Kia ProCeed Review 2024

Kia ProCeed At A Glance

3/5
Honest John Overall Rating
The Kia ProCeed is stylish, well made and slightly quirky (with no direct rivals to match the combination of body style and pricing). It’s an engaging drive that handles nicely and goes quite well, although it is shackled by its gearboxes.

+Comfort, practicality and lavish standard kit in a stylish package.

-Lazy automatic gearbox. Niche styling reflected in price

On average it achieves 86% of the official MPG figure

Whereas the first two generations of the Kia ProCeed were both two-door coupes, the current version is billed as a five-door shooting brake. What was clear on its launch in 2019 was that the Korean model had no direct rivals to speak of. As our Kia ProCeed review will demonstrate, this makes it an interesting choice.

In stylistic terms, it is arguably closest to the Mercedes CLA Shooting Brake, at which Kia had clearly taken a long, hard look and decided – despite the existence of the mechanically almost identical, but more traditionally rumped Kia Ceed Sportswagon – that it had room in the range for something similar.

However, the Mercedes was a minimum of £5000 more expensive, and much more once specced to match the Kia’s comprehensive kit list. That leaves the Hyundai i30 Fastback from the company’s own stable as the closest competitor, with standard estate cars such as the Volkwagen Golf Estate (which is pricier), Ford Focus Estate (cheaper) and the Renault Megane Sport Tourer also in the mix by dint of size and cost.

All Kia Ceed at the front and a deal of Porsche Panamera Sport Turismo at the rear (from which angle it looks particularly good), the Kia ProCeed launched with a choice of three engines and just three trim levels – GT-Line, GT-Line S and GT.

Three powertrain options featured two petrol engines and one diesel unit: 1.4-litre 140PS and 1.6-litre 204PS turbo petrol engines, and a 1.6-litre 136PS diesel. GT-Line and GT-Line S were available with either the 1.4-litre petrol or 1.6-litre diesel engines and a choice of six-speed manual or seven-speed twin-clutch automatic transmissions.

The GT only employed the 1.6-litre petrol unit mated to the seven-speed automatic gearbox, with paddle shift override.

Pricing was considered keen (with nothing to compare it to except the Mercedes CLA Shooting Brake), and the range kicked off at just under £24,000, topping out 250 quid short of £29,000.

What made that all the more impressive was the mountain of standard equipment lobbed at even the least expensive variant. Toys included 17-inch alloys, electric everything, heated front seats and steering wheel, dual-zone climate control, an eight-inch touchscreen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, Bluetooth and sat-nav, rear parking sensors and a camera, plus a raft of safety technology.

In truth, although perfectly comfortable and ergonomically satisfactory, the interior doesn’t quite live up to the promise of the Kia ProCeed’s svelte couture. That being said, this marked a vast improvement over previous-generation Kia interiors.

As a result, touchscreen haters will relish an almost full deployment of old-fashioned switchgear here, including shortcut buttons for the eight-inch infotainment screen. Estate-car sized rear loadspace is barely compromised at all by the sloping rear screen.

On the road, the Kia ProCeed rides more firmly than a standard Ceed, yet still makes supple, flowing progress. All versions tackle motorways well, and are surprisingly engaging through the bends, although the seven-speed automatic gearbox is prone to laziness, particularly when using the paddle shifters to change down.

None of the powertrains matches the car’s gently sporty brief, and performance of even the faster version, the GT, might best be described as warm rather than hot.

Ask Honest John

What is causing uneven tyre wear?

"My Kia Ceed has a noise which sounds like a wheel bearing problem. My garage says it is due to uneven tyre wear, i.e. going round the circumference wear gets more/less as you go. Seems to me this can only be caused, if indeed it is the problem, by a geometry problem on the car. Have you heard of anything like this? "
I would expect the Kia dealer to investigate the cause of the uneven tyre wear. More often than not, it's linked to underinflated/overinflated tyre(s) or an issue with the wheel alignment. In more serious cases, it may indicate a problem with the suspension. I'd start by checking the tyre pressures (the correct PSI rating will be in the owner's handbook and/or on a plate inside the driver's door).
Answered by Dan Powell

I want an estate car for a growing family and mostly short trips. Should I go hybrid or petrol?

"I have a Skoda Fabia 1.0-litre 110PS - which is great for my school run and occasional longer trips, but due to growing kids and a dog, I need a bigger car. I'm not a fan of SUVs so fancy an estate car. I have a budget of £20,000 and quite fancy a Toyota Corolla Estate but is the 1.8 hybrid worth the extra money over the 1.2 petrol? I cover about 6000 miles a year - which is mainly short trips of 10 miles with the occasional trip to London (from Manchester). Are there any other estates you would recommend. I don't want a VW Group car with a 1.5-litre petrol engine due to all the issues it seems to have."
The Toyota Corolla Touring Sports is an excellent estate car. We'd recommend the 1.8 hybrid - the 1.2 lacks guts and it sounds like a hybrid would suit your requirements well. The hybrid will hold its value better, too. Also, consider the Kia ProCeed (or Ceed Sportswagon) or a Ford Focus estate.
Answered by Andrew Brady
More Questions

What does a Kia ProCeed cost?