Body | 4dr Hatch |
Wheelbase | 101.2 in |
Length | 163.0 in |
Width | 70.9 in |
Height | 63.0 in |
Curb Weight | 2784 lb. |
Fuel Capacity | 14.2 gal. |
Headroom, Row 1 | 39.6 in |
Shoulder Room, Row 1 | 55.5 in |
Hip Room, Row 1 | 53.2 in |
Legroom, Row 1 | 40.9 in |
Headroom, Row 2 | 39.5 in |
Shoulder Room, Row 2 | 54.7 in |
Hip Room, Row 2 | 49.3 in |
Legroom, Row 2 | 39.1 in |
Total Legroom | 80 in (over 2 rows) |
Cargo Volume, Minimum | 24.2 ft3 |
Cargo Volume, Maximum | 61.3 ft3 |
2016 Kia Soul Seat Room and Comfort: Pros | ||
Year | Comment | |
2015 | Volkswagen managed to package the e-Golf's 24-kWh battery pack so well that neither passenger nor cargo room is reduced. Kia didn't do as well with its 27-kWh pack, and the Soul EV has three fewer inches of rear legroom than the regular Soul as a result. Still, this leaves it with about as much rear legroom as the e-Golf, and more than you'll find in other compact EVs. If you want a compact EV with an adult-friendly back seat, these are the ones to get. Rear seat passengers don't get rear air vents in the Soul EV, but they can get seat heaters. The e-Golf has the vents but doesn't offer back row bun warmers. see full Kia Soul review |
None of our members have yet commented on the seat room and comfort of the 2016 Kia Soul.
Trim | Base | + | ! | EV-e | EV | EV+ |
Standard Engine | 1.6L I4 DOHC-4v 130 hp@6300 118 lb-ft@4850 | 2.0L I4 DOHC-4v 164 hp@6200 151 lb-ft@4000 | 2.0L I4 DOHC-4v 164 hp@6200 151 lb-ft@4000 | Electric 109 hp 210 lb-ft | Electric 109 hp 210 lb-ft | Electric 109 hp 210 lb-ft |
Standard Transmission | 6-speed manual | 6-speed manually-shiftable automatic | 6-speed manually-shiftable automatic | 1-speed automatic | 1-speed automatic | 1-speed automatic |
Optional Transmission(s) | 6-speed manually-shiftable automatic |   |   |   |   |   |
Standard Drivetrain | FWD | FWD | FWD | FWD | FWD | FWD |
Standard Tires | 205/60R16 tires | 215/55R17 tires | 215/55R17 tires | 205/60R16 tires | 205/60R16 tires | 205/60R16 tires |
Optional Tires |   | 205/60R16 tires | 235/45R18 tires |   |   |   |
  |   | 235/45R18 tires |   |   |   |   |
2016 Kia Soul Powertrain: Pros | ||
Year | Comment | |
2017 | In its first applications, the Hyundai Veloster and Kia Forte SX, no one thought much of the Korean companies' 201-horsepower turbocharged 1.6-liter engine. Compared to the turbocharged 2.0-liter engines offered by Volkswagen and Ford in their hot hatches, the 1.6 lacks grunt and delivers quick but not quite thrilling acceleration. Put the same engine in the Kia Soul, though, and you have the quickest vehicle in its class. The Mazda CX-3, Honda HR-V, and Chevrolet Trax are all far less powerful. Jeep and Fiat offer a 180-horsepower 2.4-liter engine in the closely related Renegade and 500X, respectively, but even with nine transmission ratios to work with those vehicles still take about nine seconds to get from a stop to 60 mph. The Kia can achieve the same feat in under seven seconds, a dramatic difference. The Kia still isn't thrilling. Perhaps the turbo four goes about its business with too little fuss. Turning onto a busy street, you ask it to quickly get the car up to speed, and it obliges. Before you know it, you're there. No drama. If anything, the 1.6T engine shines brightest in typical daily driving, where it provides all the thrust you usually need with little apparent effort. Go light on the accelerator, and the transmission will shift at 2k. Go heavier, and it still will usually shift well short of the red line. The specs suggest why. While the non-turbo 2.0-liter engine in the Soul Plus (and in the Soul Exclaim until this year) can churn out 150 pound-feet of torque, it needs 4,700 rpm to do so. The 1.6T can not only twist its crank considerably harder--a max of 195 pound-feet--but can do this as low as 1,500 rpm. Acceleration is more of an experience in the Mini Countryman, even with the base Cooper's 134-horsepower / 162 pound-feet turbocharged 1.5-liter three-cylinder engine. The Mini's three sings a much lower, sportier tune than the Kia's four. It sounds like an engine twice its actual size. In typical driving the three feels plenty torquey. Its 1,250-rpm torque peak is even lower than the Kia's. Wind the three out, though, and you'll find it has no top end. If you want full-throttle acceleration like the Kia's, you'll need to step up to the 189-horsepower / 207 pound-feet Cooper S. The 2.0T Mini engine pulls more strongly than the 1.6T Kia engine, but it must motivate a heavier vehicle (by 276 pounds with FWD and 439 with AWD). While the Mini can seem quicker the stopwatch will report that they're closely matched. Any variety of Mini manages traction better than the Kia. With the Soul it's much easier to spin a front tire when accelerating while turning. Adding all-wheel-drive fully addresses this common issue with front-wheel-drive cars, but this option isn't offered on the Soul. The Mini's conventional automatic transmission (a six-speed in the base FWD Cooper, an eight-speed in the others) also performs much better than the Kia's dual-clutch automated manual. While the latter sort of gearbox adds to the driving experience in Volkswagens with lightning-quick shifts, the Korean execution leaves much to be desired. While upshifts with brisk acceleration tend to be quick and precise, in more casual driving the transmission often slurs shifts--once it decides to execute them. Especially at low speeds the delayed actions of the transmission often feel odd. But, hey, when you need the Soul ! to be quick it's quick! see full Kia Soul review |
None of our members have yet commented on the powertrain of the 2016 Kia Soul.
None of our members have yet commented on the tires of the 2016 Kia Soul.
Body | Trim | Base Price | Invoice | Destination |
4dr Hatch | Base | 15,900 | 15,565 | 850 |
4dr Hatch | + | 19,400 | 18,391 | 850 |
4dr Hatch | ! | 21,300 | 20,162 | 850 |
4dr Hatch | EV-e | 31,950 | 29,982 | 850 |
4dr Hatch | EV | 33,950 | 31,727 | 850 |
4dr Hatch | EV+ | 35,950 | 33,285 | 850 |