2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 EV has crucial luxury-brand feature competitors can’t match

'Pixel' look headlights and tail lights are the 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5's visual signature.

Every day, it gets harder to deny electric vehicles are the imminent next great advance in transportation.

Not because governments will mandate them. But because they’re better than what we drive today. We’re drawing ever closer to the moments most buyers demand EVs, then can’t figure out how they got along without them.

The 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5, a low-slung compact SUV that goes on sale shortly, is the latest EV to make drivers an offer many won’t be able to refuse.

The first vehicle to use the South Korean automaker’s global EV platform, the Ioniq 5 combines competitive prices with a fast level of charging so far only seen in luxury EVs costing many thousands of dollars more.

The ability to recharge batteries quickly is among the great remaining challenges to widespread adoption of EVs.

What is it?

The Ioniq 5 is the first vehicle to use a new architecture Hyundai-Kia developed to underpin its upcoming EVs.

It’s a compact SUV, but exceptionally roomy. Despite being just 0.2 inch longer than the Tucson, Hyundai’s conventionally powered compact SUV, the Ioniq 5 has a wheelbase nearly 10 inches longer, topping even the brand’s seven-seat Palisade SUV for longest in the brand’s U.S. lineup.

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2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 electric SUV prices start at $39,700.

The Ioniq 5 is 13.6 inches shorter than the hulking Palisade, but takes advantage of its long wheelbase — and a flat floor; no tunnel for drive shaft of transmission in an EV with front and rear motors — to create a roomy passenger compartment and cargo space.

The Ioniq 5 seats five. It’s available with a single motor on the rear axle or one on each axle for all-wheel drive.

The base model has 168 hp and a 220-mile range on a full charge. One step up is a 225-horsepower rear-drive model with a 303-mile range. AWD models have a total of 320 hp and a 256-mile range.

The base model has a 58 kWh lithium-ion battery. All others get a 77.4 kWh unit. The batteries are under the vehicle’s floor, the most common engineering approach in current EVs.

The Ioniq 5’s engineering and execution are impressive, but its exterior styling is relatively anonymous. Its signature visual features are rectangular headlights and tail lights ornamented by small dots Hyundai refers to as pixels, but the 5’s profile fades into the ever-growing background of compact SUVs.

'Pixel' look headlights and tail lights are the 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5's visual signature.

How’s it charge so fast?

The Ioniq 5’s fast-charge capability arises from being equipped to work with the fastest DC chargers, those that deliver 350 kilowatts, or 800 volts. They can charge the Ioniq from 10% to 80% range in 18 minutes. Porsche is the only other brand currently selling vehicles capable of 350 kW DC fast charging. Most others top out at 150 kW (400v). At 150 kW — the more widely available DC charging rate in the U.S. now — 10%-80% takes 25 minutes. That’s quicker than many competitors. Ford says the Mustang Mach-E does it in 45 minutes, for instance.

12.3-in touch screen in 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 electric SUV

DC fast chargers become important to EV adoption because they enable longer drives for vacations and weekend getaways. Eighteen minutes is closer to the time typically spent at a freeway gas station — stretching legs, getting a drink or snack, etc. — that most drivers expect.

EV owners do most of their charging at home overnight. They use 240v connections, generally getting a discounted rate for charging during off-peak night hours. Charging an Ioniq 5 from 10% — lower than most EVs will ever get — to 100% at 240v takes 6 hours, 43 minutes, more than practical for overnight home charging.