2025 Kia Carnival Hybrid First Drive: Great Expectations Met?
The newest member of the minivan club is a homegrown hybrid, but can its 1.6-liter turbo engine manage 1.5 tons of #vanlife?Pop quiz: Which Kia model attracts the youngest buyers, sells the quickest, and brings 65 percent new buyers to the brand? The affordable, cheerful, sleek new Niro? One of the hot electrics? Nope. It’s the Kia Carnival minivan. Apparently, its SUV cosplay ploy was working, so Kia enhanced that look for 2025. And now that 61 percent of buyers in the segment report considering a hybrid, Kia adopts a fortified version of the Kia Sorento Hybrid’s powertrain, in hopes of steering such buyers away from the hybrids offered in the form of the segment-leading Chrysler Pacifica and Toyota Sienna. The new hybrid boasts class-leading torque but does this wee little 1.6T have the hustle needed to haul eight passengers and their gear?
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A Hybrid but Nothing Like Chrysler’s and Toyota’s
All three of those vans’ systems involve two electric motors assisting a combustion engine. But here in the 2025 Kia Carnival, one of them is a small alternator/motor connected to the engine’s accessory drive while the other mounts where the torque converter would go in a conventional six-speed automatic. Both Toyota’s Hybrid Synergy Drive and Chrysler’s E-Flite (aka SI-EVT) use planetary combiners to blend power from the engine and two stronger motors (Chrysler’s arrangement licenses Timken/Ricardo patents, not Toyota’s). And of course, only the Chrysler’s electric motors are sufficiently powerful to drive the van on electricity alone (up to 32 miles).
Regen Paddles!
Like Kia’s EVs and unlike the Chrysler and Toyota hybrids, steering-wheel-mounted paddles allow you to select from three levels of regenerative braking, or virtually none (Chrysler and Toyota each offer a gearshift lever position to increase engine braking). There is no iPedal or one-pedal driving mode, however, and the feeling differs greatly from what many EV owners have come to expect. Even with L3 selected, there is often a pause between lifting your foot and feeling meaningful deceleration. And the deceleration can get a bit lumpy during transmission downshifts.
Elec-Tricks
Kia engineers claim to have figured out a way to leverage the main electric propulsion motor to limit pitch and shock travel (E-Ride) and to sharpen handling in normal and emergency evasive maneuvers (E-Handling and E-EHA). The theory is that when, for example, traversing a speed bump, a very brief dose of regen braking from the motor can help lower the nose, while a quick spot of acceleration can lift it a bit on the other side. On the handling side, when the driver initiates a lane-change, a momentary whiff of regen serves to load the front tires, enlarging their contact patch to boost grip. When completing the lane change, a bit of extra drive force settles the rear for improved stability. Switching off the traction control disables these functions to enable an A-B comparison. The theory sounds plausible, though the results seem to be infinitesimal. Or at least during our drive we were unable to detect any such electrickery making an impact on the van’s dynamics. A Hybrid screen tracks fuel economy and electric-motor use, while also displaying battery charge level.


