LIKES
- A styling wake-up call
- Spacious backseat
- Cockpit’s gone digital
- Standard safety tech
DISLIKES
- Gas-only models are hesitant to accelerate
- No wireless Apple CarPlay with larger screen
- Buzzy powertrain
- Noisy on the highway
BUYING TIP
- The SEL Hybrid hits peak Tucson, with excellent fuel economy and value.
The 2023 Hyundai Tucson leans into its extreme-sports exterior and hybrid drivetrains, but the interior’s in need of an upgrade.
What kind of vehicle is the 2023 Hyundai Tucson? What does it compare to?
The Tucson five-seat crossover SUV squares off against other compact bestsellers, including the Toyota RAV4, Honda CR-V, Nissan Rogue, and Ford Escape.
Is the 2023 Hyundai Tucson a good vehicle?
The latest Tucson earns a TCC rating of 6.7 out of 10, due to strong technology offerings, a comfortable and roomy interior, and plentiful safety features. Holding back the Tucson are a middling fuel economy score, based on the gas version, and a four-star overall crash rating from the NHTSA.
What's new for the 2023 Hyundai Tucson?
The Tucson SEL no longer offers the Premium Package. Synthetic leather upholstery now covers the seats on the SEL (and SEL Hybrid) with the Convenience Package as well as the XRT. Finally, the 10.3-inch touchscreen now comes standard on the XRT, N Line, and Limited models—and on SEL Convenience and Limited Hybrids and Plug-In Hybrids.
The Tucson runs the gamut of powertrains from a 187-hp 2.5-liter inline-4 and an 8-speed automatic—in front- or all-wheel drive— to a hybrid 1.6-liter turbo-4 coupled to a 6-speed automatic that puts out 226 hp. In either case, the Tucson’s capable suspension damps its body motions well, and its steering has timely responses if not a lot of feel until it’s clicked into Sport mode. The best Tucson is the priciest: the Plug-In Hybrid can drive 32 miles on battery power alone from an upsized 13.8-kwh pack, and its net 261 hp feels strong and sure.
With plenty of room for four adults and about 40 cubic feet of cargo, the Tucson has grown into a head-on rival for vehicles like the CR-V. It needs a finer grade of interior trim for a knockout blow: the interior’s digital displays cast a shadow on the plain grades of plastic it wears from the door caps on down.
The Tucson has standard automatic emergency braking and automatic high beams; SELs get active lane control and blind-spot monitors. Adaptive cruise control, blind-spot steering support, and a surround-view camera system come on higher-end models. Base Tucsons have an 8.0-inch touchscreen with wireless Apple CarPlay and wired Android Auto. Bose premium audio and automatic climate control are available, as is a 10.3-inch touchscreen with wired-only smartphone support.
How much does the 2023 Hyundai Tucson cost?
The Tucson is offered in four trim levels for gas models (SE, SEL, N-Line, and Limited) and three for the Tucson hybrid (Blue, SEL Convenience, and Limited). Prices for 2023 haven’t been confirmed, but will likely rise from last year’s base price of $26,135. The Tucson SEL represents the best value at $27,685 in 2022 dollars—or a couple thousand more in hybrid spec. It’s possible to spend more than $45,000 on a Tucson Plug-In Hybrid.
Where is the 2023 Hyundai Tucson made?
Hyundai builds some gas-powered Tucsons in Montgomery, Alabama, and other versions in Ulsan, South Korea.
Styling
Its angular body sets the Tucson on the path to stardom, but the interior snuffs out some of the glow.
Is the Hyundai Tucson a good-looking car?
With deep angles stamped into its exterior, the Tucson takes some risks and reaps the rewards. It’s striking enough to earn two points for the exterior, though the drab interior doesn’t move the needle. That’s a 7.
Some clever visual tricks enliven its already crisp shape. The Tucson’s LED daytime running lights fair into its grille, melding in until they’re illuminated. Exhaust tips hide in the rear bumper, which has its own exuberant diamond-shaped details and downward pointing taillights.
Performance
The Tucson hybrid performs better, and it’s more efficient.
Its most common 4-cylinder powertrain doesn’t have potent acceleration, but a well-tamed ride earns the Tucson an extra point above average, for a rating of 6 here.
Is the Hyundai Tucson 4WD?
Front-wheel drive can be upgraded to all-wheel drive on the gas-only Tucson, for $1,500. Tucson Hybrid and Plug-In Hybrid SUVs come with all-wheel drive.
