How to start it
Sit down, the car wakes. Step on the brake, click the selector to D, and you're moving — there is no start button on the new EV platforms.
Three-row electric SUV — 270 mi range, 800V fast charging.
Tap a trim to open its full page — specs, features, build configurator and a maintenance schedule tailored to that trim.
Three-row electric SUV baseline.
Long-range AWD — 280 mi.
Top trim — 21s, Nappa leather.
Performance EV9 — Brembo brakes, sport tune.
Performance, build, and ownership-cost composite.
Practical guide for everything a new owner asks on day one — starting the car, finding the gear selector, drive modes, infotainment, driver aids, and easy-to-miss features.
Sit down, the car wakes. Step on the brake, click the selector to D, and you're moving — there is no start button on the new EV platforms.
Column-mounted rotary dial on the right of the steering wheel — rotate forward for D, back for R, press the center P button to park.
Drive modes are accessed via the Drive Mode dial on the console. Available modes typically include Eco, Normal, Sport, Snow, GT (EV6/EV9 GT). Each mode reshuffles throttle mapping, steering weight, adaptive dampers (if equipped), exhaust valves, and stability-control thresholds. On performance trims, an 'Individual' or 'Custom' slot lets you save your favorite combination so you can recall it with one click instead of nesting through menus.
The driver display is a 12.3-inch digital cluster. Use the steering-wheel left thumb-pad to cycle layouts (Classic, Sport, Navigation, Minimal). When in Sport / Track mode the cluster automatically swaps to a wide tach with gear indicator and tire-temperature readout. The head-up display brightness, height, and content are configured from Settings → Displays → HUD.
Infotainment runs on ccNC trinity display (cluster + climate + nav). Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are standard; pair from Settings → Connections the first time, then it auto-connects whenever your phone is in range. Steering-wheel push-to-talk wakes the in-car assistant for nav, climate, calls, and messaging without touching the screen. The main display also hosts vehicle-specific apps: tire pressures, performance data recorder (where fitted), drive-mode customizer, and the camera views.
Standard driver aids include adaptive cruise control, lane-keeping assist, automatic emergency braking, blind-spot monitoring, and rear cross-traffic alert. Toggle each system individually from the driver-assist menu (steering-wheel left-pad → Assistance). A surround-view camera and parking assist may be optional — turn them on once in settings and they default to active in tight spaces from then on.
DC fast-charging happens through the CCS1 (or NACS, for newer 2025+ US-market models) port. Plug in, the car negotiates power automatically — typical 10–80% takes 18–28 minutes on a 350 kW charger. Level-2 home charging via J1772 covers a full charge overnight (8–11 hours). The car app schedules charging during cheap off-peak hours and pre-conditions the cabin while still plugged in so you don't drain range warming up.
Beyond the physical key, this car supports Kia Digital Key 2. Set up phone-as-key from the Kia Connect app: it provisions a secure credential to your phone's wallet so a tap on the door handle unlocks the car and placing the phone on the wireless charging pad authorizes ignition. You can also share temporary keys to family members (with optional speed and area limits on performance trims) directly from the app.
A few things every new owner tells us they wish they'd known on day one: