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Kia assembled a few hundred more cars in 1982 and 1983, after the ban had taken effect, but no passenger cars were built in 1984 and 1985. [12] Prior to the forced 1981 shutdown, Kia had rounded out its passenger car lineup with two other foreign models assembled under license: the Fiat 132 [13] [14] and the Peugeot 604.
Crossover City car (A-Segment) for Indian market. - Telluride: 2018 ON 2018 North America and Middle East Three-row mid-size crossover SUV, only sold in the Arabic-speaking Middle East and North America. 106,860 XCeed: 2018 CD CUV 2018 Europe, etc. Two-row compact crossover SUV (C-segment) based on the Ceed. 53,951 Pickup truck/Ute: Tasman ...
The Kia K5 (Korean: 기아 K5), formerly known as the Kia Optima (Korean: 기아 옵티마), is a mid-size car manufactured by Kia since 2000 and marketed globally through various nameplates. First generation cars were mostly marketed as the Optima, although the Kia Magentis name was used in Europe and Canada when sales began there in 2002.
The two other variations are the Indian-made Seltos (codename: SP2i) and the closely related Chinese version badged as the Kia KX3 (codename: SP2c). The SP2i and SP2c models are the low-cost versions of the Seltos to penetrate emerging markets , built on the Hyundai-Kia K2 platform and closely related to the second-generation Hyundai Creta/ix25 .
The Kia Sonet is a subcompact crossover SUV manufactured by Kia since 2020. Positioned below the Seltos and closely related to the similarly sized sibling Hyundai Venue , [ 8 ] [ 9 ] [ 10 ] it is sold in emerging markets, including Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America.
The Kia Carnival (Korean: 기아 카니발) is a minivan manufactured by Kia since 1998. It is marketed globally under various nameplates, prominently as the Kia Sedona. The first-generation Carnival was introduced in January 1998, [1] and was marketed in a single, short wheelbase version. Second-generation models were marketed (2006–2014) in ...
Kia debuted the first generation model of Carens, the RS series in May 1999. It is based on the same platform as the Kia Sephia. [4] A facelift was issued in 2002. The model was discontinued in Australia in 2001, with production continuing elsewhere for the updated model which was launched in 2002.
The K9 was launched in South Korea in May 2012, with export sales beginning in late 2012. As of June 2013, it was sold in South Korea, the Middle East, Colombia, Chile, Guatemala, Peru, Russia, [3] the United States, and Canada. There are plans to release it in China, although Kia will not use the Quoris nameplate after it lost a legal battle. [4]