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Hyundai Ioniq hybrid Review and Prices

The Hyundai Ioniq is a hybrid car that鈥檚 cheap to run and big enough for small families but it doesn鈥檛 look as stylish or feel quite as upmarket inside as alternatives.

Buy or lease the Hyundai Ioniq hybrid at a price you鈥檒l love
We take the hassle and haggle out of car buying by finding you great deals from local and national dealers
RRP 拢22,085 - 拢28,835
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Used
拢8,990
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wowscore
6/10
This score is awarded by our team of expert reviewers after extensive testing of the car

What's good

  • Easy to drive
  • Cheap to run
  • Cheaper than hybrid alternatives

What's not so good

  • Slightly cramped back seats
  • Struggles at motorway speeds
  • Plug-in version鈥檚 more usable

Find out more about the Hyundai Ioniq hybrid

Is the Hyundai Ioniq hybrid a good car?

鈥淭axi!鈥. You might have to get used to people shouting that at you if you invest in a Hyundai听滨辞苍颈辩听hybrid, but there鈥檚 a good reason for that. The Ioniq is popular with Uber drivers because it鈥檚 cheap to run and easy to drive, especially in town. Better still, the Kia Niro and Toyota Prius are more expensive, and the Ioniq has more kit as standard.

From the side, the Hyundai Ioniq鈥檚 low-slung body looks almost identical to that of the Toyota Prius. Both feature that teardrop profile that manufacturers seem to think is essential for a car to look futuristic. Some might say it brings tears to your eyes, but each to their own.

From the front and rear, however, the Hyundai鈥檚 unassuming styling won鈥檛 turn as many heads as the Toyota鈥檚 bonkers collection of lines and creases.

The Hyundai Ioniq feels much more memorable inside, however. You get plenty of shiny trims, large screens and more soft-feeling materials than you鈥檒l find in a Toyota Prius. You get a decent amount of equipment behind the scenes, too 鈥 especially in mid-range cars that come with sat-nav, smartphone mirroring and loads of electric seat adjustment as standard.

The latter helps make sure you鈥檒l find a comfortable seating position easily but that鈥檒l be of little comfort to tall passengers who find themselves in the back seats. Sure, there鈥檚 enough space for three kids to get comfy, but those over six-foot-tall will find their head brushing against the Hyundai Ioniq鈥檚 sloping roof.

If you鈥檙e looking for a little more passenger space, you鈥檒l be better off with a Kia Niro, but the Hyundai Ioniq has the edge when it comes to boot space.

The Ioniq looks like it was lifted straight from the Toyota Prius jelly mould. Sadly, it鈥檚 not quite as spacious inside but you might still be mistaken for an Uber driver on your way to work.

Mat Watson
Mat Watson
莲花直播 expert

Every Hyundai Ioniq hybrid is powered by a 1.6-litre petrol engine and an electric motor that helps them return around 55mpg. The electric motor can power the Ioniq by itself at slow speeds so you can cruise around town almost silently without using any fuel 鈥 albeit not for as long as the Ioniq Plug-in model.

Spend more time on the motorway than driving around town? You might want to consider a diesel car instead that鈥檒l return better fuel economy over long distances. The Hyundai Ioniq struggles to overtake slow-moving traffic and its engine drones rather loudly when you accelerate hard.

The standard automatic gearbox can be a little jerky when you鈥檙e driving along fast country roads too, and the Hyundai Ioniq can鈥檛 soak up potholes and bumps quite as well as the Toyota Prius.

Fortunately, systems such as automatic emergency braking that鈥檒l try to stop the car for you if it detects an obstacle ahead helped the Ioniq earn an impressive five-star safety rating from Euro NCAP in 2016. This makes it one of the safest聽family cars聽on sale and well worth considering if you want an affordable hybrid that鈥檚 easy to drive and cheap to run.

If you want to see the kind of savings you can expect, just click through to our聽Hyundai Ioniq deals听辫补驳别.

How much is the Hyundai Ioniq hybrid?

The Hyundai Ioniq hybrid has a RRP range of 拢22,085 to 拢28,835. The price of a used Hyundai Ioniq hybrid on 莲花直播 starts at 拢8,990.

How practical is it?

