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Hyundai Santa FeMarch 2006

Recommended.

It's good to drive, it looks good and it's now available with the option of seven seats.

Our rating:

4

User rating:

4_5
Hyundai Santa Fe
 
 

Fifth Gear Hyundai Santa Fe review

 
 
1. Handsome styling
2. Painless driving experience
3. Brilliant third-row seats

WE DON'T LIKE

1. Starts-with-a-2 pricetag
2. Horrendous fake wood trim.
3. Loud diesel engine
 
 

This Santa Fe is a very different prospect to the car it replaces, having grown considerably in both size and price. Hyundai goes so far as to claim that it's now competing in the next segment up - and the optional seven seat practicality certainly wins it the right for consideration against more prestigious rivals.

Lexus-like design isn't particularly original, but the Santa Fe looks good and projects a solid, classy air. Inside the transformation over the old model is even more striking, with a cabin trimmed with quality materials and a well designed dashboard. There's also an integrated stereo in place of the previous aftermarket item. Our only real complaint is with the terrible plastic-wood trim.

It's good on the road, too - thanks to a driving position that's comfortable over longer journeys and decent rear seat space. The optional seven seat layout (which also includes self-levelling rear suspension) is likely to be popular among those with young families, combining SUV ruggedness with near-MPV practicality. The third row works well, collapsing easily into the boot floor and offering an impressive amount of space (although young kids will have difficulty seeing out of the high windows.) Boot space is reasonable with the rearmost seats collapsed, but tight with them upright.

The petrol engine has been dropped, which leaves only the 2.2 litre CRDI turbodiesel. The diesel was upgraded to 194 bhp in 2010 and gives very decent performance along with a combined fuel consumption figure of 41.5 with the manual transmission. It can also be specified with a smooth-shifting five-speed automatic gearbox which suits it well. Ride and handling are impressively composed, with refinement only marred by excessive wind noise from the top of the doors and windscreen at motorway cruising speeds.

It might lack the badge appeal of its upmarket rivals - but in terms of design and dynamics, the Santa Fe runs them impressively close.

Fifth Gear overall car ratings

STYLING

Good looks have clearly been inspired by some posher rivals, most notably the Lexus RX300.

HANDLING

The low-geared steering lacks feel, but grip levels are impressively high and behaviour is composed. Four wheel drive provides plenty of grip on slippery roads.

COMFORT

Good ride quality helps to absorb bumps and the well-designed seats give excellent support. Motorway refinement is knocked by excessive wind noise.

QUALITY & RELIABILITY

Massively improved over the previous model, the Santa Fe now has the quality to take on any mid sized SUV rival. Unconvincing fake plastic trim in the cabin is the only real complaint.

PERFORMANCE

The 2.2 litre diesel engine is loud when worked hard but gives reasonable performance. The V6 petrol sounds nicer and goes harder - but will be prohibitively thirsty for most.

ROOMINESS

The Santa Fe rivals people-carriers for utility thanks to lots of space, good stowage accomodation and the option of the easy-to-use third row of seats.

STEREO / SAT NAV

Standard stereo offers good sound, with a more advanced upgraded version also available. Satnav untested.

RUNNING COSTS

Servicing costs are very competitive, although 10,000 mile intervals are short compared to some rivals. The diesel offers reasonable fuel economy but the petrol is terrible. Depreciation should be well contained.

VALUE FOR MONEY

The Santa Fe looks expensive compared to rivals like the Kia Sorento and Ssangyong Kyron, but seven-seat practicality and excellent standard equipment should be enough to persuade many of its charms.

ENVIRONMENT

The Santa Fe's green performance is not great - but on the plus side it can carry seven people. Manual transmission 2.2 CRDi diesel is under 180 g/km of CO2, which is not bad.

This review has been tagged with: Hyundai | Hyundai Santa Fe

There are 8 variants of the Santa Fe

Santa Fe variants Price (£) Fuel type Engine
size (cc)
CO2 emission
(g/km)
2.2 CRDi Style (5 seat) 5dr £23,195 2199 176
2.2 CRDi Style (7 seat) 5dr £24,145 2199 176
2.2 CRDi Style (5 seat) Auto 5dr £24,845 2199 194
2.2 CRDi Premium (5 seat) 5dr £25,145 2199 176
2.2 CRDi Style (7 seat) Auto 5dr £25,795 2199 197
2.2 CRDi Premium (7 seat) 5dr £26,095 2199 176
2.2 CRDi Premium (5 seat) Auto 5dr £26,795 2199 194
2.2 CRDi Premium (7 seat) Auto 5dr £27,745 2199 197
 

Average

4_5

User reviews (3)

Leave a review

steve
4

Tried several vehicles, Freelander, Kia sorento, BMW x1 etc. but went for the new Santa Fe. I find it a good car to drive, not bad on fuel and well kitted out. Got a great trade in and discount from Arnold Clark so I am well pleased.

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FrankFisher
5

Very good car, had ours for two years now, done 15K miles, 5 or 6 of those towing a caravan - excellent performance, perfect reliability. Only gripe is that the MPG isn't fantastic, but then it is a heavy car. Oh and the std stereo is pretty rubbish. Performance with snow tyes (toyo proxes) was great this winter and last - managing snowy hills that defeated a Disco, with ease. Disco driver in my rear view mirror, in a ditch, did not look happy. That's got to be worth five stars.

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B K Mann
5

Just purchased 2011 Face lift Santa Fe 2.2, I tow a touring caravan, and have had no complaints to date the fuel consumption is great, the longest tow so far has been to the west country and Cornwall, the towing MPG was 28.2, and that's lugging the best part of 1800KG, and the Six speed manual box is a dream, it just laughed at the hills, best tow car I have had in 26 years of touring, well done Hyundai, the best solo MPG so far is 48.6.

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