Skip advert
Advertisement

New Kia Ceed Sportswagon PHEV 2020 review

The new Kia Ceed Sportswagon PHEV gets the Niro’s plug-in hybrid running gear, but does it improve the compact estate’s appeal?

Overall Auto Express rating

3.0

How we review cars
Avg. savings
£2,094 off RRP*
Find your Kia Ceed
Compare deals from trusted partners on this car and previous models.
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Value my car
Fast, no-nonsense car selling
Value my car

Verdict

Compared with the rest of the Ceed Sportswagon family, this plug-in hybrid powertrain is expensive, to the point where private buyers will be hard-pushed to ever recoup the extra cost. Practicality – such an important consideration for estate cars – is compromised too, which means that only company car users taking advantage of big Benefit-in-Kind savings will find this model worthy of consideration.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Kia’s push to electrify the Ceed family is gathering pace. Following the mild- hybrid, clutch-by-wire manual version we tried in August, the Korean brand is adding a brace of plug-in hybrid models to the line-up, too.

The Ceed Sportswagon PHEV driven here joins a new XCeed PHEV crossover and the existing Niro in the line-up, giving Kia good coverage of the plug-in hybrid market.

In the estate-bodied layout, Kia’s closest rival is the Renault Mégane Sports Tourer E-Tech, a car which is more powerful, but also £1,990 more expensive.

Regardless of whether it drives the Niro, XCeed or Ceed Sportswagon, the plug-in powertrain remains the same. There’s a 1.6-litre four-cylinder petrol engine backed up by an electric motor and an 8.9kWh battery. Both motive forces are sent to the front wheels via a six-speed dual-clutch automatic gearbox.

Typical of pretty much any plug-in hybrid, the Ceed starts up silently as it defaults to electric drive. The motor provides 60bhp on its own, which is plenty for general urban driving. Officially the car will cover 29 miles without any combustion intervention, and we found that figure completely achievable in real-world driving. Plugged into a modest 3.3kW home wallbox, it’ll take two hours to completely charge the battery.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

Ceed

2020 KIA

Ceed

49,852 milesManualDiesel1.6L

Cash £10,400
View Ceed
Ceed

2020 KIA

Ceed

45,942 milesManualPetrol1.6L

Cash £13,800
View Ceed
Ceed

2021 KIA

Ceed

5,096 milesManualPetrol1.5L

Cash £16,300
View Ceed
Ceed

2021 KIA

Ceed

45,260 milesManualDiesel1.6L

Cash £11,287
View Ceed

Once the battery has depleted (or a little more power is needed), the petrol engine kicks in. And kick it most certainly does, because it engages in a much more conspicuous manner than the Mégane’s engine.

Indeed, it’s not as slick as the Renault in most situations; Kia’s dual-clutch gearbox shifts abruptly compared with the Mégane’s transmission, or similar hybrid systems from Toyota and Peugeot. On the plus side, the Ceed sounds more natural than the CVT of Toyota’s set-ups, and while it’s not as nippy as the Renault around town, it feels at least as lively at the national speed limit.

With plenty of mass to haul around, the Ceed Sportswagon PHEV isn’t particularly fun to drive. But that battery shoves the weight distribution further back than in the normal car, so even if the tyres give up grip earlier on, it does feel balanced and predictable. The steering is well weighted and precise, too. The suspension gets caught out by larger bumps to a greater degree than other Ceed models, although overall it’s still a comfortable place to while away big mileages.

In the Sportswagon, Kia’s plug-in hybrid powertrain is only available in 3 trim – the highest spec on offer in the estate. Standard equipment is generous, with 17-inch alloy wheels, LED headlamps and daytime running lights, rain-sensing wipers, rear privacy glass and silver roof rails all fitted as standard. It also benefits from Kia’s latest infotainment system, a 10.25-inch system with excellent full-screen integration of Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Unfortunately, the battery brings a notable compromise in boot space. By estate standards, the Ceed’s 437 litres with the seats in place and 1,506 litres when the back row is folded flat look pretty meagre. By way of comparison, combustion-powered Ceed Sportswagons offer 625 litres and 1,694 litres.

Another possible stumbling point is the PHEV’s list price of £29,995. While that’s usefully cheaper than the Mégane Sport Tourer E-Tech, it becomes harder to justify against the rest of the Ceed range. Take the diesel automatic in 3 trim, the next most expensive model; at £25,180, it would take a huge amount of EV running to recoup that initial extra outlay. If you’re not bothered about that trim level’s kit, the entry-level 2 diesel with a manual gearbox starts from £21,145. Look at the PHEV on finance, and on a typical four-year deal with a 10 per cent deposit, it’ll cost a hefty £471 per month – roughly £100 more than the Ceed Sportswagon 3 diesel auto.

The big benefit comes for company car users. With CO2 emissions standing at just 33g/km, the PHEV falls into the 12 per cent Benefit in Kind bracket. By contrast, CO2 emissions of 131g/km for the diesel Ceed SW mean it slots into the 33 per cent bracket. In other words, those choosing their car through work stand to benefit so much from monthly deductions that the initial cost of the PHEV will be easily cancelled out.

Model:Kia Ceed Sportswagon PHEV
Price:£29,995
Engine:1.6-litre 4cyl petrol and electric motor
Power/torque:139bhp/265Nm
Transmission:Six-speed automatic, front-wheel drive
0-62mph:10.5 seconds
Top speed:105 mph
Economy/CO2:188.3mpg/33g/km
On saleNow
Skip advert
Advertisement
Chief reviewer

Alex joined Auto Express as staff writer in early 2018, helping out with news, drives, features, and the occasional sports report. His current role of Chief reviewer sees him head up our road test team, which gives readers the full lowdown on our comparison tests.

New & used car deals

KIA Ceed

KIA Ceed

RRP £19,745Avg. savings £2,094 off RRP*Used from £8,800
KIA Xceed

KIA Xceed

RRP £21,260Avg. savings £2,085 off RRP*Used from £10,200
Skoda Scala

Skoda Scala

RRP £19,300Avg. savings £2,207 off RRP*Used from £8,995
Mazda 3

Mazda 3

RRP £22,945Avg. savings £2,429 off RRP*Used from £8,490
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Have you considered?

Cupra Leon review
Cupra Leon - front action

Cupra Leon review

In-depth reviews
10 Mar 2025
Used MG5 (Mk1, 2020-date) buyer’s guide: electric estate is great value
Used MG5 EV - front

Used MG5 (Mk1, 2020-date) buyer’s guide: electric estate is great value

Used car tests
28 Feb 2025
Cupra Leon ST VZ2 TSI 333 review: big fun behind low-key looks
Cupra Leon ST VZ2 - front tracking

Cupra Leon ST VZ2 TSI 333 review: big fun behind low-key looks

Road tests
26 Feb 2025

Most Popular

Hot hatch fans rejoice! A new Peugeot 208 GTi is officially on the way
Peugeot 208 GTi render (watermarked) - front

Hot hatch fans rejoice! A new Peugeot 208 GTi is officially on the way

The GTi badge is coming back, and sooner than we might have imagined!
News
25 Mar 2025
MGS5 EV review
MGS5 EV - main image

MGS5 EV review

MG’s conservatively styled B-segment SUV delivers on most counts, but it lacks a bit of flair
In-depth reviews
25 Mar 2025
The smart money is being spent on hybrid cars
Opinion - Toyota Yaris Cross

The smart money is being spent on hybrid cars

Mike Rutherford thinks hybrids sit in the sweet spot between cheaper petrol and diesel models and more expensive pure-electric cars
Opinion
23 Mar 2025