

The not so good: Our mediocre observed fuel economy trailed EPA estimates; some control-interface quirks

More Genesis GV70 price and availability information

John Biel

Perhaps Genesis mislabeled its brand-new premium-compact SUV by calling it the GV70. It is derived from the platform of the G70 sedan and styled in the same vein. But the available engines, rotary-dial gear selector, and console dial for the infotainment system are straight out of the midsize G80 sedan and GV80 sport-utility. Maybe the newcomer ought to really be called the GV75.

Of course, there are numbers that truly are more important to shoppers and we’ll get to them by and by. What really counts is that with the GV70 Genesis has created an excellent, value-packed entry in this busy market segment.

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

 

The Genesis GV70 launches for 2022 as the second crossover SUV in the growing Genesis-brand product lineup; in size and price, it slots in below the midsize Genesis GV80, which debuted for 2021.

Riding a wheelbase of 113.2 inches and ranging 185.6 inches from bumper to bumper, the 5-passenger GV70 is, respectively, 3.1 and 9.1 inches shorter in those categories than the GV80 that’s set up to carry seven in some models. Where the G70 premium-compact sedan offers the choice of a 2.0-liter turbocharged four or a 3.3-liter twin-turbo V6, the GV70 engines are a similarly aspirated 2.5-liter four and 3.5-liter V6.

All-wheel drive is standard in every GV70. Prices (with delivery) begin at $42,045 for the base 4-cylinder version and rise to $63,545 for the V6 Sport Prestige. Consumer Guide sampled a 2.5-equipped Advanced—it sits second from the top of four 4-cylinder models—with a starting price of $50,195. Only a spray of Cardiff Green paint nudged the final tab to $50,695.

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Consumer Guide Test Drive

 

The GV70’s interior is dazzling in terms of both design and materials. The infotainment system can be controlled via a center-console dial (which is unfortunately easy to grab when you intend to use the rotary-dial gear selector mounted just aft of it) or the extra-wide, 14.5-inch high-definition touchscreen.

Typically for a Genesis, trim levels are treated as packages added to the core model. To get two steps up from the base vehicle, CG’s tester first had to absorb Select equipment (19-inch alloy wheels, panoramic sunroof, 16-speaker Lexicon premium audio, ventilated front seats, and brushed-aluminum interior accents). Then came the Advanced package with leather upholstery, heated steering wheel, interior trim with a “Waveline” pattern, surround-view monitor, blind-spot view monitor, front parking-distance warning, rear parking-collision avoidance, Remote Smart Parking Assist (to jockey the vehicle in and out of tight spaces while the driver stands outside), and advanced rear-occupant alert.

Test Drive: 2022 Genesis G70 3.3T Sport Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

 

There’s ample space in the GV70’s front seats, but the rear-seat legroom and headroom can be tight for adults.

All that is the frosting on the cake. It builds on GV70 basics like LED headlights and taillights, heated exterior mirrors, heated front seats with power adjustment, dual-zone automatic climate control, front and rear 12-volt power outlets, and hands-free liftgate. Tech items include an infotainment system with 14.5-inch screen, navigation, satellite and HD radio, and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto compatibility; dual front and rear USB ports; wireless device charging; and fingerprint recognition for one-touch starting. Safety and driving assists consist of adaptive cruise control, forward collision avoidance with pedestrian and cyclist detection, lane-keeping and following assist, rear parking-distance warning, and blind-spot and rear cross-traffic monitoring.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

 

The GV70’s cargo volume is a bit better than most premium compact SUV rivals–there’s 28.9 cubic feet behind the second-row seats, which grows to 56.8 cubic feet when the second-row seat backs are folded.

The Advanced’s luxury additions fill out a cabin that’s pretty lush for the price, with lots of soft-touch material—even far down on the doors past the point at which lots of other manufacturers default to plastic. Knurled surfaces adorn the ends of the wiper and light-control stalks, steering-wheel thumb buttons, and the transmission selector dial. Metal accents brighten the doors, dash, console, and steering wheel. The big infotainment display atop the instrument panel is vibrant, easily legible, and can show two things at once (for instance radio settings and navigation map). Fortunately, it is a touchscreen, which means you don’t have to use the remote console controller—and this one reminds us a little of the Lexus Remote Touch get-up that we’ve never particularly liked. By the way, it’s uncanny how easy it is to reach this round controller when you really want the trans selector. Easy-working temperature dials mix with numerous buttons for climate control.

Quick Spin: 2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

 

A 300-hp turbocharged 2.5-liter 4-cylinder is GV70’s base engine; a 375-hp turbo 3.5-liter V6 is also available. Choosing the Select package upgrades the standard 18-inch wheels to 19-inch alloys.

Comfortable seats welcome four adults. The front row is roomy; the second row slightly less so—but it would be wrong to call it cramped. Headroom is quite good, too, and driver sightlines are fairly unobstructed. Personal-item storage is accomplished in a large glove box, decent covered console bin, door pockets with bottle holders, and net pouches behind the front seats. Exposed cup holders are found in the console and the pull-down center armrest in the rear seat.

Overall cargo space is good, even if the rakish rear shape might stand in the way of certain loading options. The cargo bay holds at least 28.9 cubic feet of stuff. Drop the 60/40-split rear seats, which fold absolutely flush with the load floor, and a further 28 cubic feet open up.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

 

The GV70’s attractively athletic body shape is highlighted by nicely executed styling details, such as the Genesis brand’s signature shield-shaped grille and slim “Quad Lamp” LED headlights and taillights.

The 2.5 engine, rated at 300 horsepower and 311 lb-ft of torque, is attached to an 8-speed automatic transmission. This powerteam is an eminently competent pairing for moderately lively performance that gets a little zestier (and a touch louder) in “Sport” mode, with its quicker throttle response and more patient upshifts. Still, you can happily cruise all day in subtler “Comfort” mode. “Eco” and “Custom” settings are available as well. We wish the GV70 was a little stingier with gas—premium, wouldn’t you know. EPA ratings are 22 mpg in city driving, 28 on the highway, and 24 combined. When this driver put 81.5 miles on the test vehicle—with 69 percent city-style operation—it returned just 20.3 mpg.

With a suspension that’s a retuned version of the G70’s front struts and multilink rear, ride quality is luxury-brand good, with fine bump absorption and isolation from road noise. Steering is nicely weighted and responsive in the Comfort setting. Maybe the more resistant Sport-mode steering is a help on twisty roads where you wouldn’t want to overdo inputs, but in lazier urban-expressway driving it just feels heavy. Brakes are easy to modulate and predictably reliable.

The inaugural GV70 finds its strength in numbers—the number of things it does right. That would be true no matter what number Genesis assigned to it.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

 

The new-for-2022 Genesis GV70 might be the Genesis brand’s most impressive vehicle so far; it delivers an athletic driving character, attractive styling inside and out, and a high level of luxury and available technology features, all at prices that handily undercut its primary European luxury-brand rivals.

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Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced Gallery

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Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

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Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

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Test Drive Gallery: 2021 Nissan Kicks SR

2021 Nissan Kicks SR

2021 Nissan Kicks SR in two-tone Electric Blue Metallic with Super Black roof (a $250 option)

Class: Subcompact Crossover

Miles Driven: 272

Fuel Used: 7.1 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance B-
Fit and Finish B+
Fuel Economy A
Value A-
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B+
Tall Guy B+
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 122-hp 1.6-liter
Engine Type 4-cyl
Transmission CVT automatic
Drive Wheels Front-wheel drive

Real-world fuel economy: 38.3 mpg

Driving mix: 15% city, 85% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 31/36/33 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Regular Gasoline

Base price: $21,940 (not including $1150 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Exterior package with rear-roof spoiler ($435), 2-Tone Paint ($250), carpeted floor mats ($225), illuminated kick plates ($460), Interior Electronics Package ($575), Premium Package ($1200), 17-inch black alloy wheels ($495)

Price as tested: $26,730

Quick Hits

The great: Value pricing, standard safety features

The good: Great fuel economy with decent performance

The not so good: All-wheel drive is not offered, rear seats don’t fold flat with the cargo floor

More Kicks price and availability information

CG Says:

For an example of something that is more than the sum of its parts, look no further than the 2021 Nissan Kicks. Nissan’s subcompact crossover is among the smallest and least powerful vehicles in the growing small-SUV segment, but its overall appeal transcends its relatively humble elements.

Introduced for the 2018 model year, the Kicks enjoys a modest freshening for 2021. The most-obvious update is a revised front fascia that gives the Kicks a bolder look. Cabin appointments, too, are updated, though the effect is subtle. A larger touchscreen for SV and SR trim levels is the most meaningful revision, and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto connectivity are now standard across the line.

