The Kia Telluride is the 2020 MotorTrend SUV of the Year
History Made: Kia joins the premier leagueThe Kia Telluride's achievement as winner of MotorTrend's 2020 SUV of the Year award is more inevitability than incongruity.
It's been a long time coming for a company that was founded in 1944 and for decades has lived with the backhanded compliment of building "cheap and cheerful" transportation for buyers on a budget.
But this award is the deserved recognition that today's Korean auto industry has evolved to possess the skill and talent to design, engineer, and manufacture world-class vehicles—ones able to best their mainstream Japanese, European, and American rivals in terms of style, dynamics, refinement, and build quality.
Manufactured in West Point, Georgia, the Telluride is a Kia built in America for Americans: a comfortable and roomy three-row SUV that's perfectly pitched at the heart of a highly competitive segment that includes products from Chevy, Dodge, and Ford, as well as Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Mazda, and Volkswagen.
Read about Car, SUV, and Truck of the Year contenders and finalists HERE.
As expected of a Kia, the Telluride is a terrific value, offering lavish levels of standard equipment even in the $32,785 base model. And when you load it up to its as-tested $46,910 price, it absolutely deflates its mass-market competition.
But value is only one element of what makes the Telluride our 2020 Sport Utility of the Year. Our exhaustive judging process, in which each contender is evaluated in the context of our six key criteria, means the winning vehicle must be a well-rounded product, regardless of its functional focus.
So although its price makes the headlines, what helped the Kia Telluride garner seven first-place votes from our 11 judges is that it's anything but bargain basement in the way it looks, the way it drives, and the way it effortlessly copes with the modern American family's needs.
"Pleasing overall design, with nicely executed linework and surfacing," guest judge and former Chrysler design chief Tom Gale said during his design walkaround.
"One of the very few three-row crossovers that I actually like driving," features editor Christian Seabaugh said after he pushed the Telluride around our SUVOTY proving ground's challenging winding road.
"The Koreans have become masters at studying what everyone else does right, picking the best practices, and implementing them," Detroit editor Alisa Priddle added during the debate before the final vote.
MotorTrend en Español managing editor Miguel Cortina summed up the Kia this way: "The Telluride really nails the criteria."
Let's take a closer look at how.
Advancement in Design
The Telluride is the largest SUV yet from Kia, measuring 2.8 inches longer overall than its Borrego predecessor, with a 0.2-inch-longer wheelbase. But it wears its size well thanks to exterior styling that is both confident and sophisticated. The large grille makes a statement without being overbearing, and the headlights have been pulled back from the corners to visually reduce the front overhang. "The imposing stance and good proportions impressively disguise the dash-to-axle ratio inherent to the front-wheel-drive architecture," guest judge Johan de Nysschen said.
On the bodyside, simple surfaces mostly tell their own story instead of becoming a stage for entertainment riven with random cuts and lines. The greenhouse is subtly sporty, amplifying the slight rake to the D-pillar without compromising practicality. The rear graphic, bracketed by commalike taillights, is strong and distinctive. Even the base LX model gets jewelry such as the contrasting silver panels at the lower edges of the front and rear fascias and the brightwork around the greenhouse and at the base of the doors.
The Telluride looks substantial but is also friendly and approachable. There are some playful Easter eggs in the detailing, such as the castellation in the brightwork at the B-pillar, a nod to similar detailing in the Kia grille and on the upper edge of the windshield, and the indent at the lower front corner of the front doors.
The interior is just as confident and as sophisticated as the exterior. Again, even the base LX trim's interior looks well equipped and well finished. As for the range-topping SX: "I keep looking around the cabin and reminding myself this SUV costs only 47 grand," executive editor Mark Rechtin said after he climbed into our tester's Dune Brown Nappa leather-trimmed interior. "It feels like a rustic-modernist house of a millionaire rancher."
The interior not only looks good but is also practical and usable. Although the third row is for teenagers, adults will fit, and smartly located seat-fold buttons and grab handles to get in and out of the rear doors offer better functionality than the comparably sized Mercedes and BMW SUVs. Then there's the detail stuff, like both the second and third rows getting their own USB ports to keep all the family's devices happily charged and functioning.



