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Hyundai Tucson vs Kia Sportage

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Hyundai Tucson (5.7) and Kia Sportage (5.8) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Hyundai TucsonKia Sportage
Reliability & Durability 6.0 4.0
User Sentiment 4.2 4.2
Complaint Severity 7.1 6.8
Consensus Strength 1.6 3.4
Value for Money 3.7 6.0
Owner Advocacy 7.0 7.1
Hyundai Tucson

If you're shopping 2022 or newer, the Tucson is a spacious, feature-loaded compact crossover that punches above its price point, more room than a RAV4, solid tech, and a hybrid option that actually delivers. The catch is the dealer lottery: some honor the 10-year warranty without drama, others turn a covered injector swap into a month-long parts-backorder nightmare. Pre-2020 models are a different story entirely, Theta II engines that burned oil, seized, and occasionally caught fire earned Hyundai its bad reputation the hard way. Stick to the current generation, confirm your local dealer isn't a disaster, and you'll get a genuinely competitive crossover. Buy used from the old era, and you're gambling on an engine grenade with a lit fuse.

Kia Sportage

If you're shopping used, the model year matters more than the badge. Pre-2020 Sportages carry the weight of Kia's Theta II engine disasters, catastrophic failures, oil sludge, and head gasket leaks that turned routine ownership into warranty battles. The 2023-and-newer generation runs different engines and shows real improvement, but a troubling trickle of oil consumption complaints on brand-new units keeps the question mark alive. The hybrid is the smart bet: punchy, efficient, and free of the sluggishness that dogs the base gas engine. You're getting luxury-grade tech and space for thousands less than a RAV4 or CR-V, but only if Kia's engine demons stay buried. Buy the hybrid if you're going new, or skip the nameplate entirely if you're shopping the used lot.