There is nothing “traditional” about the midsize Ioniq 6, but its features and technologies are familiar, with welcome engagement for driver and occupants.
Table of Contents
Who Will Buy the Ioniq 6?
Choices of Power and Driving Ranges
Charging the Ioniq 6
2024 Ioniq 6 Pricing
Touchy Feely Design
The Human Experience
Enter the Living Space
Clever Function
Ride and Handling
Driver Assist Technologies
Back Seats and Cargo
Why Buy the Hyundai Ioniq 6?
2024 Hyundai Ioniq 6 Specifications
The Hyundai Ioniq 6 is not just a benchmark electric car; it is a well-done passenger car without gimmicks or compromise to comfort or drivability.
For those considering an electric vehicle, the Ioniq 6 treats you right, from its gracious ride quality to its ease of entry and exit and many appreciated details. Its potential as an emergency power source is not the least among its assets.
The midsize “coupe sedan” has been a breakout star for Hyundai. The Ioniq 6 debuted last year and is a “carryover” model with no changes for 2024.
Exterior styling of the Ioniq 6 has stirred controversy. The rear end is very busy with two spoilers, vertical metallic accent bars, and “parametric pixel” cubes liberally applied in the lighting.
Front views are sleek and refined, with a smooth slope to the hood, centered between the curvaceous fenders. The dramatic slope is key to aerodynamics, but at a compromise to space in the front trunk. The frunk’s 0.5 cu.ft. shows good use of space, but the space is long and shallow but lighted. How an owner would use this leftover space? For gloves? A microfiber towel? Christmas gift hiding place?
Trimming the height of the frunk was likely to allow the steep slant of the nose, contributing to low aerodynamic drag. Intended or not, the slope of the hood also allows open sightlines. The slant design treatment has been compared to the 1980s Porsche 911 Turbo S “slantnose.” The Porsche “Flachbau,” or flat front design, had a low front aerodynamic flow for its race cars.
Who Will Buy the Ioniq 6?
Hyundai’s marketing research has decided that the focus buyer for the Ioniq 6 will be:
- Millennial professionals who are confident in their choices and looking to transition to electric;
- Accomplished singles or couples who are typically urban. They are comfortable standing apart and differing from the status quo. They seek to make an informed choice for their next vehicle;
- They are looking to reward themselves with an EV that makes a statement of confidence and doesn’t compromise on a premium interior, advanced technology (safety and connectivity), or limit (through charging and range) their active lifestyle.
Choices of Power and Driving Ranges
The 2024 Hyundai Ioniq 6 is sold in four trim levels in rear or all-wheel drive with standard and long-range battery options:
Standard range RWD with a 53-kWh battery pack of 264 cells; 149-hp (111kW); up to 240-mile range; 0-62 mph 9 seconds.
Long range RWD with a 77.4 kWh battery pack of 384 cells; 225 hp (168kW); up to 361-mile range; 0-62 mph 7.4 seconds.
Dual-Motor HTRAC AWD long range, with 77.4 kWh battery; 320 hp (239 kW), up to 316-mile range; 0-62 mph 5.1 seconds.
The single-speed transmission has four driving modes of Eco, Normal, Sport, Snow, and Custom, with a dedicated eAWD torque split for each drive mode.
Charging the Ioniq 6
According to Hyundai, the Ioniq 6 battery pack will charge from 10 percent to 80 percent in 18 minutes at an ultra-fast 800V charging facility. Connecting to the more common 350-kW Level 3 fast charger can add as much as 65 miles of range in 5 minutes.
Hyundai includes a 10.9-kW onboard charger as standard equipment so owners can plug it into a household outlet or a 240V Level 2 home charger. Charging a depleted battery at home on a Level 2 charger would take around seven hours. I plugged in at home with 150 miles remaining on the charge, and it took about 4 hours to reach 100 percent.
Here are the official charging times, up to 80 percent:
Level II standard 120-volt: 6 hours 55 minutes
50kW: 73 minutes;
Rapid Charging, 350kW: 18 minutes.
Hyundai’s Multi-Charging System
Hyundai has patented its multi-charging system, calling it world-first technology. The system enables the motor and inverter to boost 400V to 800V for stable charging compatibility.
The technology includes “reverse compatibility,” also known as bidirectional. This added level of engineering — Vehicle to Load (V2L) — allows the Ioniq 6 battery to be used as an alternate power source. V2L is handy in the event of a significant power outage. It has enough power to operate small appliances, recharge electronic devices, or boost another EV.
Recharging an EV on vacation travel is still a time-management effort, no matter if the EV has a range of 600 miles. The recharge still requires a break for a meal or shopping.