The Kicks is motivated by a 122-horsepower 1.6-liter engine mated exclusively to Nissan’s Xtronic CVT automatic transmission. Power is delivered through the front wheels on all models; AWD is not available.

As before, three trim levels are available: S, SV, and SR.  Nissan reports that the midline SV and topline SR model comprise the bulk of Kicks sales. This isn’t surprising to us, as even our loaded SR test vehicle equipped with the $1200 Premium Package listed for less than $27,000. For the record, a no-frills base S can be had for less than $21,000 including destination.

We make note of three Kicks attributes that contribute most to its overall appeal: cabin space, sportiness, and fuel economy.

Despite its extra-tidy exterior dimensions, the Kicks’s relatively tall, upright body endows it with better occupant space inside than you might expect. There’s enough space for four average-sized adults here, though tall front-seat occupants may need to slide their seats back far enough to make the legroom tight in back. Still, the Kicks is decently roomy for its class.

Even though it’s working with a relatively modest amount of horsepower, the Kicks is decently quick from a stop and easily able to keep up with city traffic. Sharp handling and quick, communicative steering add to the fun.

And, for the second time in Consumer Guide testing, a test Nissan Kicks has returned fuel economy in excess of the EPA highway mileage estimate. A 2019 Kicks SR returned 37.2 mpg in 80-percent highway driving in our real-world testing, while the test car shown here did even better, returning 38.3 mpg in a similar mix of city/highway driving.

The Kicks has its flaws. Even in topline SR trim, some of the cabin materials are on the basic side. In highway driving, the road noise is relatively high and the ride can turn choppy—the Kicks may not be the best choice for consumers who spend most of their in-car time on long road trips.

However, as a high-value commuter car that’s surprisingly fun to drive, the Kicks deserves a spot on your test-drive list. As we noted earlier, Kicks may not impress on paper, but this likable small crossover is somehow more than you might expect.

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2021 Nissan Kicks SR Gallery

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Test Drive: 2021 BMW 430i xDrive Coupe

2021 BMW 430i xDrive Coupe

2021 BMW 430i xDrive Coupe in Portimao Blue Metallic (a $550 option)

2015 Audi Q52021 BMW 430i xDrive Coupe

Class: Premium Sporty/Performance Car

Miles driven: 265

Fuel used: 9.8 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 27.0 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B-
Power and Performance B+
Fit and Finish A-
Fuel Economy B+
Value C+
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B+
Tall Guy B-
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 255-hp 2.0-liter
Engine Type Turbo 4-cylinder
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Driving mix: 40% city, 60% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 24/33/27 (mpg city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Premium gas recommended

Base price: $47,600 (not including $995 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Portimao Blue Metallic paint ($550), black leather w/ blue stitching ($1450), Dynamic Handling Package ($2450), M Sport Package ($3800), Premium Package ($2300), Adaptive M Suspension ($700), wireless charging ($500), Harman Kardon surround-sound audio ($875)

Price as tested: $61, 220

More 4-Series price and availability information

Quick Hits

The great: Confident power with surprisingly good fuel economy for a sporty luxury coupe; upscale interior

The good: Better-than-expected rear-seat space

The not so good: Driving personality isn’t quite as athletic/communicative as we’d hope for a BMW; polarizing front-end styling; options drive up bottom-line prices

John Biel

When does criticizing something by degrees here and degrees there add up to fully finding fault with it? How many accumulated quibbles and picked nits does it take tip the balance between simple observation and outright disappointment? The redesigned 2021 BMW 430i xDrive makes you ponder these questions.

None of the Consumer Guide editors who drove the Portimao Blue Metallic all-wheel-drive coupe entrusted to their care found it irredeemably bad. Most of the restyling on a body 5.2 inches longer than its predecessor is nice, even if the huge “twin-kidney” grille openings have elicited a healthy share of derision. Engine output has been increased—nobody ever complains about that—and technology features have been added to this denizen of CG’s premium sporty/performance class. The 430i coupe mixes sportiness with the practicality of useful rear-seat and trunk space, and it can be surprisingly respectful of a gallon of gasoline.

2021 BMW 430i xDrive Coupe

BMW’s 4-Series coupes and convertibles are redesigned for 2021 on the basic platform that their 3-Series sedan sibling adopted for 2019. The lineup consists of 4-cylinder 430i models and 6-cylinder M440i models, each with a choice of rear-wheel drive or “xDrive” all-wheel drive. Serious high-performance buyers can choose the M4.

