Kia EV2 Wants to Be the Budget Electric Crossover That Doesn’t Feel Like One

Kia EV2 Wants to Be the Budget Electric Crossover That Doesn’t Feel Like One

Kia’s electric onslaught continues, and this time it’s aimed squarely at the heart of Europe’s fastest-growing segment. Meet the Kia EV2, a B-segment electric crossover that’s lining up to take swings at the reborn Renault 4 and Volkswagen’s upcoming ID Cross—while promising the longest range of the bunch and a price that undercuts most of them.

Unveiled at the Brussels motor show, the EV2 is the smallest and cheapest member of Kia’s dedicated EV family, slotting in below the EV3 and EV4. It rides on a simplified version of the brand’s E-GMP platform and will be built in Žilina, Slovakia, alongside the EV4. That European production could make it eligible for incentives like the UK’s electric car grant, which matters when your target price is a hair under €30,000 (about £25,000). Kia’s product and pricing boss Alex Papapetropolous says some trims will dip even lower—and that’s no accident. More than a quarter of the European market lives below that €30K line, and Kia clearly wants a piece of it.

Visually, the EV2 doesn’t pretend to be anything other than a baby SUV. It borrows the squared-off stance and pixelated details of its larger siblings, wrapped around a compact footprint designed to maximize usable space. At 4060 mm long, it’s slightly shorter than the Renault 4, but with an 1800-mm width and a 2565-mm wheelbase, it’s clearly been stretched where it counts. The revised “tiger face” front end gives it family resemblance without overdoing the sci-fi.

Powertrain options are straightforward but competitive. Standard Range models launch first, using a 42.2-kWh LFP battery good for a claimed 196 miles of range and a 145-hp front-mounted motor. The Long Range version arrives later with a larger 61.0-kWh NMC pack, stretching range to an impressive 278 miles—comfortably ahead of the Renault 4’s 254-mile max—paired with a slightly less powerful 134-hp motor. No all-wheel drive here: the EV2’s cost-conscious E-GMP variant uses a torsion-beam rear suspension instead of the multilink setup needed to package a rear motor.

Charging hardware reflects the EV2’s urban mission. It runs on a 400-volt system rather than the 800-volt architecture of the EV6 and EV9, but Kia claims both batteries can charge from 10 to 80 percent in about 30 minutes. More interesting is AC charging: the EV2 will be Kia’s first model available with both 11-kW and 22-kW onboard chargers, a big win for city dwellers who rely on public or workplace charging.

Inside, the EV2 feels familiar but intentionally simplified. The dash is dominated by three screens—a 12.3-inch digital gauge cluster, a 5.3-inch climate display, and a 12.3-inch central touchscreen—running a new “lite” version of Kia’s infotainment software. The idea is to keep costs down without sacrificing essentials like over-the-air updates. Practicality gets equal billing: buyers can choose between four- and five-seat layouts. The four-seater uses individual reclining rear chairs that slide forward to open up as much as 403 liters of cargo space, while the five-seater still manages a respectable 362 liters. Both versions add a small 15-liter frunk up front.

Trim details are still being finalized, but Kia has confirmed a range-topping GT-Line with 19-inch wheels and sportier styling touches. Lesser trims will roll on 16- or 18-inch wheels, presumably in the name of efficiency—and cost control.

The EV2 doesn’t chase headline performance numbers or futuristic gimmicks. Instead, it plays the long game: solid range, sensible packaging, and pricing that undercuts rivals without feeling stripped bare. If Kia delivers on its promises, the EV2 could become the default recommendation for buyers who want an electric crossover that fits real-world budgets—and real-world lives.

Source: KIA