On paper, the Hyundai IONIQ 5 N and Kia EV6 GT look like two riffs on the same Korean performance EV formula: big power, dual motors, all-wheel drive and enough instant torque to make traditional hot hatches look like they’ve brought a spoon to a knife fight. But in character they are much further apart.
The EV6 GT is the sleek, fast, slightly grown-up grand tourer — a car that takes Kia’s sharp electric crossover shape and injects it with serious straight-line pace.
The IONIQ 5 N, meanwhile, is Hyundai’s full-send engineering department let loose: louder in attitude, more playful in calibration, and deliberately designed to feel like more than just another very fast battery-powered appliance.
Use the table below to compare the key specs, including power, torque, kerb weight, 0-62 mph, top speed, and battery technology.
| Statistics | Hyundai IONIQ 5 N | Kia EV6 GT |
|---|---|---|
| Power | ||
| Torque | ||
| Kerb weight | ||
| Power-to-weight | ||
| 0-62 mph | ||
| Top speed | ||
| Fuel type | Electric | Electric |
| Drivetrain | AWD | AWD |
| Battery capacity | ||
| Electric range | ||
| Electric motor count | ||
| Peak DC charging | ||
| 10-80% charging time | ||
| Combined MPG | 0 mpg | — |
| CO2 | 0 g/km | 0 g/km |
| Engine | Dual Electric Motors | Dual electric motors |
| Cylinders | 0 | 0 |
| Induction type | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Gearbox | Single-speed automatic | Single-speed automatic |
| Insurance group | ||
| Origin | KR | KR |
| Production years | 2023 on | 2025 on |
So much in common
Underneath the branding, these two cars are close relatives. Both come from the Hyundai Motor Group stable, both use the group’s advanced electric architecture, and both follow the same broad recipe: a large battery, rapid-charging capability, dual-motor all-wheel drive and the sort of acceleration that would have seemed supercar-adjacent not long ago.
They also occupy similar territory in the market: not quite conventional hot hatches, not quite SUVs, and not quite grand tourers, but something new in the middle — practical, rapid, high-tech performance EVs with real everyday usability.
That shared DNA matters. Both cars give you five-door practicality, big-car refinement, instant throttle response and the security of all-wheel-drive traction. Both make a strong case for the idea that the next generation of performance hatchback is not going to be small, light and petrol-powered, but wide, heavy, battery-fed and devastatingly quick. The difference is not so much what they can do, but how they want to make you feel while doing it.
Which should you pick? And why is it the Hyundai IONIQ 5 N?
Choose the IONIQ 5 N if you want a more theatrical car. It feels like Hyundai has tried to engineer back some of the drama that EVs often remove: gearshift simulation, track-focused modes, aggressive chassis tuning and a general sense that the car wants to be played with rather than simply deployed. It is the one for drivers who still care about interaction, humour and a bit of engineered mischief. It may be heavier and more complex than a traditional hot hatch, but it is also trying much harder to keep the driver involved.
The IONIQ 5 N is also the more convincing enthusiast statement. It is not just “the fast one”; it is the one with a philosophy. If your idea of a performance EV is something that should entertain on a B-road, survive a track day and make every journey feel like an event, the Hyundai is the more compelling choice. It is less subtle, less restrained and probably less sensible — which, in this context, is rather the point.

