2026 Kia Sportage Hybrid First Drive: Good Fix of the Unbroken?
We’ve never found much fault with Kia’s small hybrid SUV, so futzing with a good thing could be dangerous.
We love us some Kia Sportage. In its purely combustion-powered guise, it presently sits at No. 1 in the MotorTrend Ultimate Car Rankings compact SUV class. When equipped with its hybrid electric (HEV) setup, it’s our second favorite (the RAV4 is just ahead), and somehow, when fitted with Kia’s plug-in hybrid (PHEV) drivetrain, it slips to third place behind the RAV4 Prime and its kissing cousin, the Hyundai Tucson.
Tampering with podium finishers is a perilous business, but we were mostly impressed with our drive of the new-for-’26 pure-combustion X-Pro mild-off-roader variant, though we noted that the 187-hp 2.5-liter non-turbocharged engine won’t light anybody’s hair on fire. The hybrid models add considerable juice, swapping in a 1.6-liter turbocharged inline-four engine with 177 horsepower assisted by an electric motor. In HEV form, it boosts torque big-time (both the engine and motor produce 195 lb-ft, though at different speeds, with total torque rated at 271 lb-ft), and for 2026 the HEV’s combined output jumps 5 hp to an all-in power of 232 horses.
One change we can neither criticize nor evaluate here is expanding the HEV lineup with a new S model that’s basically a $31,785 LX with $2,300 worth of AWD added. The other newbie is the slightly more trail-friendly X-Line model, which at $36,985 costs $1,900 above the midgrade EX and $4,900 below the range-topping SX Prestige we drove. Were the various upgrades worth it, and can a seasoned car scribbler (let alone a lay customer) feel a 2 percent power bump? Let’s hit Kentucky’s rolling, hilly bourbon country byways and find out.
The Most “Normal” Feeling Hybrid Option?
Electrification-phobes leery of silent, whooshing all-electric power or unnatural “motorboating” sounds from hybrids that employ newfangled continuously variable transmissions (CVTs don’t accelerate up through distinct “gears”) should strongly consider the Sportage (or its Tucson HEV cousin). Both sandwich a motor in between the engine and a traditional six-speed automatic, so they sound and feel more “normal.”
The Kia Sportage Hybrid’s acceleration is always attended by the reassuring rise and fall of the engine revs with each gear change, and power from the turbo engine and motor crank up the enthusiasm factor noticeably. Suspension tuning revisions to account for the larger wheels and tires (19 versus 18-inch) on our SX Prestige range topper (also fitted on the X-Line) firmed things up just enough to quell our previous complaints about a too-soft suspension.
The Trade-off: Declining Fuel Economy
The bad news? Those weird-sounding e-CVT setups are inherently more efficient, so competitors like the Toyota RAV4, Mazda CX-50, and even the new Jeep Cherokee get farther on a gallon of gas than the Kia, though at 36/35/36 mpg, the Sportage HEV squeaks 1 highway mpg ahead of the Subaru Forester among e-CVT hybrid compact SUVs. (Caveat: If you opt for the base Kia Sportage LX HEV, a rare front-wheel-drive offering, its 41/44/42-mpg ranks near the top of the class.)
Why has the fuel economy dropped from 38/38/38 mpg to a projected 35/36/35? The bigger tires on the SX Prestige and X-Line models increase rolling resistance, and because the SX has recently accounted for 50 percent of sales, the sales-weighted averaging had to include the big tires. What does that mean? If you buy an S or EX model with smaller tires and lighter equipment loading, you’ll likely see something closer to that all-38s jackpot fuel economy.



