Hyundai Boulder Concept Features That We Hope Will Survive
Being a concept, some of what appears on the Boulder won’t make it to production. Here are a few details we’d like to see carry over.
Hyundai is clearly taking aim at the Ford Bronco with the Boulder Concept it unveiled at the 2026 New York auto show, which is mainly meant to telegraph the No. 3 global automaker’s (No. 5 in the U.S.) intention to launch a new line of body-on-frame trucks to be designed and built in America, for America (and probably the Middle East and Africa if they ask nicely). Most of the details are unlikely to see the light of day—like the rear-hinged rear doors. Here are some we hope survive:
Two-Way Tailgate
Making the side-hinged rear door open from either side solves for the left-hand-drive/right-hand-drive market challenge, though we fret at what sort of hinge it would take to support that giant 37-inch spare. We’ve used enough center console lids that open from either side—none of which feels too robust—to worry about that. Still, it adds convenience and would serve as a unique selling proposition.
External Reservoir Shocks
For a concept, the Boulder has more suspension than we expected. The front is unequal-length control arms, the rear is a live axle (with trailing arms that are WAY too short to go toe-to-toe with a Raptor for suspension travel. But both ends have beautiful looking external reservoir shocks (and they’re coil-overs at both ends).





