2025 Hyundai Tucson First Drive: Good Vibes and Useful Tech Upgrades
The refreshed compact SUV has an airier, less confusing first row and an angrier face.Hyundai got the broad strokes right for this generation of Tucson compact SUV, but a handful of issues hold it back from performing better in our rankings. (That version currently sits 8th out of 14 as this is written.) Its spacious cabin and good features-per-dollar value have been generally lauded, and its exterior styling is somewhat outgoing for the segment. User interfaces and vehicle dynamics were the primary areas we thought needed attention.
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For 2025, Hyundai’s refreshed crossover tries to strike a few items from the list of things to improve. In addition to a handful of exterior tweaks, it gains a reconfigured dash and center console and several new tech features, some of them standard equipment.
A lot rides on a successful Tucson compact SUV. It isn’t simply Hyundai’s bestselling model. It also happens to take the fight directly to Honda and Toyota. On the same time Hyundai introduced a cool, new variant of the Ioniq 5 electric crossover, it also offered media drives with the updated 2025 Tucson, Tucson Hybrid, and Tucson Plug-In Hybrid. We got seat time in all three.
Kona Vibes
If the front row changes look familiar, it’s because the Tucson’s insides now echo what Hyundai gave the Kona for its 2024 update (which looks like a variant of the Ioniq 5’s cabin). The most obvious similarities are the new steering wheel and stretched housing for the cabin’s screens, seemingly plucked straight from the smaller crossover.
The newly standard curved display incorporates a 12.3-inch infotainment touchscreen, a huge improvement. Not only is it bigger than the previous standard 8.0-inch and upgrade 10.3-inch screens, but operating system improvements are said to make it run more smoothly and quickly, and we saw nothing to contradict that.
Options for the driver display include an available 12.3-inch screen or standard speedometer and tachometer with 4.2-inch multi-information readout. The upgrade screen is also a couple inches bigger than what the Tucson had before, and we found it as vibrant and engaging as the infotainment interface. Due to the new displays and their orientation higher on the dash, the front AC vents have been pushed lower and now sit below the screens.
The Tucson’s previous distinctive four-spoke steering wheel has been replaced with a more conventional three-spoke design like the wheels in the smaller Hyundais. Haptic driver-assist feedback carries over to the new unit.
The front passenger now gets their own shelf in the dash, wide and deep enough for multiple phones. Changes to the Tucson’s dash styling spill over onto the inner doors, as well, which now come without the horizontal accent line that used to stretch across the top.



