Hyundai has lowered the price of the cheapest 64kWh Kona electric to £34,995 (excluding registration fees and discounts), to meet the government’s recently revised plug-in automobile grant, becoming the latest manufacturer to respond to the tighter qualifying criteria with a price cut.
The grant is now only available for electric vehicles with a list price of less than £35,000, and the state refund has been cut from £3,000 to a maximum of £2,500.
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Hyundai says that the 64kWh Kona electric has the longest range of any automobile eligible for the scheme, with a claimed figure of 300 miles between trips to the plug.
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Hyundai has also slashed its prices for the rest of the Kona electric line-up by around £2,000 across the board. The 39kWh SE connect model now starts from £30,395, while the equivalent premium variant is priced at £31,745 before registration fees.
The only model in the Kona electric line-up that doesn’t meet the terms of the grant is the 64kWh model in range-topping ultimate trim. prices start from £37,145 before registration fees and it comes as conventional with a head-up display, ventilated front seats, heated rear outer seats, leather upholstery and an electric sunroof.
Hyundai has also cut back the price of the Ioniq electric by around £1,100 across the range. It now starts from £32,995 in premium specification and £34,995 in premium SE trim (before registration fees), meaning both squeak under the threshold for the revised grant.
Premium models come as conventional with heated seats, a heated steering wheel, a wireless smartphone charging pad, a seven-inch digital gauge cluster and a 10.2-inch infotainment system. Hyundai’s premium SE specification adds heated and ventilated front seats, heated rear seats and leather upholstery.
Now read all the latest on the pure-electric Hyundai Ioniq 5…