Premium' is an unhelpfully vague term to apply to a car, when you think about it. A premium is something you pay, but you don't - these days, at any rate - pay it for its own sake.
Audi, Mercedes, BMW and Land Rover could all be described as premium brands. But that descriptor would actually tell you little about what these brands trade on in 2024, and how different they are. Audi remains a design brand; once-luxury-minded Mercedes has become more of a technology brand; BMW is a sporting brand; while Land Rover is all about capability and versatility. We could go on.
And so for brands like Kia with premium aspirations, sooner or later you must decide what kind of 'premium' you want to be. Looking back over a decade or so, it is easy to spot the evidence of the company trying things on.
Giving neat-and-tidy refined premium design a go (with the previous Sportage and Ceed), and then moving to more bold and outlandish design (current Sportage, EV6). But also dallying with sporting dynamism and driver appeal, and even with an alternative executive saloon along the way (EV6 GT, Stinger GT).
Now it is trying something different again - and this might be its most interesting aspirational experiment yet. Because, while better known for big cars elsewhere in the world than it is in Europe, Kia has never - into any market - launched a car quite like the EV9.
More than five metres long, with genuinely arresting design, a really spacious seven-seat cabin and an all-electric powertrain easily strong enough to count as a selling point in its own right, this unashamedly full-size SUV will take Kia into buying conversations in which it has never come close to featuring before. It is, according to its maker, already attracting customers who are trading in Range Rover Sports, Cayennes, X5s and XC90s.
This story is from the January 24, 2024 edition of Autocar UK.
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This story is from the January 24, 2024 edition of Autocar UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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