At the wheel, however, this two-door car based off the 3-Series sedan architecture in use since 2019 lacks the finely honed steering and ride sensations that made BMWs the self-proclaimed “Ultimate Driving Machine.” Plus, it seems to take a lot of expense-larding add-ons to truly get to levels of performance and luxury that a buyer might expect from a compact-sized car that starts at $48,595 with delivery.

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BMW 4-Series

The 4-Series’s clean, sophisticated dashboard layout is shared with 3-Series models. The console houses the engine start/stop button, infotainment control interface, drive-mode selector buttons, and electronic parking brake switch.

One of the barbs that’s been directed at the 4-Series—particularly the closed body—is that BMW went out and designed itself a nice Ford Mustang. From some angles this pointed analogy is apt. The following comparison of manufacturer-supplied dimensions shows how that translates under the skin:

                                                     BMW 430i            Ford Mustang

                                                        coupe             EcoBoost coupe

Wheelbase (in.)                                112.2                          107.1

Total length (in.)                               187.9                          188.9

Width w/o mirrors (in.)                       72.9                            75.4

Headroom, ft/rr (in.)                      38.0/35.2                   37.6/34.8

Legroom, ft/rr (in.)                         41.8/34.5                   45.1/29.0

Shoulder room, ft/rr (in.)               55.1/51.0                   56.3/51.9

Trunk capacity (cu ft)                         12.0                            13.5

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The 430i is the entry point to the 4-Series, with M440i xDrive and M4 models above it. Unlike them, the 430 has a 4-cylinder engine, displacing two liters and turbocharged to deliver 255 horsepower at 5000-6500 rpm and 295 lb-ft of torque from 1550 to 4400 revs. That’s a pick-up of seven ponies from 2020 but 37 more lb-ft of twist that help launch the 430i xDrive to what BMW says is a 0-60-mph sprint in 5.3 seconds—0.2 faster than the rear-wheel-drive 430i that costs $2000 less. Working with an 8-speed automatic that is the sole transmission choice, the powerplant makes for lively driving, especially in highway cruising when quick trans kickdown produces instant action. Selecting “Sport” mode changes shift and throttle profiles and teases out a nice sound.

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2021 BMW 430i xDrive Coupe

There’s a respectable 12 cubic feet of cargo space in the 430i’s trunk.

The automatic stop/start fires back up a little rougher than we’d like but the BMW four has the tools to be fairly fuel efficient. This driver booked 26.7 mpg from a 72.1-mile test stint that included 58 percent city-style operation. That’s right up to the EPA combined-mileage projection of 27 mpg, which is bracketed by estimates of 24 mpg in city driving and 33 on the highway. Considering that it burns premium gas, owners certainly will welcome this kind of metabolism.

It’s the other things that go on while the 430i is frugally zipping along that conjure up complaints. Steering remains responsive, but BMWs used to let you sense every inch of pavement passing beneath their tires as they changed course. Now models like the one CG tested filter out too much of that experience. You suspect there’s still a road underneath, and you trust the car is doing its job at staying on it. Going to Sport mode adds a bit more restraint to the steering, just making it a little harder but no more tactile. Ride, too, seems less tuned to responding to the topography—long a Bimmer virtue—than to trying to ignore it. Among the test car’s $12,625 in options were an adaptive suspension, M Sport Package with variable sport steering, and Dynamic Handling Package with an M Sport limited-slip differential and larger brakes. Though not exactly linear in action, the bigger binders stop the car with authority.

The cabin is cushy when dressed up with extra-cost leather upholstery stitched in blue thread, and it’s roomy enough in front to ward off sport-coupe claustrophobia. The real surprise is that there’s space in the rear seat to fit a considerable slice of the adult population. There’s enough headroom for folks up to 5-feet-10.5 to sit upright (take it from a guy who’s that size), and enough legroom to make it worth their while to try. Other signs that they’re welcome back there are rear-seat controls for the tri-zone automatic climate control; soft-surface sidewall armrests; and storage options including net pouches on the backs of the front seats, cup holders in the pull-down center armrest, and bottle holders built into the side panels. Rear seats are split 60/40 and retract nearly flat with the trunk floor to expand cargo flexibility. Drivers will find fairly good sightlines.