Hyundai has partnered with Electrify America to provide free fast-charge sessions. The plan is provided to any new all-electric Hyundai model. For the Kona small SUV, owners will receive up to 250kWh or about 1,000 miles of driving. Buyers of the Ioniq 5 and Ioniq 6 get two years of 30-minute DC fast-charging sessions.
2024 Hyundai Ioniq 6 Pricing
Starting prices include the $1,115 freight charge from Asan, Korea; add $3,500 for AWD:
SE RWD standard range: $42,715;
SE RWD long range: $46,615;
SEL: $48,815 (RWD 305-mile range, AWD 270-mile range);
Limited RWD: $53,715, up to 305-mile range;
Limited AWD, $57,215, up to 270-mile range.
The Limited AWD Long Range tester cost $58,425 with Gravity Gold matte paint ($1,000) and carpeted floor mats ($210).
Find current Hyundai pricing here.
Hyundai’s new-vehicle warranties include 10 years or 60,000 miles bumper to bumper and 10 years or 100,000 miles for the powertrain and electric vehicle systems.
Hyundai Ioniq 6 Incentives and Rebates
Leasing a 2023 and 2024 Hyundai Ioniq 6 qualifies for up to $7,500 in an IRS credit. The incentive is only available on a lease, and other qualifiers can apply. Learn more here.
There is a California Clean Fuel Reward of $2,000, but participants are eligible based on gross annual income, as stated on their federal tax return. Details are here.
Find federal and state laws or incentives here.
And the Ioniq 6 qualifies for High-Occupancy-Vehicle freeway access, with the green DMV decal
Touchy Feely Design
Hyundai went far left coast in planning the Ioniq 6 interior. In the big wall map of features to be considered, Hyundai designers came up with many categories including “Mindful Cocoon,” “Ethical Design,” and “Emotional Efficiency.”
The cabin is referred to as “Living Space” and is defined by a cab-forward exterior design, a stretched cabin, and a low hood for a streamlined silhouette. The cabin as “Living Space” would have “Transparent Accents,” “Light Reflection,” “Parametric Pixel,” and “Eco Materials,” for “Sustainability.”
That’s a touchy-feely marketing focus that doesn’t mean a whole lot to an owner, but Hyundai neatly ties it all together. Perhaps most apparent is the “Parametric Pixel.” In, out, and around the Ioniq 6 are series of cube pixel-like accents, such as in the taillights, the trunk-lid spoiler, and on the steering wheel. There is no badge for Hyundai or Ioniq on the wheel, just a row of four, square pixels that light up when charging; they show the state of charge, whether one, two, or four squares.
The Human Experience
Popular magazine reviews of the Hyundai Ioniq 6 go deep into its powertrain kilowattage, 0-60 acceleration, and charging times. The Ioniq 6 aces those categories, which an owner will quickly accept and appreciate. However, there is a bigger presence of thoughtfulness toward the human experience. That aspect will be a pleasant discovery period for the many surprise-and-delight features throughout the living space.
Achieving max aerodynamic flow can mean lowering the car’s ride height. That’s good for the manufacturer’s fuel-efficiency standards but damning to the driver and occupants who must drop into a seat while peering into the taillights of the vehicle ahead. Ride height is one reason SUVs have become so popular. Hyundai, however, managed to give the Ioniq 6 a comfortable step-in height with a commanding forward view. Most modern sedans are now notorious for chin-scraping on driveways and dips in the road, but the Ioniq 6 has none of those tendencies.
Those attributes alone make the Ioniq 6 a “buy.”
Enter the Living Space
Modern low-riding sedans lost buyers because of trimmed headroom. Hyundai went upward with Ioniq 6 headroom, providing (tall for a car) 40.2 inches of hair space without the wide sunroof or 38.3 inches with it.
Seat design is another strong selling point, whether in the front or back. Hyundai’s H-Tex leatherette upholstery feels rich to the touch and is more compliant than leather hides. The front seatbacks gently cradle with modest cushion bolstering that does not give a goodbye wedgie when exiting. Thigh support is full-bodied and suitable for those tall enough to need all 45.4 inches of the car’s very long legroom.
The tester’s interior was basic black but refined by meticulously neat stitching, patterns, textures, and translucent plastics in the lower areas of the cabin. I liked the robust driver’s footrest, and the metal-trimmed pedals fit well with the interior design and black microsuede headliner.
And the greenhouse of the living space is a lighthouse of unobstructed views at the side mirrors, over the shoulder, and the somewhat cropped back glass.