Pretty much nobody will struggle to get comfortable in the front of the Ioniq, but you pay the price for the sleek lines in the back, where it isn鈥檛 as spacious as some hybrid alternatives.

Boot (seats up)
443 litres
Boot (seats down)
1,505 litres

The Hyundai Ioniq鈥檚 steering wheel and front seat come with plenty of adjustment so you鈥檒l have no trouble getting comfy 鈥 even if you鈥檙e very tall. Every Ioniq gets a height-adjustable front passenger鈥檚 seat and adjustable lumbar support for the driver鈥檚 seat to help reduce backache on long journeys.

Pick a top-spec Premium SE car and you get electric seat adjustment with a memory function 鈥 useful if you regularly lend your car to someone significantly taller or shorter than you. There鈥檚 even a seat cooling feature to make hot days that little bit more bearable.

The back seats are reasonably spacious but there isn鈥檛 quite as much room for adults in the Hyundai Ioniq as you get in a Kia聽Niro or Toyota Prius. Anyone over six-foot-tall will find their head perilously close to touching the roof and knee room is a little tight 鈥 especially with a six-foot-tall driver sitting in front.

Fortunately, there鈥檚 plenty of space to carry three kids in the back but the rather narrow central seat means there isn鈥檛 quite enough elbow room for three adults to sit side by side. There鈥檚 a slight lump in the floor that can get in the way of your middle passenger鈥檚 feet, too.

The back doors open quite wide but the Hyundai Ioniq鈥檚 sloping roofline means you鈥檒l have to stoop down to lift in a child seat if you鈥檙e quite tall and the hidden Isofix anchor points make securing the seat base a bit of a pain.

The Hyundai Ioniq鈥檚 front doors come with handy round bins that are big enough to hold a 1.5-litre bottle each with just enough room left over for another small bottle or can. You also get two cupholders in the centre console and space under the folding front armrest for a few valuables.

The rear door bins aren鈥檛 as spacious as those in the front but you get a pair of seat-back pockets as standard to tuck away thin items (such as iPads) and a folding rear armrest with two built-in cupholders.

The Hyundai Ioniq has 443 litres of boot space. That鈥檚 a little less than you get in a Toyota Prius鈥 502-litre load bay but easily big enough to carry a baby stroller or a family鈥檚 bags for a weekend away. By comparison, the boxy Kia Niro can only carry 427 litres of luggage.

The Ioniq鈥檚 boot opening is wide and square so it鈥檚 relatively easy to lift in some bulky luggage but there鈥檚 quite a tall boot lip that makes loading heavy items rather difficult. Still, its square shape makes it easy to pack full of large boxes and every Hyundai Ioniq comes with a handy luggage net to help tie down smaller items.

Sadly, there isn鈥檛 any storage space under the boot floor and you can鈥檛 adjust the floor height to reduce the size of that annoying boot lip, either. There are a few tether points dotted around the boot but no shopping hooks to stop your groceries rolling around.

Fortunately, you can fold the back seats down in a two-way (60:40) split if you need to carry some very long items and a passenger in the back seats at once. Flip both back seats down and the Ioniq鈥檚 boot grows to 1,505 litres 鈥 big enough to carry a bike if you remove one of its wheels. The back seats don鈥檛 fold completely flat, however, so it鈥檚 not particularly easy to push heavy boxes right up behind the front seats.

What's it like to drive?

The Hyundai Ioniq hybrid鈥檚 great for pottering around town but it鈥檚 just not quite as frugal as the plug-in model and a diesel-powered alternative will be better for long journeys.

The Hyundai Ioniq hybrid is powered by a 1.6-litre petrol engine and an electric motor. They work together to drive the front wheels through a standard-fit six-speed automatic gearbox.

Hyundai claims the Ioniq hybrid will return around 63mpg 74.3mpg but you can expect to see around 55mpg in normal driving conditions. Unfortunately, it can鈥檛 match the plug-in hybrid model鈥檚 claimed 39 miles electric-only range but it can still potter along at slow speeds for short distances using just the electric motor. As a result, it鈥檚 much more frugal around town than a conventional petrol- or diesel-powered car.

When the petrol engine fires up to lend a hand, it does so smoothly and without any unpleasant jolts. With both motor and engine working together it feels brisk enough but the 1.6-litre petrol drones slightly if you accelerate hard.

