Hyundai Santa Cruz 2025

Hyundai Santa Cruz 2025

Our most recent review of the 2025 Hyundai Santa Cruz resulted in a score of 8.4 out of 10 for that particular example.

Carsguide Contributing Journalist Byron Mathioudakis had this to say at the time: We need the Santa Cruz and its ilk in Australia. It’s great to be in a dual-cab ute that is compact enough to fit in a regular car-parking space and light enough to be efficient.

You can read the full review here.

This is what Byron Mathioudakis liked most about this particular version of the Hyundai Santa Cruz: Car-based interior and comfort, Smooth ride, Urban SUV levels of performance, refinement, dynamics

Rating Summary
Price and features
9
Practicality
9
Driving
8
Safety
8
Overview
Likes
Car-based interior and comfort
Smooth ride
Urban SUV levels of performance, refinement, dynamics
Dislikes
Poor side/rear vision
Big turning circle
Not in Australia yet

Hyundai Santa Cruz 2025 FAQs

If the Hyundai Santa Cruz ute is sold in Australia will it be classified as an LCV?

The Santa Cruz not only has an integrated tub, it’s also a monocoque design rather than a separate body on a ladder-style chassis as many commercial vehicles are. But it would, in Australia, still be classified as a light commercial vehicle. According to the Federal Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development, light commercial vehicles are: '…motor vehicles constructed to carry goods or specialised equipment that are less than or equal to 3.5 tonnes gross vehicle mass. They include utility vehicles, panel vans, cab chassis vehicles and goods vans.' And that pretty neatly describes the Santa Cruz utility.

There has been a lot of talk about the Hyundai tray-back making it to Australia, but a couple of things are standing in the way. The volume models, for a start, are front-wheel-drive and the construction rules out the huge towing limit of something like a Toyota HiLux or Ford Ranger (3.5 tonnes). But there’s plenty to suggest that the Santa Cruz would be a nicer thing to drive than a conventional dual-cab ute and, for those who don’t need to tow super-heavy loads, the Hyundai might make a bit of sense. But don’t hold your breath on it coming here. For now, Hyundai is saying no to an Australian launch, purely because the Santa Cruz is not being built in right-hand-drive form.

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