A winglet-design dashboard is unique with 90-degree angles at each end by the windows. The dashboard looks like a plug-and-play unit, but it all works — though it will look odd for the first few drives.
Driver information comes from two side-by-side, 12.3-inch digital screens with white backgrounds. The driver’s instrument cluster with EV display is visible in all lighting conditions with text and graphics that are an easy read.
The HD touch-screen navigation screen includes a split screen for the around-view camera system. The screen anchors at least a dozen categories with icons for connecting a phone, media, climate, and charging.
Clever Function
A “bridge” console extends from the base of the instrument panel and divides the front seats, with unique storage. The upper level has cup holders, a wireless charging pad, window lift switches, and door locks. An armrest box has useful storage and conceals two Type C USB ports, and there is an old-style USB-A next to the wireless charging pad.
Below the bridge is a long, open storage space with low sides for a purse or take-out food bags.
Without a space-robbing gearshift lever, the designers rethought what could be. Placing window and lock controls on the console is different, but I adapted quickly. Moving the switches from the traditional door panel allowed the designer to create a long, padded armrest with an integrated grab rail for closing the door. On opening, the grab rail — with a bead of ambient lighting — provides the ideal leverage point to control the door from punching the car next to it.
Hyundai gives owners a 3-month trial for the Wi-Fi hotspot, followed by a $20 per month Verizon data plan. Or the owner can add the Ioniq 6 to their phone plan.
Mercifully, the digital infotainment touchscreen has various buttons and switches for such oft-used features as volume, tuning, fan speed, and temp control.
All controls were intuitive for me to quickly figure out and use — a degree in IT is not required. Also smartly designed is the steering-column mounted, shift-by-wire gear selector. The sturdy stalk is clearly marked D-N-R, with a Park button at the end. Turning the tab-end of the stalk was never confusing to select D or R.
Ioniq 6 AWD Ride and Handling
Underpinned by a seemingly unsophisticated steel suspension, there is outstanding control from the front MacPherson struts and rear multi-link. The setup provides capable finesse in enthusiastic driving, but the main asset is how the suspension absorbs the jarring roughness of crappy road surfaces and potholes. The ride is luxurious without a complex air ride system or electronic control.
On the Interstate with cruise set and Hyundai Drive Assist engaged, the Ioniq 6 settles in and tracks like a streamliner. The ride quality is consistently unruffled over California’s cantankerous concrete highways, but the ride is carpet smooth on blacktop.
The Hyundai Ioniq 6 is among the aerodynamic slipperiest cars on sale today. Models with 18-inch wheels have a drag coefficient of 0.20, while 20-inch models rise to 0.27 (matching the 2023 Toyota Prius). Other aerodynamically sleek cars include the Mercedes-Benz EQS and Mercedes-Benz EQE (0.20), Lucid Air (0.21cd), and Porsche Taycan (0.22 cd).
Driver Assist Technologies
The Ioniq 6 has all the expected safety features, including six air bags and a full spectrum of advanced technologies, including Hyundai’s Highway Driving Assist 2.
This evolved system is reliably accurate for Level 2 semi-autonomous driving. When engaged, the lane-centering function is spot-on and keeps the car from drifting wide across the white lines or Botts dots. However, some stretches of light-colored Interstate highway can play tricks on the cameras, causing brief slowdowns.
The evolved technologies now allow Lane Change Assistance. It can be activated when the turn signal is held for a left or right move and the driver has hands on the steering wheel. In my experience, the response was too slow, and I intervened to make the lane change. This function is just one more layer of technology toward fully autonomous driving.
More relevant in the evolved HDA is how it now can respond to low-speed cut-ins of other vehicles or motorcyclists. The system also will adjust the car’s position in the lane if another vehicle in the adjacent lane moves too close.
Also evolved is the Smart Cruise Control with Machine Learning. This electronic “intelligence” mimics the driver’s acceleration style and spacing with the vehicle ahead. I’m too much of an actual driver to give up this type of control.
Other advanced driving-assist technologies include:
- Blind-spot collision-avoidance assist and Blind-Spot View Monitor;
- Rear Cross-Traffic Collision-Avoidance Assist;
- Parking Distance Warning, reverse and forward;
- Parking Collision-Avoidance Assist (reverse, forward, side);
- Remote Smart Parking Assist 2;
- Forward Collision-Avoidance Assist with Car/Ped/Cyclist Detection and Junction Turning;
- Lane Keeping and Lane Following Assist;
- Intelligent Speed Limit Assist.
Back Seat and Cargo Space
The Ioniq 6 is too nice to use as a ride-share sedan, but what a lovely back seat it has.
