The Kia Sorento is a mid-sized, five-door CUV that is into the fourth year of its third generation and is available as either a 5-seater or 7-seater, depending on configuration.
Following a 2018 mid-year facelift that saw revised front grille, headlamps, taillamps and signals that continue the design cues shown on its sister Kia Forte and Kia Cadenza models, the 2019 version tweaks-up with new front and rear fascias and new cabin technology, including available Driver Attention Warning
Available in eight trim levels, the 2019 Sorento modifies its power, exterior and interior for the model year. One power-mod is the eliminating of its formerly optional 2.0-liter 4-cylinder turbo (240 horsepower, 260 lb-ft of torque), which was discontinued due to low consumer demand. That leaves Sorento with two power choices: the base 2.4-liter 4-cylinder engine and the 3.3-liter V6.
Outside, the 2019 Kia Sorento features the new front and rear, plus updated headlight and taillight designs. Top trims use full LED headlights, and most trims use LED rear lighting. Sorento's distinctive “ice cube” fog lights are updated with LEDs on the SX Limited trim.
Inside, you now get a four-spoke steering wheel, a new shifter head, new instrument cluster graphics, new colors and connectivity improvements. For 2019, every Sorento comes with a touchscreen -- 7 inches as standard, with an optional 8-in unit that includes integrated navigation. Wireless charging is a new feature that has been added to top trims, and, new for 2019, the Kia Sorento comes standard with three rows and 7-passenger seating. The 2018 came standard with only two rows, with a third being optional on the LX trim level and standard on all those with the V6 engine.
Safety upgrades for 2019 include lane-keep assist and a driver inattention and fatigue monitor added to the top trims.
All Sorento trim levels are loaded, and my test vehicle, the top-of-the-line SX Limited (often called the SXL) added to the basics with such style and substance items as a Black Metallic Nappa Leather interior, Panoramic sunroof with power sunshade, Chrome 19-inch Alloy Wheels with Michelin Tires, LED Front Fog Lights, LED Headlights, Low Beam Assist, Chrome Lower Door Molding, Power-Folding Outside Mirrors, Automatic Rain Sensing Windshield Wipers, Smart Power Liftgate, High Beam Assist, Reverse Tilt-Down Outside Mirrors, Heated 2nd-Row Seats, Stainless-Steel Pedals, Surround View Monitor, Blind spot collision warning, Forward Collision Avoidance and Surround View Monitor.
The 5-door Sorento is considered a large, “mid-size” SUV with Steel Unibody (Iso-Structure) Construction, weighing in anywhere from 3968 pounds to 4350 pounds, depending on trim and configuration. Displaying a muscular, rugged and confident stance, with a raked windshield, rounded angles, and a long hood to deliver a more aerodynamic and sleek appearance, Sorento’s dimensions are189.0 inches in length, 74.4 inches in width and 66.5 inches in height on a 109.4-inch wheelbase.
Offered in both FWD and AWD configurations, Sorento provides two engine choices: a 2.4-liter inline-4 GDI, and a 3.3-liter V-6 GDI that powered up my test Sorento SXL. The 2.4-liter engine delivers 185 horsepower and 178 lb-ft of torque; and the 3.3 V-6 gallops out 290 horses and 252 lbs-ft. of torque and can tow up to 5,000 lbs when equipped with AWD. My test Sorento SXL with the 3.3-liter was EPA rated at 19/city, 24/highway and 21/overall in AWD, and my tests showed 27mpg on the interstate and an average of 22.2 overall in mixed-use driving.
Sorento’s engine response was slower than expected, but steady, and passing power is reliable. On the track, my ride finished off a zero-to-60mph sprint in 7.7 seconds, and covered a quarter-mile in 15.8.
The ride is quiet and road roughness is evened out nimbly. Sorento is smooth on the highway thanks to an independent front suspension with MacPherson struts, coil springs, stabilizer bar, dual flow dampers shocks that work well with the independent, multi-link rear with stabilizer bar and DFD shocks. The Rack-Mounted-Motor Driven Power Steering reacts appropriately in quick maneuvering with only slight understeer, and top-wobble has been lessened due to the long, wide stance and short height. Lesser trim levels get Column-Mounted Motor Driven Power Steering.
The well-appointed cabin room measures legroom of 44.1 inches in front, 39.4 inches in the middle and a child-roomy 31.7 inches in the rear. Headroom is tight in all sections: 39.5 inches up front, 39.3 in the middle and 36.3 in the rear. Shoulder room is comfortable at 59.1, 58.0, and 52.8 for children in the rear. Cargo room volume behind the first row is 73.0 cu.ft.; behind row two is 38.8 cu.ft., and you still get 11.3 behind the third row.
The 2019 Kia Sorento offers eight trims. The base L trim has a starting price of $26,290 for the 2.4-liter manual in FWD. The first trim with the 3.3-liter V-6 is the Sorento S V6 that starts at $31,290 (FWD), and I tested the top-level SX Limited trim, basing at $46,490. In all-wheel-drive (normally an extra $1800 for lesser trim levels), we added remote start for $425, Mud Guards for $95 and Side step bars for $495. Destination charges of $1045 were added for a price-as-tested of $48,945.
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Mike Blake, former editor of KIT CAR magazine, joined Carlisle Events as senior automotive journalist in 2004. He's been a "car guy" since the 1960s and has been writing professionally for about 30 years. </I>