Kia Niro Plug-in Looks to One-up the Toyota Prius Prime in One Key Way

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Kia’s well-regarded Niro, the boxy, decent looking hybrid five-door that’s a cross between a crossover and a hatch (it doesn’t offer all-wheel drive), spawns a plug-in sibling for 2018.

Positioned as a mainstream offering for green yet thrifty families, both Niro and Niro Plug-in offer more than 100 cubic feet of passenger volume in an incognito body while delivering fuel economy approaching that of the Toyota Prius. In plug-in form, the Niro travels 26 miles before requiring the assistance of gasoline.

While the Niro Plug-in’s price tops that of a base Prius Prime, we’ve learned Kia has a strategy for scoring value-minded buyers.

Leasing. More and more Americans are deciding to have their vehicular relationships last no longer than three years, making attractive lease offers an increasingly popular way to lure buyers — and trump rivals.

According to Cars Direct, the base 2018 Niro Plug-in LX, which retails for $28,840 after delivery (an $845 increase over a Prius Prime), is a cheaper lease proposition than its space age-styled competitor. Kia will offer a national lease of $259 a month for 36 months with $1,999 due at signing, which works out to $315 a month.

In the oh-so-green Los Angeles area, that offer undercuts the Prius by $10 a month and the Prius Prime by $90 a month. The Prius’ volume model, the Prius Two, retails for $3,260 less than the Niro Plug-in, but the Kia’s the cheaper lease. Financing is available for as low as 0.9 percent APR.

While the Prius name remains top of mind among hybrid vehicle buyers, Kia figures cost can work in its favor.

There’s actually more than just lease value hidden inside the Niro Plug-in. Regular Niro buyers, Cars Direct notes, might find the plug-in model a better buy than the basic hybrid. Features found in the base plug-in hybrid are only obtainable through an options package on the regular base hybrid, pushing the Niro’s price to just $2,900 less than the plug-in model, before factoring in the federal EV tax credit.

Since entering the U.S. market in January, the Niro hybrid chalked up 24,840 sales through the end of November. That makes it the sixth-best-selling hybrid vehicle in the country, with year-to-date volume just over one third of that of the standard Prius hatch.

[Image: Kia Motors]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • D. Saxton D. Saxton on Dec 22, 2017

    That added interior room could well be a selling point for the increased cost of the car. American families will opt for more utility in their car purchases over brand loyalty. Toyota builds a damn fine product, but Kia/Hyundai have gotten their act together and brought their quality up to nearly the same level so it comes down to practicality in this vehicle segment. If Toyota built a small minivan, or other such designed vehicle in the Prius lineup it would blow the doors off everyone else. As it is, the shape of the Prius is it's weakest selling point for practicality. The hatchback slope is such that carrying anything other than a few grocery bags is impractical. Add that to the range anxiety most Americans still have towards Electric vehicles, and you alienate customers to switch from Gasoline fuel vehicles to the cars of the future. Electric vehicles will become more mainstream as States like California outlaw Fossil fuel vehicles Whether we like it or not, alternative fueled vehicles are coming. Hydrogen cells, Electric, hybrids or both are in our future, and American drivers need to get ready for it. what we once took for granted isn't going to happen in the future, and our driving habits will have to change with the times.

  • Jalop1991 Jalop1991 on Dec 22, 2017

    "the boxy, decent looking hybrid five-door that’s a cross between a crossover and a hatch (it doesn’t offer all-wheel drive)" WTF does all this mean? What's a "crossover"? Is it a transgender car?? Does all of this make the Golf R a "crossover"? Hey, it has AWD!!! And it's tall!!! And it's 5 doors!!! C'mon, guys, let's take that R thingy four-wheelin' down in the holler!

  • Jalop1991 You do realize, you can get a $1 lease payment on any vehicle from any manufacturer, for any term.Just make a big enough "down payment". But hey, at least you have bragging rights, right?I keep seeing this insanity being marketed. "Polestar, only $399 month!" (with a huge "down payment"). Are people really this stupid?$7500 to enter into a lease just so you can say "but the payment is only $559!"??? Good God. And when some car full of Kia Boyz slams into you and totals it as you drive it off the lot, what then? The dealership will laugh at you as they count your $7500 and you stand there on the street looking like a fool.Why do people who lease, put any money down on a depreciating and very easily totalled asset like a car?
  • EngineerfromBaja_1990 A friend from college had its twin (2003 Cavalier 2dr) which fittingly re-named the Cacalier. No description needed
  • Lorenzo GM is getting out of the car biz, selling only trucks, EVs and the Corvette. They're chasing the bigger margins on lower volume, like the dealer trying to sell a car for $1 million: "I just have to sell one!"
  • SCE to AUX "The closeness of the two sides"56-44 isn't close, if that's what you mean.
  • Jalop1991 expensive repairs??? I've heard that EVs don't require anything that resembles maintenance or repair!So let me get this straight: as EV design and manufacture technology, and as battery technology, improves over time, the early adopters will suffer from having older and ever-rapidly outdated cars that as a result have lower resale value than they thought.And it's the world's obligation to brush their tears away and give them money back as they realize the horrible mistake they made, the mistake made out of some strong desire to signal their virtue, the mistake they could have avoided by--you know--calmly considering the facts up front?Really? It's Tesla's obligation here?If Tesla continued to manufacture the Model 3 (for example) the same way it did originally when the Model 3 was introduced, Tesla would not have been able to lower prices. And they wouldn't have. But they invested heavily in engineering in order to bring prices down--and now the snowflakes are crying in their cereal that the world didn't accommodate their unicorn dreams and wishes and wants and desires.Curse the real world! How dare it interfere with those unicorn wishes!
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