Even with the engine and motor working together the Ioniq doesn鈥檛 have quite enough puff to keep up with fast-moving motorway traffic. If you do lots of motorway miles you鈥檒l want to consider a diesel-powered alternative instead.

Thankfully, the Hyundai Ioniq鈥檚 six-speed dual-clutch automatic gearbox helps take the stress out of long-distance drives and it doesn鈥檛 make the engine rev loudly when you accelerate like the CVT automatic in a Toyota Prius. It can be a little jerky on country roads, however.

Overall, the Hyundai Ioniq doesn鈥檛 give you a great view out. The pillars between the front doors and the windscreen produce a few large blindspots at junctions and the split rear windscreen makes it difficult to judge how far away other cars are when you鈥檙e parking. The Kia Niro is easier to see out of thanks to its raised driving position and boxy body.

Thankfully, every Hyundai Ioniq comes with rear parking sensors and a reversing camera to help avoid any scrapes in supermarket car parks and you even get a cross-traffic alert system that鈥檒l warn you if a car鈥檚 about to pass behind you as you reverse out of a perpendicular parking bay.

Around town, the Hyundai鈥檚 light steering and pedals make it fairly easy to drive and it鈥檚 especially relaxing at slow speeds when the near-silent electric motor鈥檚 doing most of the work. It can鈥檛 quite iron out bumps as smoothly as the Prius but it wallows and leans a little less on fast country roads.

Unlike the previous Ioniq, you get a set of paddles behind the steering wheel that let you adjust how strongly you want the Ioniq鈥檚 regenerative braking to help slow the car down when you lift off the accelerator. Unfortunately, while this does help extend the car鈥檚 electric range, it doesn鈥檛 work particularly smoothly, so you鈥檒l probably end up leaving it in its least intrusive setting.

Head out onto a motorway and the Hyundai starts to feel a little out of its depth. Its 1.6-litre engine has to work hard to keep up with fast-moving traffic which means you鈥檒l hear quite a lot of noise from under the bonnet as you drive along.

You鈥檒l hear a touch more wind noise in the Hyundai Ioniq than in the Prius but the roar from its tyres is less noticeable than in the Toyota.

All Ioniq hybrids come with adaptive cruise control to help make long journeys as relaxing as possible. This feature can adjust your car鈥檚 speed to maintain a safe distance to other cars in front before returning to a preset speed once the road鈥檚 clear.

Also standard is automatic emergency braking 鈥 it鈥檒l stop the car as quickly as possible if it detects an imminent collision. This helped the Hyundai earn an impressive five-star Euro NCAP safety rating in 2016, making it one of the safest family cars on sale.

For even greater peace of mind, pick a top-spec Premium SE model. They come with an extra system that鈥檒l warn you if there鈥檚 a vehicle in your blind spot before you change lanes on a motorway.

What's it like inside?

Snazzy blue trims and a digital display behind the steering wheel give the Ioniq鈥檚 interior a stylish edge, but a few cheap-feeling trims let the side down

Hyundai Ioniq hybrid colours

Solid - Polar white
Free
Special solid - Electric shadow
From 拢565
Special solid - Electric grey
From 拢565
Pearl - Phantom black
From 拢565
Pearl - Liquid sand
From 拢565
Pearl - Lava orange
From 拢565
Pearl - Iron grey
From 拢565
Pearl - Intense blue
From 拢565
Pearl - Fiery red
From 拢565
Pearl - Demitasse brown
From 拢565
Metallic - Typhoon silver
From 拢565
Metallic - Platinum silver
From 拢565
Metallic - Iron grey
From 拢565
Metallic - Intense blue
From 拢565
Metallic - Fluidic metal
From 拢565
Metallic - Fluid grey
From 拢565
Metallic - Cyber grey
From 拢565
Metallic - Amazon Grey
From 拢565
Next Read full interior review
Buy or lease the Hyundai Ioniq hybrid at a price you鈥檒l love
We take the hassle and haggle out of car buying by finding you great deals from local and national dealers
RRP 拢22,085 - 拢28,835
莲花直播 price from
Used
拢8,990
Ready to see prices tailored to you?
Compare used deals