Kia Ev4 vs Volkswagen Transporter

What's the difference?

VS
Kia Ev4
Kia Ev4

$49,990 - $64,690

2026 price

Volkswagen Transporter
Volkswagen Transporter

$45,890 - $85,590

2026 price

Summary

2026 Kia Ev4
2026 Volkswagen Transporter
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Not Applicable, 0.0L

Fuel Type
Electric

Diesel
Fuel Efficiency
0.0L/100km (combined)

-
Seating
5

0
Dislikes
  • Design will polarise
  • Boot is a missed practicality perk
  • Service costs higher than most

  • Electric Transporter is very expensive
  • Electric Transporter has limited range
  • Could have more safety items
2026 Kia Ev4 Summary

Kia admits that, even a handful of years ago, a car like the EV4 likely wouldn't exist in Australia. With a forecast of 70 sales a month, or 840 a year, it won't come close to the brand's biggest all-electric sellers, and senior executives and product planners alike would have been wondering if it was worth the effort.

But times have changed, and so have regulations, and Kia is happy to roll the dice on as many EVs as it can get its hands on to lower its fleet emissions in the wake of the New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES).

If you'll forgive the long and rambling intro, I'll now get to the point. Long live the NVES, because the EV4 is a good (if a little bizarre-looking) thing. It's quite lovely to drive, will cross vast distances in its long-range guise, and will undoubtedly make our roads a more visually interesting place.

But would you have one over the Tesla Model 3 or BYD Seal? Read on.

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2026 Volkswagen Transporter Summary

Commercial vans are not an exciting segment of the car industry - but they are big business.

Not only do businesses, especially fleets, need a quality van, if you can crack the market there are meaningful sales for some of the biggest name brands in the country.

Unsurprisingly, Toyota dominates the mid-size van market with its HiAce, which notched up more than 12,000 sales in 2024 to make it one of the market leader's most popular models. For Ford the Transit Custom is even more important as the brand’s third best-selling vehicle behind the Ranger and Everest.

Which is why the decline of Volkswagen’s Transporter has been a big deal for the brand, and it’s why the arrival of the all-new, seventh-generation model is such a big deal. The German maker only sold 875 Transporters last year, as the transition between the out-going model and this new one hit hard.

But that’s the past, Volkswagen is focused on the future, with high hopes this new Transporter can rise back up the sales charts. It also completes VW’s commercial van line-up, sitting alongside the smaller Caddy and ID.Buzz Cargo as well as the larger Crafter.

This new Transporter is slightly less Volkswagen than the previous six generations, though, as it is now platform sharing with Ford as part of the two automotive giants’ commercial partnership (which sees the Amarok also based on the Ranger).

By working together it has allowed the two companies to develop not only a new diesel-powered van but also an all-electric offering and a plug-in hybrid. The latter won’t be available until sometime in 2026, but we’ve just driven the new diesel and electric Transporter.

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Deep dive comparison

2026 Kia Ev4 2026 Volkswagen Transporter

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