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8 years or 100,000 miles
Kia's EV4 Fastback takes everything that was good about the brand's mid-sized EV4 electric hatch and packages it up with a bit more 'want one' factor.
'Fastback' is quite an evocative body style name that over the years has designated products as diverse as the Mazda3 saloon and the Ford Mustang sports car. We've not though, seen it applied to anything quite as avant-garde looking as this, the Kia EV4 Fastback. The EV4 is an electric mid-size contender that sells primarily in five-door hatch form. But late in the project to develop that model, Kia decided it would also take the opportunity to offer EV4 customers something a little different. The EV4 Fastback is certainly different for Kia, the brand's very first four-door electric car. And a four-door saloon of the sort you'll not have seen before; it should really get company car park talking. Let's take a closer look.
It seems a bit odd that Kia's second phase of electric models is less advanced than the first. Like the company's initial EV6 and EV9 designs, this EV4 uses the Hyundai Motor Group's E-GMP architecture, but does without it in ultra-rapid-charging 800V form. Instead, like the marque's more recent EV3 and EV5 designs, there's a less sophisticated (but cheaper-to-make) 400V version of that platform, which comes with a 201bhp front-mounted electric motor, which puts 283Nm of torque through the front wheels. That motor's energised in this Fastback model by the brand's larger 81.4kWh long range battery. Range is up to 380 miles and the 0-62mph time is 7.9s, en route to 105mph, At the wheel, you sit quite low and there are three driving modes - 'Eco', 'Normal' and 'Sport', the latter engineered to make the car feel genuinely sportier, rather than just heavier of steering. Not all EVs in this segment are quite as refined as you might hope, but this one should be thanks to its super-slippery drag coefficient. As usual with Kias, there's plenty of drive assist kit. Whether all of it will be welcome is another question.
This Fastback model sits 5mm lower than the EV4 hatch - on big machined 19-inch wheels. And at 4,730mm in length, the Fastback is 300mm longer than the EV4 in hatchback form, with the difference in length coming from the 300mm rear overhang needed for the swooping roofline and long-tail side profile. Overall, it's marginally longer than the rival Tesla Model 3. Aerodynamic efficiency is everything with this four-door EV4. Active Air Flaps in the front bumper open automatically to optimise cooling efficiency and maximise aerodynamic performance. Plus 82.5% of the car's underside is covered by a near full body undercover, further boosting its slippery shape. These measures, combined with swooping, smooth exterior design and 'boat tail', mean an extremely low drag coefficient of just 0.23Cd. The front end features the company's 'EV Tiger Face', framed by vertically-orientated LED headlamps and the brand's eye-catching 'Star Map' lighting signature. Inside up-front, as with the EV4 hatch, most of the dashboard architecture has been lifted from the smaller EV3. That means the usual pair of 12.3-inch screens, creating a combined display size of 30-inches, plus a further 5.3-inch unit for the climate functions. It all looks of decent quality and unlike in many rival Chinese models, a number of physical switches and buttons have been retained. The nearly-flat floor makes it feel airy and spacious in the back. And at 590-litres, boot space is pretty generous - 55-litres more than you get in the hatchback.
Pricing's quite a bit higher than the equivalent EV4 hatch, partly because Kia restricts sales of this Fastback body style to the larger 81.4kWh long range battery pack and sporty 'GT-Line' and 'GT-Line S' trim. From launch, prices started at just under £41,000 the 'GT-Line' or just over £45,000 for the 'GT-Line S'. Think in terms of the price premium of around £2,000 over an equivalent hatch version of this model. At least you'll get plenty of kit. As with all EV4s, there's a 30-inch Ultra-wide Panoramic Display panel that combines a 12.3-inch instrument cluster, a 5.3-inch climate panel and a 12.3-inch infotainment screen. Also both models also get LED headlights, heated front seats, wireless 'Apple CarPlay' and 'Android Auto', Smart Cruise Control, power-folding mirrors, automatic air conditioning and rain-sensitive wipers. 'GT-Line' trim includes 19-inch alloy wheels, 'GT-Line' exterior styling, auto flush door handles, aluminium pedals, a digital key, customisable ambient lighting, a wireless 'phone charger, two-tone faux leather upholstery and powered driver's seat adjustment. Top 'GT-Line S' spec gives you the real niceties; a wide front sunroof, bespoke 'small cube design' headlights, a smart power tailgate, heat for the front a rear seats, front premium Relaxtion seats with ventilation, a 360-degree surround view monitor, an 8-speaker Harmon Kardon premium sound system, a Head-up display, Remote Smart Parking Assist and a V2L Vehicle-to-Load socket so you can plug external devices into the car's drive battery. Unfortunately, you have to stretch to 'GT-Line S' trim to be able to pay Kia extra for a heat pump. Across the line-up, there's plenty of safety kit; Forward Collision-Avoidance, Lane Keep Assist, Lane Follow Assist and Blind-Spot Collision-Avoidance Assist with Rear-Cross Traffic Collision Avoidance. Plus Highway Driving Assist, Safe Exit Warning, Driver Attention Warning and a Multi-Collision Braking System.
This EV4 model's EV6 stablemate was the Kia EV to offer the ultra-fast-charging 800V infrastructure that larger Hyundai Motor Group E-GMP-based models helped to pioneer. Disappointingly, that set-up's not fitted to the EV4, but thanks to a new generation battery management system, both Fastback models claim a 10-80% DC charge time of 31 minutes - despite a rather modest charging speed. A 10-100% AC charge at 11kW takes 7 hours 15 minutes. The 81.4kWh battery is warmed by a clever thermally-efficient sheath heater with multiple maps for low and high temperature charges. Kia says that because this enables the battery to self-heat at temperatures down to minus-35-degrees C, charge times are significantly lowered and efficiency-killing precipitation of the battery's lithium-ion cathodes is avoided. There's also a Battery Conditioning Mode that can optimise battery temperature when heading to a fast-charging station. This can be manually activated or can work automatically linked to GPS data. We gave you the EV range figure in our 'Driving' section - up to 380 miles for this 81.4kWh Long Range model. Kia has developed an advanced heat pump to maintain these mileage figures during winter, a clever fourth generation multi-valve system that not only draws in ambient heat from outside air to aid the climate system but also combines this with recovered waste heat from the electric motor. The brand claims this is a world first. As with other recent Kia EVs, there's vehicle-to-load functionality (allowing you to power devices from the car's battery). And vehicle-to-home and vehicle-to-grid capability (allowing you to return un-needed charge energy for use in your home or back to the National Grid).
Usually, where family cars are offered with a choice of four or five-door body shapes, it's the saloon that's more sensible looking and rather dull. Not here. The EV4 Fastback is one of the most interesting pieces of design Kia has yet bought us. And certainly the sleekest. Saloons don't tend to sell well in our market unless they have a premium badge, but this car deserves to buck that trend. If you're already attracted by the EV4 hatch, then this Fastback model delivers almost everything you get there with a dash more pavement presence. This kind of 'want one' factor used to be foreign to Kia; not any more. And if you doubt that, you need to check out one of these.