Kia Rio vs Maserati Ghibli

What's the difference?

VS
Kia Rio
Kia Rio

$16,990 - $25,999

2022 price

Maserati Ghibli
Maserati Ghibli

2021 price

Summary

2022 Kia Rio
2021 Maserati Ghibli
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Inline 4, 1.4L

S/C & T/C V8, 3.8L
Fuel Type
Unleaded Petrol

Premium Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
6.0L/100km (combined)

12.3L/100km (combined)
Seating
5

5
Dislikes
  • Uninspiring drivetrain
  • Lacks active safety features
  • Hard, noisy ride

  • Seats lovely but a bit firm
  • Confused sense of identity
  • Expensive
2022 Kia Rio Summary

Australia is experiencing a mass extinction event.

Like the dinosaurs before them, and hopefully not the bees in the near future, the sub-$20,000 car is nearing the bitter end.

An evolutionary dead-end, as higher emissions and safety regulations relegate older models (read Mitsubishi Mirage) to the great scrap-heap in the sky and prevent newer ones (read Honda Jazz) from leaving their local markets.

For you, this means there are quite literally a handful of brand-new vehicles left in Australia which wear before-on-road price-tags under the magic $20,000 number.

One of them is the car we’re looking at for this review: The Kia Rio S, with the catch being you’ll have to be happy changing gears yourself.

So, is this most basic Rio worth your while, or is it best left as a puzzling fossil for future generations to study? Let’s have a look.

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Interested in a Kia Rio?
2021 Maserati Ghibli Summary

Maseratis make a certain amount of sense to a certain kind of person. As the folks who run the brand in Australia will tell you, its buyers are the kind of people who’ve driven German premium vehicles, but find themselves wanting something more. 

They are older, wiser and, most importantly, richer. 

While it’s easy to see the high-end lure of Maserati’s Italian sex appeal styling and luxuriously appointed interiors, they’ve always struck me as cruisers rather than bruisers. 

Again, they’re for the older, more generously padded buyer, which makes the Trofeo range something of an oddity. Maserati says its Trofeo badge - seen here on its mid-sized sedan, the Ghibli, which sits below the vast Quattroporte limousine (and side on to the other car in the range, the SUV Levante) - is all about the "Art of Fast". 

And it certainly is fast, with a whopping V8 driving the rear wheels. It’s also completely bonkers, a luxury car with the heart of a track-chomping monster. 

Which is why Maserati chose to launch it at the Sydney Motorsport Park complex, where we could see just how quick and crazy it is. 

The big question is, why? And perhaps who, because it’s hard to imagine who wants, or needs, a car with such severe schizophrenia. 

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Interested in a Maserati Ghibli?

Deep dive comparison

2022 Kia Rio 2021 Maserati Ghibli

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