Still Mum on Venue Pricing, Hyundai Opens Up About Its Baby Crossover

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Amid splashy introductions like that of the resurrected Toyota Supra, the 2020 Hyundai Venue‘s debut at the New York Auto Show was a different kind of affair. It’s an entry-level vehicle, at least as far as crossovers are concerned, and its lack of all-wheel drive might have some saying it doesn’t even belong in the crossover camp.

In going smaller, slotting an A-segment vehicle below its still-new subcompact Kona, Hyundai says it’s staking a claim in a segment it expects other to populate. Not losing sight of what the Venue is supposed to be meant avoiding AWD like the plague.

Speaking to Automotive News, Michael O’Brien, vice president for product, corporate and digital planning at Hyundai Motor America, said the Venue could easily have bowed with AWD capability.

“We have all the parts,” he said. “We know how to do it.”

Adding AWD would have increased the Venue’s price, causing the model to overlap with its larger Kona stablemate and potentially cannibalize sales. The vehicle would grow in weight, too, lowering the improved fuel economy that serves as a perk for entry-level buyers. Hyundai predicts significant MPGs from its smallest CUV offering (33 mpg combined), and boffo sales, too.

Undoubtedly, Hyundai’s recent sales drubbing has company brass crossing their fingers and hoping for the best. It seems they know the Venue’s appeal will lie in its price, which is why AWD was left off the table.

“The easiest thing for product planners to do is to add. Nobody resists you. ‘Oh, add it, add it, add it.’ And then you have to pay for it, and then the product becomes difficult to afford,” O’Brien said, adding. “Our speculation is that the Venue is going to really take off. I think the idea is just right for the market now.”

In the U.S., Hyundai buyers can have a base Accent sedan for $15,915 after destination, with Canadian buyers getting their hands on a five-door model that’s actually cheaper than the sedan. The Kona starts just above $21k U.S.

As Hyundai spokespersons on both sides of the border tell TTAC that the Venue is not a replacement for a current model, the idea seems to be to find buyers in that middle ground — those who want a little more cargo room and ground clearance, but aren’t willing to move up to the already small Kona.

They’re also not willing to drive a bare-bones stripper, which is why the Venue comes with a standard 8-inch touchscreen, plus Apple CarPlay and Android Auto connectivity. When courting young, cash-strapped buyers, amenities like these seem to hold more weight than off-road capability.

While O’Brien didn’t state a starting price, he did say the Venue will sticker “at a little bit of a premium but not much” more than the Accent. “Remember, we’re competing against used cars in many cases,” he added.

[Image: Hyundai]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • MKizzy MKizzy on May 13, 2019

    The Venue's not terrible looking--at least not in pictures. However, given its assumed price point, buyer demographic, and delicate looking front end; there's going to be a lot of totaled Venues in junkyards with busted grills.

  • Oldowl Oldowl on May 14, 2019

    Second car errand runner.

  • Marc Muskrat only said what he needed to say to make the stock pop. These aren't the droids you're looking for. Move along.
  • SCE to AUX I never believed they cancelled it. That idea was promoted by people who concluded that the stupid robotaxi idea was a replacement for the cheaper car; Tesla never said that.
  • 28-Cars-Later 2018 Toyota Auris: Pads front and back, K&N air filter and four tires @ 30K, US made Goodyears already seem inferior to JDM spec tires it came with. 36K on the clock.2004 Volvo C70: Somewhere between $6,5 to $8 in it all told, car was $3500 but with a wrecked fender, damaged hood, cracked glass headlight, and broken power window motor. Headlight was $80 from a yard, we bought a $100 door literally for the power window assembly, bodywork with fender was roughly a grand, brakes/pads, timing belt/coolant and pre-inspection was a grand. Roof later broke, parts/labor after two repair trips was probably about $1200-1500 my cost. Four 16in Cooper tires $62 apiece in 2022 from Wal Mart of all places, battery in 2021 $200, 6qts tranny fluid @ 20 is $120, maybe $200 in labor last year for tranny fluid change, oil change, and tire install. Car otherwise perfect, 43K on the clock found at 38.5K.1993 Volvo 244: Battery $65, four 15in Cooper tires @ $55 apiece, 4 alum 940 wheels @ roughly $45 apiece with shipping. Fixes for random leaks in power steering and fuel lines, don't remember. Needs rear door and further body work, rear door from yard in Gettysburg was $250 in 2022 (runs and drives fine, looks OK, I'm just a perfectionist). TMU, driven maybe 500 miles since re-acquisition in 2021.
  • 1995 SC I never hated these. Typical GM though. They put the wrong engine in it to start with, fixed it, and then killed it. I say that as a big fan of the aluminum 5.3, but for how they were marketing this it should have gotten the Corvette Motor at the start. Would be a nice cruiser though even with the little motor. The 5.3 without the convertible in a package meant to be used as a truck would have been great in my mind, but I suspect they'd have sold about 7 of them.
  • Rochester I'd rather have a slow-as-mud Plymouth Prowler than this thing. At least the Prowler looked cool.
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