Is the Hyundai Coupe a future classic?

It was almost 30 years ago that the Hyundai Coupe was first revealed. To those who remember the 90s as if they were only yesterday, the fact that the first genuinely pretty Korean car has come of age will come as quite a shock, but what's even more alarming is that numbers are in freefall.

Take the best-selling 2.0i variant, for example. In 2001, there were 13,000 of them in the UK. 15 years later there were just 350 left and it's fair to assume that most of them are unloved bangers.

Yet the Hyundai Coupe is a car that deserves its place in automotive history. It was the first Korean car to prove that manufacturers such as Hyundai could do more than just create cars as consumer goods. 

The lithe, sweeping lines were based on those of the 1992 HCD1 concept car, the first styling study to emerge from Hyundai's new design studio in California, which it set up in order to gain greater global acceptance of its styling.

And it worked - the plaudits came in thick and fast as soon as the production car was revealed, almost four years later. Its raked profile, narrow headlights and low-slung cabin were all the ingredients that coupe buyers were after. But beneath the skin, there lurked the platform of a Hyundai Lantra...

To be fair, the chassis was capable. Not hugely dynamic or agile, but certainly good enough to be hustled along reasonably quickly, while the special edition 'F1' and 'F2' versions that came later were more sharply tuned and were genuinely half-decent to drive.

Equipment levels were great with leather in all but the most humble example and features such as air conditioning and ABS as standard. In the mid-1990s, these were big things. The Coupe was cheap, too. 

Hyundai was overwhelmed by the positive response that the coupe received and in 1999 - seemingly high on its own supply - decided to give the model one of the most ill-advised facelifts of all time.

Gone were the pretty, narrow lights and slim bumpers, to be replaced by a goofy-looking front end that looked like it had smashed head-on into an ugly tree.

Luckily, this was all put right in 2002, with the second generation Hyundai Coupe, which looked like a miniature Ferrari 456.

The 1996 Hyundai Coupe was the original pretty Hyundai, though. And now's the time to rescue one, while you can still pick one up for three figures. Be warned though, the reason for the model's decline is its propensity to corrode. Rust has killed most of them, while a few others have succumbed to gearbox failure.

Find a nice one, tuck it in a garage and you'll have a legitimate claim to the first genuine Korean classic. Find a classic car for sale.

Ask HJ

Why is my classic car not tax exempt?

My car was first registered on the 2nd of January 1985 and my calculations make that my car is 40 years and 2 days old.... yet the DVLA insists my car is not eligible for exemption stating that the vehicle needs to be OVER forty years old... even though it is over 40 by a few weeks now why is this?
Tax exemption for a classic car applies from the 1st April in the year after its 40th birthday, so as your car was first registered on 2nd January 1985 it will become tax exempt on 1st April this year.
Answered by David Ross
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