You don’t call your new automobile the Kona if your intention is to build a serious, stately, and expensive grand touring model to rub shoulders with the finest European imports. You dust off such a Polynesian presentation because you want to attract the young, the carefree, and (therefore) the broke.
Kona (or Kailua-Kona, technically) is the tourism capital of the Big Island of Hawaii. It’s all about sunshine and seashells, shave ice and snorkeling. The place offers a playful escape from the rigors of serious everyday realities, and Hyundai looks to do the same with this brand-new compact crossover.
The Korean automaker is so committed to the island vibe that it introduced the Kona in that titular town, spoiling automotive writers with long Hawaiian drives full of sea views and volcanic overlooks. Looking to remain a little more objective, we managed to get our hands on a pair of Konas (one each of two different trim levels) without leaving town.
Available now and making its debut with this 2018 model, the Kona continues a trend—not just for Hyundai but for the entire automotive industry. The crossover segment remains the fastest growing and hottest selling sales segment in the American automotive industry. Crossovers are so dominant that many automakers name a crossover as their top seller—and everyone is hustling new vehicles like the Kona to market.
The crossover seems to have already replaced the station wagon entirely in the US market. Now, it threatens to wipe the sedan from American showrooms—with Ford recently deciding to kill off its sedan production and sales in North America in favor of hatchbacks, SUVs, trucks, and (of course) crossovers. This dominant breed of compact SUVs is the urban choice for a ride with more space than a sedan but less bulk than a truck or full-size SUV.
However, a lot of this “crossover” talk is nomenclature hustle. That term sells, so automakers like Hyundai are always squeezing vehicles into the class regardless of size. Some bigger crossovers might as well be massive SUVs—and many smaller ones are essentially sporty hatchbacks.

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