Advertisement

The Kia EV5 will not be coming to the United States. Canada? Probably.

The Kia EV5 will not be coming to the United States. Canada? Probably.


See Full Image Gallery >>

SEOUL — Kia first showed the new EV5 electric crossover in China back in August, but during the company’s EV Day event in South Korea this week, we learned a few more details about this compact SUV. The one thing we can’t seem to nail down, however, is exactly where on the North American continent it will be sold. 

During the EV Day presentation, Ho Sung Song, Kia’s president and CEO, said the EV5 will come to "America," and a representative from the product planning department said it would arrive in mid-2025. However, Kia later issued a statement saying the EV5 is literally confirmed for North America, with internal sources following that up by saying it will not be sold in the United States. This may come as a surprise to some, but the United States is not the only country in North America. Logically, the EV5 will therefore appear in Canada and/or Mexico but not the United States of America. 

ADVERTISEMENT

Why not here? The disappointing sales of two-row midsize crossovers like the Honda Passport likely has something to do with it, as customers in the United States are more likely to go with three-row models like the EV9. It could also be related to the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and its new $7,500 tax credit for EVs. Because Kia is not planning to build the EV5 in North America, this would make it ineligible for this credit, raising the cost. Of course, things could still change; 2025 is a ways away, after all.

The EV5 is built on the same flexible E-GMP architecture that underpins Kia’s EV6 crossover and EV9 SUV, as well as the two other new products the company showed during EV Day, the EV3 and EV4. It’s about the same size as a Sportage, but wears a design that’s both boxier and more futuristic. In person, it looks rad, and we hope the spiffy aero wheels make their way to production, too.

Moving inside, comparisons between the EV5 and EV9 are definitely warranted; the two SUVs are practically identical in terms of layout and design. The large screen that spans most of the dash houses a pair of 12.3-inch displays, with an extra 5.0-inch screen in the middle for climate control functions. Commonly used buttons are flush-mounted and backlit along the center of the dash – meaning you’ll hit them with your wrist when you rest your hand there while using the screen – and the EV9’s squircle steering, um, wheel(?) carries over, as well.

When the Chinese-spec car debuted in August, you might’ve noticed the weird front seats that almost looked like a raised-up bench. Kia confirmed that’s a design feature specific to the Chinese market; the rest of the world won’t get this layout and will instead have a more traditional two-seat arrangement. We’re not really sure why this faux bench would be useful, anyway, especially since there’s no seatbelt for what could theoretically be a middle passenger.