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BMW 4-Series

The 430i’s turbocharged 2.0-liter 4-cylinder engine supplies excellent acceleration; it feels stronger than its 255-hp rating suggests. Nineteen-inch “M” wheels on performance tires are standard equipment.

However, not everything that makes this grand tourer grand is built in. It takes the $2300 Premium Package to pump in heated front seats and steering wheel, keyless entry, ambient lighting, a head-up display, and the configurable  “Live Cockpit Pro” virtual instrument cluster. Wireless charging for smartphones commands another $500, and surround-sound audio by Harman Kardon sells for $875. Infotainment (including standard navigation) rests with iDrive 7.0, one of the remotely controlled systems that luxury brands love to death. As it stands, BMW’s is less complicated than some for doing the things you’ll ask of it most often, but there are still plenty of menus to plumb for those who get their kicks that way. Apple CarPlay and Android Auto smartphone connectivity are standard, as are frontal-collision warning and emergency braking, blind-spot detection, lane-departure warning, and speed-limit monitoring.

Do we utterly dislike the 430i xDrive? Absolutely not. Then do we love this BMW coupe? We’ll have to get back to you on that. . . .

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2021 BMW 430i xDrive Coupe

The redesigned BMW 430i has a suitably sporting powerplant and the upscale Euro ambiance expected of a BMW, but some longtime fans of the brand may find it lacks the lithe, communicative feel of of previous BMW coupes and sedans.

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2021 BMW 430i xDrive Coupe Gallery

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2021 BMW 430i

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Test Drive: 2022 Hyundai Tucson Limited Hybrid

2022 Hyundai Tucson Limited Hybrid

2022 Hyundai Tucson Limited Hybrid in Amazon Gray

Photo Gallery2022 Hyundai Tucson Limited Hybrid

Class: Compact Crossover SUV

Miles driven: 425

Fuel used: 11.8 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort A-
Power and Performance B
Fit and Finish B
Fuel Economy A
Value B+
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B+
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 226-hp 1.6-liter
Engine Type Turbo 4-cyl hybrid
Transmission 6-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Real-world fuel economy: 36.0 mpg

Driving mix: 65% city, 35% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 37/36/37 (mpg city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $37,350 (not including $1185 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Carpeted floor mats ($169)

Price as tested: $38,704

Quick Hits

The great: Excellent passenger and cargo space for the class, fuel-efficient hybrid powertrain; generous level of standard equipment

The good: Pleasant ride quality; feature-rich infotainment system and digital gauge display

The not so good: Occasionally non-linear acceleration; not all testers like touch-sensitive controls

More Tucson price and availability information

John Biel

Odd as it may seem to think it, a hot market segment is both a blessing and a curse to an automaker. The benefit is that there may be plenty of eager buyers swarming around its entry in the field. The challenge is that there’s probably plenty of competition chasing those customers’ dollars, too. Standing out from the crowd is a never-ending battle.

2022 Hyundai Tucson Limited Hybrid

Hyundai’s Tucson compact SUV is redesigned for 2022, gaining larger dimensions, bold new styling inside and out, new technology features, and its first-ever hybrid and plug-in-hybrid models.

In that case, you have to think that Hyundai is happy to have an all-new Tucson at its disposal for 2022. The fourth-generation compact SUV stirs the bubbling pot for small sport-utes by growing longer—with improvements in passenger and cargo space—adding features, and welcoming its first hybrids.

Consumer Guide put one of the new gas/electric models to the test, a top-trim Limited. At $38,535 to start (with delivery), it clocks in at $1250 more than its closest match among gas models, the all-wheel-drive Limited. (Hybrids come only with AWD, while gas-engine jobs all have the choice of front-wheel drive as well.) Stepping down through the 3-tiered hybrid lineup includes the SEL Convenience for $32,835 and the Blue at $30,235. A limited list of extra-cost accessories is all that can be added to hybrids. Otherwise, equipment levels are baked into the individual models.

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Tucson Hybrid

The dramatic dashboard layout is in keeping with the Tucson’s provocative exterior styling, though some editors didn’t care for the touch-sensitive “virtual” buttons. Limited models get a slick 10.25-inch digital gauge cluster in addition to the 10.25 inch infotainment touchscreen, along with a push-button gear selector that takes a little getting used to.

