Kia Ev3 vs Omoda 9

What's the difference?

VS
Kia Ev3
Kia Ev3

$47,600 - $63,950

2025 price

Omoda 9
Omoda 9

2026 price

Summary

2025 Kia Ev3
2026 Omoda 9
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Not Applicable, 0.0L

Fuel Type
Electric

-
Fuel Efficiency
0.0L/100km (combined)

-
Seating
5

0
Dislikes
  • Steering feels heavier than necessary 
  • GT-Line is pricey, less convenient
  • Better than EV5 but won’t outsell it

  • High price for new brand
  • Derivative looks
  • Ride and handling need refinement
2025 Kia Ev3 Summary

Kia Australia has big expectations for its littlest EV.

Not only is the small SUV priced to take on some of the very popular offerings from China, but it’s also packed with enough features to make a Euro buyer think twice. In fact, it starts from less than $50,000 drive-away.

We drove it at its global launch in South Korea and came away pretty impressed, so now the big question is - does it hold up now that its rubber is on the road here in Australia?

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2026 Omoda 9 Summary

Does Australia need yet another new car brand?

It’s the question I keep asking myself seemingly every other week as a new brand announces its intention to join the other 70 odd marques already competing for a slice of the Australia new-car market.

Chery made a successful re-entry into the Australian market in 2023, quickly establishing itself as a value-led brand. Earlier this year it launched Jaecoo, its more premium, adventure-focused offering and announced it would be spun-off into separate showrooms alongside the new Omoda brand.

The first Omoda-badged vehicle has now arrived, the Omoda 9 Virtue SHS (Super Hybrid System), which will join the almost-as-new Jaecoo J7 and J8 in the growing number of dealers around Australia.

So, does Australia need Omoda? Does the Omoda 9 Virtue SHS make a compelling case, in the same way the sharply-priced Chery models have? 

Read on for our verdict.

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Deep dive comparison

2025 Kia Ev3 2026 Omoda 9

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