Kia Tasman vs Suzuki Baleno

What's the difference?

VS
Kia Tasman
Kia Tasman

$38,010 - $74,990

2026 price

Suzuki Baleno
Suzuki Baleno

$9,990 - $18,885

2020 price

Summary

2026 Kia Tasman
2020 Suzuki Baleno
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Diesel Turbo 4, 2.2L

Inline 4, 1.4L
Fuel Type
Diesel

Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
7.4L/100km (combined)

5.1L/100km (combined)
Seating
5

5
Dislikes
  • Love it or loathe it styling
  • Deep front spoiler/shallow approach angle
  • Climate control screen placement, no rear USB ports

  • Expensive servicing
  • Cheap interior
  • Dull
2026 Kia Tasman Summary

Kia expects its all-new Tasman to be a key player in Australia’s highly competitive ute segment. And to its credit, the Korean manufacturer has created its contender from scratch, rather than taking the easier platform-sharing route favoured by some rivals.

However, judging by feedback from numerous locals during our test, the jury is out on whether Aussies will warm 'en masse' to its bold styling and confronting appearance, which tends to distract from the capable vehicle beneath.

So, given our tradie focus, we recently spent a week in the lowest-priced entry point for Tasman dual-cab ute ownership, to see how it measures up as a tool-of-trade for tradies, farmers or fleets wanting a back-to-basics workhorse.

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2020 Suzuki Baleno Summary

The fact of the Suzuki Baleno's existence is one of the more puzzling features on the automotive landscape. It's a car that pits itself against all manner of worthy competition - some of it exceedingly so - in the small hatch segment.

People still buy what the industry calls light cars (in ever-diminishing numbers) so perhaps Suzuki thought offering two would be a good idea, as its Swift occupies the same patch of sales ground in this city-sized segment.

In this part of the market, you've really, really got to want it. You need to be stylish, sophisticated and packed with tons of safety gear if you've any hope of so much as laying a fingernail on the Mazda2. Or, let's face it, be dirt cheap to counter Yaris and (the soon to depart) Accent.

It's all the more puzzling because Suzuki does interesting cars like the Jimny, Swift, Vitara and Ignis. And the oddball S-Cross (RIP).

The Baleno seems far too tame, timid and, well, blergh. But according to VFacts, Suzuki shifts at least a hundred of these per month, sometimes over 200.

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Deep dive comparison

2026 Kia Tasman 2020 Suzuki Baleno

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