Any ’22 Tucson includes forward-collision-avoidance assist, lane-keep assist, high-beam assist, intelligent speed-limit assist, driver-attention warning, rear-occupant alert, automatic LED headlamps, and Apple Car Play/Android Auto connectivity. All but the gas-engine SE come with keyless entry and push-button starting. The redesign gave Hyundai the chance to slip a couple of its newer tricks into the Tucson. One is Remote Smart Park Assist, which permits an operator standard outside the car to park or extract it from a confined space, and it can be activated through the multifarious Digital Key smartphone app that is standard on all Limiteds and the SEL Convenience. Another is Blind View Monitor that trains a camera on the area along either side—whenever that side’s turn signal is activated—to show the blind spot on the 10.25-inch digital instrument cluster that is included with those same upper-end models.

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Tucson Hybrid

Leather upholstery is standard on the Limited model, as are heated/ventilated front seats and heated rear seats. The new Tucson’s wheelbase is 3.4 inches longer than the outgoing model, which benefits rear-seat legroom.

Limiteds like the one that CG sampled come with quite a few other bits and pieces for their starting price. External items are a panoramic sunroof, 19-inch alloy wheels, black grille, projector-type headlights, premium LED daytime running lights, LED taillamps, heated side mirrors, rain-sensing windshield wipers, roof rails, and hands-free power liftgate. The interior boasts leather seats, power front seats with driver’s-seat memory function, heated steering wheel and seats all around, ventilated front seats, dual-zone automatic climate system, and AM/FM/HD radio with satellite radio and Bose premium sound. Technology features run to adaptive cruise control with stop-and-go capability, 10.25-inch infotainment-system touchscreen, navigation, twin front USB outlets, wireless charging, and Hyundai Blue Link remote services.

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Tucson Hybrid

A 6.1-inch increase in overall length over the previous-gen model helps improve the new Tucson’s cargo capacity. There’s 38.7 cubic feet of volume behind the rear seats, and 80.3 cubic feet with the rear seats folded.

The hybrid powerteam links a 1.6-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder gas engine with a 44.2-kW electric motor and a 6-speed automatic transmission. The two powerplants produce 226 system horsepower and 258 lb-ft of torque. It’s enough for fairly relaxed highway cruising and somewhat sprightly around-town behavior. However, a good tromp of the pedal from a standstill has to wait for the turbo to clear its throat and then the trans gets a hitch in its giddy-up during an upshift, so power delivery under the circumstances is nowhere near linear.

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Tucson Hybrid

Tucson Hybrids are powered by a turbocharged 1.6-liter 4-cylinder paired with an electric motor for a combined output of 226 horsepower. (A plug-in-hybrid Tucson with an estimated 261 horsepower is joining the lineup as a midyear addition.) Limited models come standard with dramatically styled 19-inch alloy wheels.

Under lesser load the transmission actually works quiet unobtrusively. So do the switch-offs between electric and gas operation. SEL Convenience and Limited hybrids have an EPA fuel-economy rating of 37 mpg in the city, 36 mpg on the highway, and 37 combined (the Blue is pegged at 38 across the board). Our observed fuel economy was right in line with those numbers.

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2022 Hyundai Tucson Limited Hybrid

The Tucson’s exterior styling wears lots of avant-garde design details, such as these “sawtooth” taillight segments connected by a full-width LED strip.

Damping meets its limit on pavement cracks that can put a good charge in the structure. For the majority of the time, though, the Tucson rides and handles decently, and corners with a nice level of composure. The sometimes-sketchy brake-pedal feel that’s been known to haunt hybrids wasn’t terribly obvious in the test truck.

Exterior styling is bolder than you’ll find on a good many other mass-market small crossovers (and may not be everybody’s cup of tea). The new trappings go with a wheelbase that is 3.4 inches longer than on the gen-3 vehicle and a body that is 6.1 inches longer from end to end. Add in slight increases of height and width and there’s roughly 6 percent more passenger room and 25 percent more cargo space than before.

Indeed, cargo capacity of 38.7 cubic feet behind the rear seats and 80.3 cubic feet with the seats down ranks among the largest in the Tucson’s class. There is excellent organized bonus space under the flat cargo floor, and the backs of the 60/40-split rear seats fold at a slight angle that matches the floor. Levers in the side panels permit handy remote release of the seat backs.

