The Kia Stinger Thread

Kia working on a new mid-sized all-electric sedan to succeed the Stinger

Hyundai aims to go fully electric by the end of this decade and has allocated at least €17 billion. As part of the transition, the company is hard at work developing its next-generation EV platform that could potentially carry the biggest batteries in the industry. The first vehicle to debut with the said platform is a car codenamed GT1 - a mid-size sedan, which is coming to replace the Stinger.

According to rumors, the GT1's new eM platform will accommodate a big 113.2 kWh battery. It should be able to go for 800 km on a single charge. Additionally, the GT1 will come in a couple of different powertrains with single and dual-motor configurations. The range-topper in the portfolio will likely reach 603 hp, making it the most powerful Kia in production.

 
Kia Stinger Replacement Will Be A 600 Horsepower EV With Nearly 500 Miles Of Range: Report

A report is claiming Kia’s replacement for the Stinger is a new performance EV that’s coming in 2026.

If you’re like me, you’re still mourning the loss of the Kia Stinger. With the Stinger gone, the EV6 GT is carrying the performance torch for the Kia brand. But if a new report out of Korea is to be believed, that torch is going to get passed really soon to a new performance EV.

Korean Car Blog reports that a leaked new car production schedule from Kia’s Union confirms that a new EV sedan is coming. Apparently, this sedan is already being worked on and bears the internal codename of GT1. It’ll be built at Kia’s Hwaseong Plant 3 starting in 2026. According to Korean Car Blog, this new EV will be the first to ride on a new, next-generation EV platform that’ll also underpin a two new Genesis SUVs.

The GT1 will be Kia’s first electric vehicle to be equipped with next-generation electric vehicle-only platform (known as “eM”) developed by HMG following the E-GMP (used for the KIA EV6, EV9, Hyundai IONIQ 5 and IONIQ 6 and Genesis GV60) and to be premiered by Genesis GV90 in 2025. This model will correspond to an E-segment and will also serve as Kia K8 successor.

Supposedly, the specs for this new performance EV have leaked as well. If everything pans out, this thing will be pretty damn competitive, especially if the price is right. According to the leaked specs, base versions of the GT1 will have a single rear-mounted motor setup with 160 kW; a midlevel AWD trim will add another 160 kW for the front bringing output to 435 horsepower.

 
5 Semi-sensible (and non-German) Sports Sedans

If you’re a motoring enthusiast who’s thinking about buying a semi-sensible sports sedan, you will have browsed through Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz’s wares by now. But what if you broaden your search to include brands from outside of Germany?

Admit it, if you’re a fiend for speed with a family to transport (which means that you need a car that not only offers evocative performance, but at least a smidge of practicality too), you’ve probably looked at German premium brands’ sports sedans on many occasions during your tyre-kicking endeavours.

And why wouldn’t you? Audi S- and RS, BMW M and Mercedes-AMG models are performance A-listers, well-made, have desirable badges backed up by credible sporting pedigrees and are based on tamer bread-and-butter models, so it’s easier to convince yourself that getting one is a sensible choice.

Ford Mondeo ST220 (2002–2007)

Mazda6 MPS (2005-2007)

Lexus IS-F (2007–2014)

Kia Stinger (2017–2023)

Volvo S60 Polestar AWD (2015–2017)

 
Tested: Kia's Stinger is a fast, head-turning grand tourer

"This machine has some serious muscle car vibes", I ponder while approaching the tail end of the Kia Stinger GT in our office basement. Possibly even a hint of Corvette in the way the upper extension of the rear bumper grips around those 3D taillights. But let’s not dwell on the particulars here, this is the Kia we’ve all been waiting for and it looks absolutely arresting from every angle.

Sadly, it is sold out, and at this stage no further allocation has been confirmed, although you can still pre-order one on the www.kiastinger.co.za website and hope for the best.

It’s 3cm lower than a 3 Series and just 2cm taller than a Ford Mustang. The Korean is as wide as a 5 Series, and closer to the latter in length than it is to the 3 Series. But what really matters is that in true grand tourer tradition, the Stinger has the classical ingredients of a long bonnet, short front and long rear overhangs as well as a cabin that sweeps back over the rear wheels.

