2025 Hyundai EV Upgrades Include Tesla’s NACS Charging Port2025 Hyundai EV Upgrades Include Tesla’s NACS Charging Port

Hyundai is sweetening the deal on the Ioniq 5 with bigger batteries and better charging.

Dan Carney, Senior Editor

September 4, 2024

4 Min Read
The 2025 Hyundai Ioniq 5 XRT drives on desert sand.
The 2025 Hyundai Ioniq 5 XRT drives on desert sand.Hyundai Motors

At a Glance

  • More knobs and buttons for audio and seat heater controls
  • Rear wiper and washer to clear the back window
  • Off-road-themed XRT trim package

The Hyundai Group is pressing the accelerator to the floor on EV development while rivals hesitate and retrench, with a raft of upgrades to the Hyundai Ioniq 5 that make the car even more attractive than before.

As a member of Hyundai’s E-GMP EV product family, changes to the Ioniq 5 preview other future EV models and improvements to existing vehicles. These vehicles will arrive via Hyundai’s Savannah, Georgia Metaplant, which will assemble EVs for delivery to customers this fall, with eligibility for half of the $7,500 federal tax credit.

The key technical changes to Hyundai’s popular EV are increases in battery pack capacity, from 58.0 kilowatt-hours to 63.0 kWh for the standard-range models and from 77.4 kWh to 84 kWh for the long-range models.

Maximum driving range depends on the specific wheel/tire combination, but the maximum distance for the standard-range battery grows from 260 miles to more than 280 miles. The long-range pack goes from 303 miles to more than 310 miles.

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Range doesn’t matter as much when you have access to a speedy, reliable DC fast-charging network, so Hyundai has made the 2025 Ioniq 5 the first non-Tesla to come to market with that company’s North American Charging Standard (NACS) port built into the car in place of the clunky old SAE Combined Charging System port that depended on unreliable public charging networks. This provides access to more than 17,000 Tesla Superchargers nationwide, while an included adapter will let drivers also connect to the SAE CCS charger networks if needed.

Related:Hyundai Develops Automatic Snow Chain Tech

Pragmatism rules at Hyundai, even if it is belatedly, as the company has added physical controls for radio tuning and for front seat heaters in response to unrelenting customer insistence that these functions need to be simple and they need to be available from when the car is switched on, without waiting for the infotainment system to boot or being pre-empted on-screen by a backup camera. The climate control interface remains capacitive touch, but it is simplified for improved useability.

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The infotainment display is now 12.3 inches and the system includes wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto as standard equipment. The car also gains Hyundai Digital Key 2 phone-as-key, over-the-air update capability, and upgraded Smart Cruise Control. SEL and higher trim levels have blind spot collision avoidance technology and radar-based rear-seat occupant alert to prevent children from being accidentally left in cars.

If the safety gadgets aren’t enough and there is a collision, Hyundai has reinforced the Ioniq 5’s doors and B-pillar to improve protection in side impacts.

Related:2023 Hyundai Ioniq 6 Delivers EV Value

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In another triumph of practical customer demand over impractical over-reaching design, Hyundai has added a widow wiper and washer to the Ioniq 5’s rear hatch in response to specific requests for that normal component to be included.

In addition to those practical additions of buttons, knobs, and wipers that customers like, they also like to pretend that they are rugged, desert-bashing, trail-crawling outdoors people. Enter the Ioniq 5 XRT, an off-road-themed version of the EV that has a 23-mm suspension lift, 18-inch all-terrain wheels and tires, all-weather floormats, and front tow hooks to create the appearance of an SUV.

The XRT is available only in dual-motor, all-wheel-drive configuration with the 84 kWh long-range battery pack.

“We’re continuing to give customers more of what they want by expanding the Ioniq 5 lineup with a dedicated off-road-capable XRT model, NACS port, design upgrades, and a long list of features developed with customers in mind,” remarked president and global COO of Hyundai Motor Company and president and CEO of Hyundai Motor North America José Muñoz.

About the Author

Dan Carney

Senior Editor, Design News

Dan’s coverage of the auto industry over three decades has taken him to the racetracks, automotive engineering centers, vehicle simulators, wind tunnels, and crash-test labs of the world.

A member of the North American Car, Truck, and Utility of the Year jury, Dan also contributes car reviews to Popular Science magazine, serves on the International Engine of the Year jury, and has judged the collegiate Formula SAE competition.

Dan is a winner of the International Motor Press Association's Ken Purdy Award for automotive writing, as well as the National Motorsports Press Association's award for magazine writing and the Washington Automotive Press Association's Golden Quill award.

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He has held a Sports Car Club of America racing license since 1991, is an SCCA National race winner, two-time SCCA Runoffs competitor in Formula F, and an Old Dominion Region Driver of the Year award winner. Co-drove a Ford Focus 1.0-liter EcoBoost to 16 Federation Internationale de l’Automobile-accredited world speed records over distances from just under 1km to over 4,104km at the CERAM test circuit in Mortefontaine, France.

He was also a longtime contributor to the Society of Automotive Engineers' Automotive Engineering International magazine.

He specializes in analyzing technical developments, particularly in the areas of motorsports, efficiency, and safety.

He has been published in The New York Times, NBC News, Motor Trend, Popular Mechanics, The Washington Post, Hagerty, AutoTrader.com, Maxim, RaceCar Engineering, AutoWeek, Virginia Living, and others.

Dan has authored books on the Honda S2000 and Dodge Viper sports cars and contributed automotive content to the consumer finance book, Fight For Your Money.

He is a member and past president of the Washington Automotive Press Association and is a member of the Society of Automotive Engineers

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