There’s good small-vehicle passenger room in both rows of the attractive, if not lavish, interior. Controls are relatively simple to decipher but audio, climate, navigation, and other functions are dependent on numerous touch-sensitive buttons can be tricky to use—you’re never really quite sure that you’ve made full contact. The button-activated transmission selector takes a little getting used to, as well. In-cabin storage is just average with a good glove box, deep but not long console box, door pockets, lighted pockets on either side of the console, net pouches on the backs of both front seats, bottle holders in rear doors, and cup holders in the console and rear armrest (though those in back are not as wide around as up front).

Hyundai has created more to like about its compact crossover SUV, and expanded buyers’ choices. It’s the right way to stand out in a crowded field that won’t stay static for long.

Test Drive: 2021 Subaru Forester Sport

2022 Hyundai Tucson Limited Hybrid

Its radical styling is a bit too far out for some tastes, but the redesigned Tucson improves over its predecessor in most every way. The smooth, decently powerful Hybrid model offers fine fuel economy for a reasonable price premium.

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2022 Hyundai Tucson Limited Hybrid Gallery

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2022 Hyundai Tucson Limited Hybrid

First Spin: 2022 Hyundai Tucson

2022 Hyundai Tucson Limited Hybrid

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Test Drive: 2021 Subaru Forester Sport

2021 Subaru Forester Sport

2021 Subaru Forester Sport in Dark Blue Pearl

2021 Subaru Forester Sport2021 Subaru Forester Sport

Class: Compact Crossover

Miles Driven: 234

Fuel Used: 8.9 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 26.3 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort A
Power and Performance B-
Fit and Finish B
Fuel Economy B+
Value A-
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy A
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 182-hp 2.5L
Engine Type Flat four
Transmission CVT automatic
Drive Wheels All-wheel drive

Driving mix: 40% city, 60% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 26/33/29 (mpg city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Regular gasoline

Base price: $29,395 (not including $1050 destination charge)

Options on test car: Optional Package ($1645; includes STARLINK 8.0-inch Multimedia Plus touchscreen infotainment interface, 9-speaker Harman Kardon premium audio system, Reverse Automatic Braking, and power rear liftgate with height-memory function)

Price as tested: $32,090

Quick Hits

The great: Outward visibility, generous passenger and cargo space

The good: Nice mix of passenger-car and SUV elements, plenty of standard safety features

The not so good: Somewhat intrusive engine stop/start system; driving character isn’t particularly sporty

More Forester price and availability information

John Biel

Perhaps the most hopeful word in the automaker’s lexicon is “Sport.” It suggests a lot—driving fun, mostly—even if it occasionally delivers something less, or at least different.

What vehicles some manufacturers choose to call Sport get that name relative to whatever else is in their vehicle lines. Take the Subaru Forester. What makes its Sport a sport? Mostly black-and-orange appearance highlights and a heightened selectable driving mode. To be sure, it has several other features that help to foster the sport idea, but these are found in some other Foresters as well.

2021 Subaru Forester Sport

The Sport model sits square in the middle of the Forester lineup. It comes standard with features such as a blind-spot monitor with rear cross-traffic alert, unique black and orange trim accents, and LED foglights.

Don’t get the impression that we are sour on the Forester. Nothing could be further from the truth about this compact-crossover SUV that is a Consumer Guide “Best Buy” in its class on account of its practicality, spaciousness, versatility, and off-road capability. We’re merely pointing out that the 2021 Sport model that we got to test is what it is and nothing more.

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2021 Subaru Forester Sport

The Sport model’s numerous orange accents liven up the cabin ambiance a bit. We have no complaints with the Forester’s dashboard and infotainment-system layout–controls are logically arranged and easy to use.

The Sport sits dead center in the 5-model Forester lineup, priced (with delivery) at $30,445. You can pick it out of that crowd thanks to its vibrant orange accents on the lower body, two-tone cloth upholstery, air vents, and console plate; fully blacked-out grille; and black-finish 18-inch alloy wheels.

Sport comes with a “7-speed” manual mode for the automatic continuously variable transmission (CVT). This unit, also found in the costlier Touring and—for ’21—Limited Foresters, is no high-performance revelation. There’s no bite to the paddle-activated shifts, no great sense that you’ve dipped down into the power band to keep acceleration building in a rush, just slight and subtle changes and a brief softening of sound from the 182-horsepower 2.5-liter horizontally opposed “flat four” engine. The SI-Drive engine-management system in Sports does include an “S#” mode (think “Sport Sharp”) with livelier throttle response.

