Kia’ Stonic is the Korean brand’s light SUV follow-up to its well-received Seltos small SUV. While it had been on sale in international markets for quite some time before its Australian launch, the Stonic still launched in 2021 to some fanfare as a well-specified alternative to an expanding crop of light SUV challengers.
Taking the fight to the Hyundai Venue, Mazda CX-3, Toyota Yaris Cross, and MG ZS, the Stonic has the same underpinnings, interior fittings, and drivetrain options as the Kia Rio hatchback (complete with its flaws), as well as a contemporary design which is quite unique from its larger Seltos sibling. As always, the Stonic carries Kia’s generous ownership promise.
The Stonic’s line-up currently kicks off at $28,180 for the Stonic S Mhev and reaches to $35,740 for the Stonic Gt-Line Mhev.
There are eight colours available on the Kia Stonic, including 'Yacht Blue', 'Adventurous Green', 'Snow White Pearl', 'Aurora Black Pearl', 'Signal Red', 'Astro Grey', 'Sparkling Silver' and 'Clear White'.
The most commonly reported problems with the Kia Stonic are loud engine noises and rattling.
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The big news is the addition of a 48-volt mild hybrid system, and that 48-volt battery is under the boot floor. But because it's hidden under a flat partition, it doesn't impact boot space.
Kia is still claiming 352 litres of volume with the rear seats in place and 1155 litres with the rear seats folded flat. You do, however, miss out on some under-boot storage and any spare wheel. You just get a tyre repair kit.
It is a tale of good and bad in the cabin of the Stonic. The good is the fact that it all feels very familiar and very Kia, which isn't a bad thing. The bad is it is feeling a little bit old school in places. There's no wireless phone mirroring, for example, so you need to plug in. And even then you need to plug in with a USB-A rather than a USB-C, despite having both plugs at your disposal. Some of the door materials aren't just cheap and hard plastic, they feel a bit flimsy in places, as well. Same with the centre console plastics. There are some elements where you could definitely lift up the ambience in the interior.
You can have your Stonic in three flavours, the S, Sport and GT-Line, with retail pricing stepping from $28,180, to $32,290, to the range-topping $35,740.
The S is pretty basic in terms of kit, riding on 16-inch alloys, nabbing LED lights and DRLs, cloth seats, manual air-con and a six-speaker stereo. Tech comes via an 8.0-inch central screen with wired Apple CarPlay and Android Auto (but do pack a USB-A cable to make it work, which feels very old school), as well as a 4.2-inch driver display and a smart key with push-button start.
The Sport packs in plenty more. Your alloys are now 17 inches, you get LED front fog lights, and your cloth seats now have synthetic-leather trim. You also get centre console storage, single-zone climate control, a better feeling steering wheel and shifter and rain-sensing wipers. You also get a bigger 12.0-inch central screen, extra USB-C ports and access to the Kia Connect app and over-the-air updates.
Finally, the GT-Line rides on a unique 17-inch alloy wheel design, and nabs a sunroof, heated front seats, a heated steering wheel and ambient interior lighting. It gets the full Kia twin-screen treatment, with two 12.3-inch displays handling multimedia and driving data and you get a wireless charger.
All Stonics get the same powertrain. A clever three-cylinder, 1.0-litre turbo-petrol with 48-volt assistance. That means 88kW and 172Nm (up from 74kW). It has a seven-speed dual-clutch auto transmission.
The Kia Stonic is a five-seat small SUV with surprising space for back seat passengers. You could fit two adults in the back for longer road trips without hearing howls of complaint.
We don’t have an official 0-100km/h time for the Kia Stonic, but I’m estimating in excess of 10 seconds. Top speed is around 180km/h.
The 48-volt system in the Kia Stonic helps drop fuel use and C02 emissions with use now pegged at 5.0L/100km and 116g/km.
The Stonic’s 45-litre tank should deliver a theoretical range of circa-900km.