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Kia EV9

New from £66,635 / £713 p/m

Electric
Automatic
SUV
6 or 7 seats
5 doors
A home charging station

How long will it take to charge?

Electric Vehicle Charging Information
Charging location
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Results based on 99.80kWh Kia EV9 battery

  • 0

    For a part charge (up to 0 miles)

  • 0

    For an 0% charge 0

You can charge this vehicle in 27 minutes at its fastest charging speed of 350 kW

* We have used data from the manufacturer to estimate these charging times, they are only a guide. Charging times for some speeds may not have been provided.

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Is the Kia EV9 SUV a good car?

Read our expert review

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Words by: Dan Trent

"If the Kia EV9 is a lot of electric SUV this GT version is even more so! Just as big and practical as the regular EV9 this version does all the same things … just faster. You get a hint of that from the more aggressive bodywork, the neon brake calipers, sports seats and other trimmings but the real changes are underneath, and intended to making this leviathan handle more like the EV6 GT that inspires it. This includes extra power, fake engine noise, simulated ‘gear changes’ and lots of clever stuff going on with the suspension and twin-motor system. Whether you need all this in a family SUV is your call, but the EV9 GT is as stylish as it is imposing with tons of interior space and impressive tech."

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Green Rating

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2.5

Kia and Hyundai both operate out of Korea, though localised production for certain models helps keep a lid on their embedded manufacturing CO2. Sadly, the EV9 GT doesn’t benefit from this so any vehicle bought here will have been shipped half-way round the world before it even touches UK soil. And when it does any benefit from being electrically-powered has to be offset by the negative impact of being such a large and heavy vehicle, given the extra raw materials required to build it and wear, tear and additional particulates released by things like tyres and brakes. Credit to Kia for its transparent approach to sustainability at a corporate level, though, this all clearly flagged on its global website and model pages at a local level. It’ll take more than recycled seat upholstery to make a car of this nature look sustainable, though!

Read the review by category

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Running costs for a Kia EV9

3/5

If you’re number crunching against a top-spec regular EV9 the step up to the GT doesn’t look all that bad, especially given the extra performance and features. This assumes you’re happy paying premium money for what was once considered a budget brand, of course. True, you literally get a lot of car for your money. And Kia’s modern design language and build quality delivers. But it remains a very expensive choice, and quite a bit more pricey than the Hyundai Ioniq 9 with which it shares much of its tech. True, it’s cheaper than equivalent premium seven-seat electric SUVs like the Volvo EX90. But it can’t compete on brand image, even looking as good as it does. Running costs will meanwhile depend very much on your circumstances, and if you can charge at home will be much cheaper than an equivalently powerful petrol or hybrid alternative from more familiar premium brands. That big battery also  charges quickly but guzzles a lot of power, and on longer journeys could end up costing you when plugged into expensive public chargers.

Reliability of a Kia EV9

5/5

Kia and partner brand Hyundai share much in the way of tech, and both have a proven track record with electric cars. Faith in this engineering means Kia is happy to offer the EV9 GT with a seven-year warranty just as it does the rest of its cars, beating the related Ioniq 9 and potentially lasting well into the second ownership cycle for those buying second-hand.

Safety for a Kia EV9

4/5

Certainly, no complaints about the amount of technology keeping you safe on the EV9 GT, Kia loading it up with all the assistance features you could wish for as standard. Which is good news for a car likely to be used as a family wagon. And one so large you’re going to need every one of those cameras, sensors and monitors to avoid scraping it. Particular favourites include the projected blindspot camera views in the instruments when you put an indicator on and essential 360 parking monitoring. We have to deduct a point for the irritation factor of the mis-called speed limit alerts and emergency braking alarms. Maybe the black boxes were just as intimidated by the size of the EV9 as we were!

