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Kia Sportage vs Subaru Forester

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Kia Sportage (5.8) and Subaru Forester (5.7) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Kia SportageSubaru Forester
Reliability & Durability 4.0 4.4
User Sentiment 4.2 3.8
Complaint Severity 6.8 6.3
Consensus Strength 3.4 2.2
Value for Money 6.0 4.6
Owner Advocacy 7.1 8.8
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.

Subaru Forester

You want a crossover that hauls your family through snowstorms, swallows cargo like a minivan, and lets you see the road like you're sitting in a fishbowl, the Forester does all that without complaint. Owners walk away from brutal crashes praising the safety cage, and the all-wheel drive is legitimately capable when pavement ends. The problem: EyeSight emergency braking slams the anchors for phantom threats, grocery bags, road dips, nothing at all, creating real rear-end collision risk that's now the subject of a lawsuit. The 180hp engine also wheezes under load, and that auto start-stop feature will drain your battery while shaking your fillings loose. If you can disable the worst tech quirks and accept that acceleration is a suggestion rather than a command, it's a smart buy that'll run past 150k miles. If you need power or can't tolerate a safety system that occasionally attacks you, walk away.