The clear winners among the Tucson’s hybrid and non-hybrid powertrains are those with a jolt of electricity. A 187-hp 2.5-liter inline-4 shows up in base versions, with its 178 lb-ft of torque twisting through the front or all four wheels via an 8-speed automatic transmission. It’s hard to recommend this version once you’ve driven the superior hybrids: the gas-only model hesitates off the line and doesn’t have much grunt to muster when it’s time to pass.
Hybrids start with a 1.6-liter turbo-4 with 180 hp and 195 lb-ft of torque, but add on a hybrid pack with batteries and an electric motor for a net of 226 hp. The Hybrid splits that power to all four wheels through a 6-speed automatic, which shifts readily and doesn’t have the rubberband-like feel of a CVT in competitive hybrid SUVs.
The Tucson’s ride and handling are benign, and even the Hybrids have good ride quality and light steering feel at mid-range and highway speeds. The suspension doesn’t cope as well with bumpy urban roads: it doesn’t gather itself back up quickly after a lumpy stretch, and it can skitter across pavement wrinkles while it scrabbles for traction.
Comfort & Quality
The Tucson welcomes four people and their stuff, but the interior borders on drab.
With its substantial cargo hold and good front-seat comfort, the 2023 Tucson earns a 7 for utility and quality.
When it was redesigned last year, the Tucson picked up a wheelbase some 3.4 inches longer than the vehicle it replaced, pushing it to 108.5 inches. It also grew a half-foot, to 182.3 inches long overall. As a result it’s much closer to the Honda CR-V and Toyota RAV4 in its footprint.
The size gains show up inside, where the passenger space has much more room. In it, those in front will find supportive, cloth-covered, manually adjustable front seats in base trim; SELs and above can have synthetic leather upholstery and power driver-seat adjustments.
Behind those rear seatbacks, Hyundai’s carved out 38.7 cubic feet of storage space; it extracts 74.8 cubic feet when the rear seatbacks are folded down.
Space is great, but the Tucson’s fit and finishes leave us underwhelmed. The plasticky trim, like that on the related Elantra, have a lower-budget feel that doesn’t go away even with the bigger combination of digital displays.
Safety
The Tucson gets the IIHS nod, but the NHTSA is more critical.
How safe is the Hyundai Tucson?
The IIHS gives it a Top Safety Pick+ award, but the NHTSA pegs it at four stars overall. Those scores offset each other in our ratings, but with its standard automatic emergency braking, safety options, and good outward vision, the Tucson scores an 8 here.
Tucsons also come with active lane control and rear occupant alerts. The Tucson SEL gains adaptive cruise control and blind-spot monitors; Limited models add rear automatic emergency braking, blind-spot cameras, front and rear parking sensors, and a surround-view camera system.
Features
Impressive warranty coverage and standard equipment lift the Tucson against rivals.
With excellent standard equipment, lots of options, great value, and a warranty that leads the pack—5 years/60,000 miles, plus three free years of scheduled service—the Tucson earns a 9 here.
Prices haven’t been released yet, but we expect the 2023 Tucson will cost at least $27,000 for the SE, which comes with power features, cloth upholstery, and an 8.0-inch touchscreen with wired Android Auto and wireless Apple CarPlay.
Which Hyundai Tucson should I buy?
Among mid-range models, the XRT and N Line now also get the 10.3-inch touchscreen that’s standard on the top models; so do the SEL Convenience and Limited Hybrids and all Plug-In Hybrids. Keep in mind the bigger screen loses wireless CarPlay compatibility; you’ll have to plug in to get the smartphone interface.
How much is a fully loaded Hyundai Tucson?
Tucson Limited SUVs get the 10.3-inch touchscreen, LED headlights, leather upholstery, heated front and rear seats, a surround-view camera system, and blind-spot camera, all for about $40,000. Limited Plug-In Hybrids can cost more than $45,000.
Fuel Economy
Plug-in hybrids rule the Tucson rankings.
Is the Hyundai Tucson good on gas?
It’s OK in gas-only form, which happens to be the most popular version. With the base engine, it’s pegged by the EPA at 26 mpg city, 33 mpg highway, 29 mpg combined with front-wheel drive, 24/29/26 mpg with all-wheel drive. On our scale, that’s a 3.
Hybrids and plug-ins fare significantly better, with hybrids rated at 38/38/38 mpg in Blue trim and 37/36/37 mpg in SEL Convenience and Limited guise. Plug-ins get 31 miles of all-electric driving, 35 mpg combined, and an 80-MPGe rating overall. With its electric boost, the plug-in would merit a 5 here.
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