How comfortable is the Kia EV9

5/5

While the EV9 GT’s size can be a liability in crowded car parks and narrow suburban streets it’s very much a positive when it comes to comfort on bigger roads, with no compromise in practicality over the standard car. This side of a minibus you’re not going to find a better way of carrying a lot of people, with even the third row of seats as comfortable for adults as they are kids. Our test car had the six-seat arrangement, with two recliners in the middle instead of the more conventional bench on the seven-seat version. This means limo-like comfort for those in row two but limits options for family drivers, so doesn’t look much more than amusing novelty. Boot space is vast with the third row folded away, though a little shallow for full-on family SUV duties. In seven-seat mode it’s still decent enough for a small weekly shop but not for the annual family holiday. On the road there seem few sacrifices in comfort for the extra performance and sporty handling, the GT getting sophisticated suspension that adjusts according to which of the driver modes you’re in. This keeps the EV9 flat through corners with none of the wallowing you might expect of a top-heavy SUV, the sheer weight of it basically flattening the bumps (or anything else) on any given road surface.

Features of the Kia EV9

5/5

The engineering upgrades making this a GT over the regular EV9 are genuinely extensive and impressive, if likely lost on all but the most enthusiastic of drivers. You don’t have to understand how they all work to appreciate how much sharper it is to drive as a result, though. Of more relevance for one-upmanship at school drop-off are the bits you can see, these including neon coloured brake calipers within the redesigned 21-inch wheels, more aggressive sculpting and extra intakes on the bumpers and a fancier lighting signature. On the inside you get sportier front seats with contrast stitching and various GT-branded bits, including the prominent lime green hot key on the steering wheel for selecting the sportiest combination of the various systems. Even ambient lighting and these colourful trim elements couldn’t lift the rather dark and broody ambience on our test car, the design appealing even if the materials can’t quite match the premium levels of the Volvo EX90 you might be tempted to stretch the monthly budget for. It’s a very different vibe but if you’re after an electric seven-seater a long-wheelbase VW ID.Buzz is a lot more fun to be in, and perhaps more versatile as well. But each to theirs. No complaints about Kia’s crisp, logical interface through the paired screens serving driver information and infotainment, though. Saying that we were less sold on the ‘haptic’ shortcuts on the dashboard, which more often than not required multiple jabs to wake up.

Power for a Kia EV9

4/5

With a fraction over 500 horsepower the GT builds on the existing twin-motor EV9, with more power at the rear in an effort to contrive a more dynamic driving style. Which it genuinely does, though you need a lot of road to appreciate it, the GT rewarding assertive throttle inputs with a very clever distribution of power, all contained by supremely effective suspension and brakes. A vehicle this big is never going to handle like a hot-hatch but the EV9 GT can cover ground with a surprising sense of agility, the silent-but-deadly power delivery of the electric motors made that little more involving with the ‘virtual gear shifting’ feature carried over from the EV6 GT. In this setting the paddles behind the wheel usually used for adjusting regenerative braking act as shifters for a simulated manual gearbox, the ‘revs’ building through the speakers for a surprisingly convincing and entertaining simulation of a combustion-engined vehicle. Which you can, of course, switch off entirely if you think it’s all a bit silly. Dial it back to the more mellow driving modes and the EV9 GT drives like a more conventional electric SUV, with smooth and silent acceleration, excellent refinement and claimed range of just over 300 miles between charges. Previous experience of the regular EV9 suggests that’s an optimistic target, especially if you’re ‘enjoying’ the GT as intended. But Kia’s charging at least means you won’t need to plug in for long before resuming the fun.

Lease deals

These deals are based on terms of 8,000 miles, for a 36 month lease with a 6 months initial payment.

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£916.73

Monthly payment

£5,500.37

Initial payment

14

£1,004.64

Monthly payment

£6,027.84

Initial payment

17

£1,031.99

Monthly payment

£6,191.93

Initial payment

17

£1,038.68

Monthly payment

£6,232.10

Initial payment

17
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Standard equipment

Expect the following equipment on your Kia EV9 SUV. This may vary between trim levels.

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