The facelifted Hyundai Santa Fe is suffering of sluggish sales, that is a fact. Since the launch of the 1st gen Santa Fe back in 2000 (the Sorento was launched in 2002) remained in the throne until 2020, the year of 4th gen Sorento’s launch. According to our industry sources, Hyundai is already working on the 5th gen Santa Fe (already has a codename) and will arrive by mid-2022 instead of early 2023 (original schedule).
Hyundai tried to reinforce Santa Fe
line-up line-up by applying a heavy facelift that is more closer to a full
change model. Usually facelifts changes were made within 3 years after the
release of a new generation and are slight, but in the case of Santa Fe and
more usually in other Hyundai models, a new platform was applied together with
a new design that was qualified as “weird”.
Until the release of the fourth-generation
Sorento (codenamed as MQ4), Santa Fe was the number one SUV in South Korea. The
Santa Fe has the milestone of being the first SUV developed by Hyundai Motor
Company. Through generations, the Santa Fe were selected by many customers as
it improves its completeness with generations. In the meantime, even if there
were problems with the powertrain, the design was not pointed out as a
disadvantage, it was a clear advantage.
But with the launch of the partial change
Santa Fe this has changed. The situation could get worse when Kia release the
new generation Sportage sometime in June. Like the Tucson, it will grow its
size as well as adding a hybrid system, all packed in a design that like with
the K5 or Sorento could engage customers and steal even more sales. In many
ways, it seems unlikely Santa Fe sales will revive with the current design.
Full year sales are not a small number, however, the fact that the number has
decreased despite the facelift is a proof that there are a problem.
As if Hyundai Motor Company was conscious,
there are confirmation that they already started working on the 5th generation
Santa Fe, codenamed as MX5. So the new iteraction of the Santa Fe will arrive 6
months before than originally expected.