The Ioniq 5 delivers the EV trifecta, 18-minute charging, 300-mile range, and genuinely fun driving dynamics, wrapped in retro-futurist styling that either delights or confuses, rarely in between. The ICCU (Integrated Charging Control Unit) can fail without warning and strand you, sometimes mid-drive, requiring a tow and potentially weeks sidelined waiting for parts; Hyundai's 15-year warranty extension acknowledges the pattern but doesn't eliminate the risk. If you can tolerate warranty-covered downtime for a car this capable at this price, it's a compelling buy; if you need a vehicle that simply works every single day, walk.
Lincoln finally built a three-row that earns its luxury badge on merit, not just badge engineering. The 400hp twin-turbo V6 delivers effortless thrust, the cabin stays library-quiet over rough pavement, and those 30-way adjustable seats in higher trims genuinely justify the upgrade. The catch: early 2020-2021 models suffered door misalignments, trim rattles, and minor electrical quirks that required multiple dealer visits. One 2025 owner reported a fuel-tank-float stalling issue when parked on steep inclines with low fuel, odd but seemingly isolated. If you're cross-shopping German rivals, the Aviator delivers comparable refinement at a friendlier price, though it lacks the curbside prestige. Stick with 2023+ model years if possible; those who own them genuinely love the thing.