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2021 Subaru Forester Sport

The Forester’s tall-ish body build provides excellent headroom in both the front and rear seats. You’ll have to step up to a Limited model if you want leather upholstery, but the Sport’s cloth upholstery looks and feels pretty nice.

Frankly, powerteam performance is not one of the things that earned the Forester its Best Buy designation. Acceleration is mediocre with just 176 lb-ft of torque. It’s at least enough grunt for decent driving on surface streets and competent highway operation. EPA fuel-economy ratings are 26 mpg in the city, 33 on the highway, and 29 combined. This tester averaged 28.5 mpg after 155.5 miles with 33 percent city-type driving. An automatic stop/start function is included to help save gas, but its engagement is noisy, rough, and a little slow. It can be switched off.

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2021 Subaru Forester Sport

A panoramic sunroof is standard on all Foresters except the base model.

All Foresters come with 4-wheel disc brakes, but larger-diameter front discs are used on the Sport, Limited, and Touring. Sport is also the level at which a chrome exhaust outlet and blind-spot/rear cross-traffic alerts kick in as standard. LED fog lights are shared with the Touring. All but the base model come with X-Mode (including hill-descent control) to adjust powertrain performance and vehicle dynamics for better traction from the torque-vectoring Symmetrical All-Wheel-Drive system. Like other current-generation Foresters we’ve driven, the Sport displays a likeable balance of ride and handling qualities from its fully independent suspension in street and expressway driving.

The major change to the ’21 Forester is the inclusion of steering-linked LED headlights with automatic high beams as standard equipment throughout the line. The test truck came with the one option group available for the Sport, a package with a Subaru Starlink Multimedia Plus system (including an 8-inch touchscreen and 9-speaker Harman Kardon audio), reverse automatic braking, and power liftgate with memory height setting. Some other Sport standard comfort and convenience features are a panoramic moonroof, roof rails, automatic climate control, satellite radio, 10-way power-adjustable driver’s seat, heated front seats, keyless entry and starting, leather-wrapped steering wheel and shift knob, and electronic parking brake with auto-hold function. For safety there is “EyeSight” with forward-collision warning and mitigation, lane-departure warning, lane-keep assist, adaptive cruise control, and Lead-Vehicle Start Alert.

Forester got commendably roomier with its 2019 redesign. Leg- and headroom are very good in both rows. Big windows and slim front and door pillars make for excellent driver vision to all but the extreme rear corners, where rising bodywork cuts into the view. The four main seats are comfortable, and three adults might wedge into the second row for brief trips. Entries and exits are easy.

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2021 Subaru Forester Sport

We’re fans of the Forester’s extra-wide cargo area and rear liftgate aperture, and the overall cargo volume is generous as well: 35.4 cubic feet behind the rear seats, and 76.1 cubic feet with the rear seats folded.

While bright with its orange accents, cabin ambience comes off a little, uh, hardier in the cloth-upholstered Sport. Driving controls are bright and legible, the audio system is easy to program and use. The climate controls rely on handy dials for temperature and fan speed, with just four buttons for other functions.

Storage for personal items is handled by decently sized glove and console boxes. The latter comes with a small-item organizer that has to be removed to expose the main space. The front of the console is an open space with device inputs. Big pockets rest in the front door. Open cup holders are found in the console and pull-down rear armrest; all four doors have spaces for bottles.

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Forester Sport

The Forester’s lone powertrain is a 182-hp 2.5-liter 4-cylinder paired with a CVT automatic transmission–acceleration is a bit tepid overall. Sport models come standard with black-finish 18-inch alloy wheels.

A spacious, flat floor awaits cargo loaded in back. With the 60/40-split rear seats retracted, there is room for 76.1 cubic feet of stuff. The lowered seats pitch up a little from the cargo floor, but a cover panel provides an uninterrupted surface. An underfloor storage space is configured to hold the standard cargo cover when not in use.

The Subaru Forester Sport certainly lives up to its name in terms of appearances, and it does boast what features the model line has to maximize the little SUV’s driving character. Considering that it carries some of the pricier models’ equipment at a lower cost, it actually makes a bit of sense as a bargain proposition. Yes indeed, it is what it is.

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2021 Subaru Forester Sport, Dark Blue Pearl,

The “sport” in the Subaru Forester Sport is really only appearance features, but that’s OK… the basic Forester offers excellent passenger and cargo space for its size, and the Sport brings desirable features at a reasonable price.

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2021 Subaru Forester Sport Gallery

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Best Small Crossovers of 2021