news

2024 Kia Picanto unveiled with new look, due in Australia this year

Kia's smallest car has been given a makeover inspired by the biggest model in the range, the upcoming EV9 electric SUV. Due in Australian showrooms later this year, but without the option of turbo power.


The facelifted 2024 Kia Picanto city hatch has been unveiled in South Korea ahead of Australian showroom arrivals by the end of this year.

The smallest car in Kia Australia showrooms has received an imposing new look inspired by the EV9 seven-seat electric SUV, plus new technology and upgraded advanced safety features.

Kia Australia has confirmed local showroom arrivals from the fourth quarter of this year (October to December), with a longer list of advanced safety equipment – beyond the autonomous emergency braking standard on today's Picanto.

Prices are expected to rise as a result, and may push beyond $20,000 drive-away for the cheapest model – one of two new cars left below this threshold – for the first time.

In South Korea, the updated model is 7 to 8 per cent dearer than its predecessor.

In Australia, this would translate to prices from $20,200 to $23,000 drive-away – up from $18,890 to $21,390 drive-away today, excluding the GT turbo model, which is poised to be axed for the face-lifted Picanto range.

This is the second facelift for the current-generation Kia Picanto – which launched in 2017 and received its first update in 2020 – and is intended to extend its life beyond the middle of this decade, when it can be replaced by an electric car in its biggest market, Europe.

Picanto GT-Line leaked photos.

Kia in South Korea has confirmed the first details of the updated Picanto, where it is sold as the Morning. It's understood more details are due from Kia in Europe in the coming days.

The updated 2024 Picanto introduces a new front fascia inspired by the EV9, with vertically-oriented headlights that use LED technology for the main beams for the first time – in addition to carry-over LED daytime-running lights.

There is a bolder grille with chrome highlights and a bar connecting the headlights. Leaked photos show Picanto GT-Line variants will adopt a sportier appearance inspired by the EV9 GT-Line's front fascia.

Kia EV9 electric SUV, for reference.

At the rear there are new tail-lights that now connect across the rear with an LED bar – similar to the EV9 and latest Seltos small SUV – plus a restyled lower bumper.

There are also new 16-inch wheels with machined highlights and two new exterior colours (Adventurers Green and Signal Red).

Inside, changes focus on a new instrument cluster layout, which replaces the two analogue dials with two digitised speed and tachometer readouts, on either side of the 4.2-inch driver display.

The 8.0-inch touchscreen with Apple CarPlay, Android Auto and a reversing camera remains, but the USB ports have been updated to the latest USB-C sockets, and South Korean models can now be specified with a remote start feature.

Buyers in Kia's home market can now choose brown or dark green leather-look seat trim, instead of black.

Safety has seen a big upgrade, with a longer list of features in South Korea that now approaches Kia's larger, new-generation vehicles.

As previously reported by Drive, Kia intends to submit the Picanto for re-testing by independent safety organisation ANCAP, as the current model's score from 2017 is due to expire at the end of this year.

However – under more stringent safety test criteria today – it is unclear if the Picanto will be able to match or exceed the four stars it earned when the current car was crash-tested six years ago.

Kia does not make mention of any structural upgrades to the vehicle in its South Korean media release, or the fitment of a centre airbag – which has been used by other similarly-sized city cars to pass a strict new 'far-side impact' crash test, which measures how far the driver moves towards the front passenger in a severe side impact on the passenger side of the car.

Outgoing Kia Picanto GT.

New for the updated Picanto in South Korea is an expanded autonomous emergency braking system that can now detect cyclists and prevent collisions in intersections – plus adaptive cruise control technology, and auto-dipping high beams.

It is in addition to lane-keep assist, blind-spot monitoring and rear cross-traffic alert technology standard on the current model in South Korea.

The only advanced safety feature fitted to the Kia Picanto in Australia is autonomous emergency braking, with car-to-car detection only.

It is unclear how many of these advanced safety systems will come to Australia for the updated model, however Kia has confirmed not all will be standard across the range.

Outgoing Kia Picanto GT.

Drive has previously reported the Picanto GT – with a turbocharged 1.0-litre three-cylinder engine and a five-speed manual transmission – may be culled from the model range globally due to low demand here and overseas.

The sole engine would then become a 1.25-litre non-turbo petrol four-cylinder mated to a five-speed manual or four-speed automatic transmission.

The 2024 Kia Picanto is due in South Korean showrooms this month, ahead of Australian arrivals due later this year.

MORE:Kia Showroom
MORE:Kia News
MORE:Kia Reviews
MORE:Kia Picanto Showroom
MORE:Kia Picanto News
MORE:Kia Picanto Reviews
MORE:Search Used Kia Picanto Cars for Sale
MORE:Search Used Kia Cars for Sale
MORE:Kia Showroom
MORE:Kia News
MORE:Kia Reviews
MORE:Kia Picanto Showroom
MORE:Kia Picanto News
MORE:Kia Picanto Reviews
MORE:Search Used Kia Picanto Cars for Sale
MORE:Search Used Kia Cars for Sale
Alex Misoyannis

Alex Misoyannis has been writing about cars since 2017, when he started his own website, Redline. He contributed for Drive in 2018, before joining CarAdvice in 2019, becoming a regular contributing journalist within the news team in 2020. Cars have played a central role throughout Alex’s life, from flicking through car magazines at a young age, to growing up around performance vehicles in a car-loving family.

Read more about Alex MisoyannisLinkIcon