A comfortable stretch of back legroom seems longer than its specification of 34.7 inches. Headroom is adult accommodating for all but the very tall, somewhat cropped by the trailing arc of the roofline.
A completely flat floor provides exceptional three-across footroom. The bench seat has good thigh support and a relaxed seatback angle. The door panel has a bottle slot and a uniquely integrated niche as a small catchall for gum wrappers and other bits. The door also has the armrest rail for easy closing.
Other occupant amenities include a fold-down center armrest with dual can holders, two USB-C ports, center air vents with left and right flow, and grab handles above each door with a jacket hook on the driver side.
Trunk space is wide and low, looking more spacious than its 11.2 cubic feet. But fold the 60/40 seatback for up to six feet in ladder or ski length. A power trunk closer is a bonus for the Ioniq 6 Limited.
Why Buy the Hyundai Ioniq 6?
For those who have said good riddance to a modern midsize sedan, the Hyundai Ioniq 6 could be a mind-changer, not just a game-changer.
The average price of a new midsize sedan is around $32,000, which compares to $48,000 for a midsize SUV, according to MoneyGeek.
Spending a little more upfront for the Ioniq 6 — charging at home is a lot cheaper than buying gasoline — buys a no-compromises family car, with the added incentive of it being a power source for emergency support or pleasurable activities.
2024 Hyundai Ioniq 6 Limited Specifications
Body style: midsize 5-seat, 4-door coupe-sedan in rear- or all-wheel drive
Motor: Permanent magnet synchronous
Power, AWD: 320 hp, 74 kW + 165 kW; 446 lb.-ft. torque
Battery: 77.4 kWh lithium-ion, 697 volts; output 277 kW
Transmission: Single-speed reduction gear
EPA-estimated driving range: 316 miles
Fuel economy equivalent, MPGe: AWD 111/94/103 city/hwy/combined); RWD
129/105/117
Charging, up to 80%:
Level II standard 120-volt: 6 hours 55 minutes
50kW: 73 minutes;
Rapid Charging, 350kW: 18 minutes;
BY THE NUMBERS
Coefficient of drag: 0.22 cd
Trunk space, rear: 11.2 cubic feet; 0.5 cu.ft. front trunk
Front head/leg room: 38.3*/45.4 inches *w/sunroof
Rear head/leg room: 36.9/34.7 inches
Length/wheelbase: 191.1/116.1 inches
Width/height: 74/58.9 inches
Curb weight: 4,616 pounds
Turning circle: 38.8 feet
FEATURES
Standard Limited equipment includes: smart key locking and push-button ignition, 12.3-inch HD touchscreen navigation system, 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster with EV display, Hyundai digital key (smartphone access), surround-view monitor, wireless device charging, Bose audio system with satellite radio, Android Auto or Apple CarPlay infotainment, Bluetooth phone and audio, H-Tex upholstery, 8-way power front seats with lumbar, heated and ventilated front seats, heated steering wheel, 60/40-split folding rear seats with armrest and cup holders;
Exterior features: wide sunroof, solar glass on front doors and windshield, acoustic windshield;
Safety features include: 6 air bags, electronic stability and traction controls, Brake Assist;
Advanced safety technologies, include:
- Smart Cruise Control (SCC) with Stop & Go + Machine Learning;
- Remote Smart Parking Assist 2;
- Blind-spot collision-avoidance assist;
- Blind-Spot View Monitor;
- Rear Cross-Traffic Collision-Avoidance Assist;
- Parking Distance Warning, reverse and forward;
- Parking Collision-Avoidance Assist (reverse, forward, side);
- Forward Collision-Avoidance Assist with Car/Ped/Cyclist Detection and Junction Turning;
- Lane Keeping Assist;
- Lane Following Assist;
- Intelligent Speed Limit Assist;
- Highway Driving Assist II;
CHASSIS COMPONENTS
Tires and wheels: 20-inch 245/40 Pirelli P Zero elect all season tires;
Braking: 4-wheel regenerative with brake-level control paddles;
Steering: Motor-driven power-assisted, 38.9-foot turning circle;
Chassis: Monocoque high-strength steel unibody;
Suspension: Front MacPherson struts with coil springs and gas shock absorbers; rear multi-link
PRICING
Base Limited price: $53,715, including $1,115 freight charge; price as tested $58,425
Options on test vehicle: Gravity Gold matte paint $1,000; carpeted floor mats $210
Where assembled: Asan, Korea
Warranties: 10-years/60,000-miles bumper to bumper; 10-years/100,000-miles powertrain and electric vehicle systems; 3-years/36,000-miles free scheduled maintenance; 5-years/unlimited mileage roadside assistance