Hyundai has officially pulled the wraps off its latest electric contender, the IONIQ V, at Auto China 2026. Transitioning from the “Venus” concept revealed earlier this month to a production-ready liftback, the IONIQ V signals a radical shift in design and strategy for the South Korean automaker in the world’s largest EV market.
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A New Design Identity
The IONIQ V introduces “The Origin,” a bespoke design language for Hyundai’s Chinese electric lineup. Straying from the retro-pixel aesthetic of the IONIQ 5, the “V” features a fluid, single-curve silhouette, frameless doors, and floating side mirrors. Despite its sleek exterior, the vehicle prioritizes interior space, utilizing a massive 2,900 mm wheelbase to offer class-leading legroom.
High-Tech Cabin and Performance
Under the skin, the IONIQ V is built on an 800V architecture co-developed with BAIC, allowing for ultra-fast charging capabilities. Powered by CATL-sourced batteries, Hyundai claims a range of over 600 km (CLTC).
The tech-forward interior is headlined by a 27-inch 4K touchscreen that spans the dashboard. It is powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8295 chipset, which runs a sophisticated LLM-based AI assistant capable of managing core vehicle functions through natural voice commands.
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Hyundai is staying silent on the core specsheet of the IONIQ V like the motor output, battery capacity, charging speeds, more. There is no word on the global availability of the vehicle as well, which leads up to believe that Hyundai may be waiting on to see the response of the IONIQ V in Chinese market before commiting to a wider launch.
The “Must-Fight” Strategy
The launch is the opening salvo in an aggressive “20-model offensive.” Hyundai and its partner BAIC have committed 8 billion yuan ($1.1 billion) to regain market share, targeting 500,000 annual sales in China by 2030.
While the IONIQ V’s specs are competitive, it enters a cutthroat market dominated by local giants like BYD and NIO. Hyundai’s success will likely hinge on the final pricing and the rollout of its broader portfolio, which includes both battery-electric (BEV) and extended-range (EREV) models.

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