Images really don’t prepare you for just how much attention it attracts out on the street. I should have known the second our security guard at the office’s exit boom gave it one of the biggest thumbs-up and smile combos that I’ve ever seen from him. Needless to say that I encountered many upward-turned thumbs during the week that followed, had numerous conversations at traffic lights and even saw a few cell phones poking out of car windows.

Not since the Mustang has a car (non-exotic at least) attracted so much attention out on the mean streets of Jozi. Unlike The Ponycar, however, you don’t get asked to rev it at every stop street, which can get a touch embarrassing when Ford sent you the 2.3-litre EcoBoost.

Whereas the Mustang makes you choose between four and eight cylinders - and I’m drawing this comparison out a bit here because I really do believe that the Stinger is a Mustang rival with two extra doors - Kia gives you just one engine option. And it’s a fine one at that.

The 3.3-litre twin-turbo V6 pushes 272kW at 6000rpm and 510Nm from 1300, and in this case that’s more than enough to shunt this GT along at furious velocity. Kia quotes a 4.9 second 0-100km/h sprint and 270km/h top speed, and while acceleration is impressive to say the least, what really stands out here is the responsiveness of the turbo unit and the eight-speed automatic gearbox through which it powers the back wheels.

Though not a ripsnorting growler in the muscle car tradition, the engine sounds good by V6 standards, even mildly enticing when you’ve cranked it into Sport mode, although there is admittedly some fakery going on there.

Sport is one of five modes that you can select via the Drive Mode Select rotary control on the centre console. In addition to the acoustics, this system fiddles around with things like throttle and gearbox response, steering assistance and chassis characteristics, via the adaptive dampers. You can also preset your own mixture of settings through the Individual mode.

The car’s sheer size and 1.8-tonne bulk does limit its agility, but the Stinger is plenty grippy and handles neatly, without much drama or body roll. Turn off that traction control, however, and there is plenty of tail happy entertainment on the cards. The steering is lacking a little in the feel and feedback department, but it is tolerable.

The other area where Kia has made a serious attempt to rock the German status quo is in the cabin, and it is a largely successful attempt in our opinion, with its mix of high quality materials - soft touch surfaces and classy satin chrome featuring aplenty here. The dash design, however, is more borrowed-from-Mercedes than distinctively Kia, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

Electronically it falls behind the latest and greatest however. There’s no digital instrument cluster and the 20.3cm touchscreen infotainment system is mostly in black and white, making it seem rather dated. It’s not a complete Flintstone affair, however, as the system is at least compatible with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.

You can’t call Kia out for being stingy with the features, as this package includes a 15-speaker Harman/Kardon premium sound system, Head-up Display, around-view monitoring system, power-operated tailgate (the Stinger is a five-door hatch by the way) and Nappa leather seats in black or red, powered and heated for those upfront.

VERDICT

It’s hard to recommend a car that’s sold out and at R849 995 as it’s listed on the website - assuming that applies to any new allocation that might come at a future stage - it’s not exactly a bargain, even considering what you’re getting. But if you’re looking for a GT car that excites, turns heads and laps up the miles in comfort, the Kia Stinger is an enticing proposition.

https://www.iol.co.za/motoring/road...-is-a-fast-head-turning-grand-tourer-18326276

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I think this car is really solid even though it didn't make enough sells leading to it's discontinuation in 2023. It had real potential.
 
The Kia Stinger is one of the most underrated performance sedans of the past decade. It brought something genuinely exciting to the market—a rear-wheel-drive (or AWD) grand tourer with aggressive styling, sharp handling, and real power under the hood. The twin-turbo V6 GT variant in particular delivers thrilling acceleration, rivaling much more expensive German sedans. Kia took a bold step in design and dynamics, and they pulled it off better than many expected. The KIA Stinger Interior is simply pure class.
What impresses me most is how well-rounded the Stinger is. It's fast, yes, but also comfortable on long drives, with a surprisingly upscale interior and practical hatchback layout. You can daily drive it without compromise and still enjoy a spirited weekend blast.
It’s a shame that production is ended, because the KIA Stinger deserved more love. It proved Kia could play in the premium sport sedan space and hold its own. For anyone looking for performance, practicality, and value in one stylish package, the Stinger is hard to beat.
 
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