2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 RWD (Long Range)

2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 RWD

Long Range

Electric SUV · RWD

303 mi 77.4 kWh 225 hp NMC CCS1 235 kW DC 3 recalls 392 complaints · 39.2/10K 9/10 value
70 /100
TrimIndex Score

Based on battery health, build quality, owner data, EPA range, and market pricing

Above average for 2022 EV SUVs (class avg 66 · top 25%)

Personalize this score
Is a low score bad?
Not always. A low score flags items to verify before buying — and often signals stronger value, since heavier discounts already price the risk in. See TrimIndex’s pre-purchase inspection →
Sourced from: NHTSA· EPA· KBB· J.D. Power ·27 Reddit threads ·125 forum excerpts

Last scanned 12 days ago

Buyer brief · 253 words

The 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 RWD (Long Range) is rated at 225 hp, 303 miles of EPA range and a 74 kWh battery, and a mid-pack composite means the records-and-test-drive call matters more than the headline.

Score read

A 70/100 makes this worth comparing, not chasing. Software and driver-assist score is the cleaner read at 82/100; range and efficiency score needs more diligence at 64/100. Reddit threads cluster around software tech and owner satisfaction — verify both against the service records. A clean VIN lookup matters more than the headline count.

Is it a good deal?

Bargain Priced well below class for the quality on offer

Used examples are running around $21,180 against a $44,000 original sticker, about 48% of new. A reasonable spot for the score, but condition matters more than the headline number; verify recall completion, battery health, and service history.

Who this is for

✓ Good for

  • Daily commuter ≤50 mi/day, predictable charging
  • Road tripper Long trips, needs DC fast network

✗ Avoid if you are a

No persona-level disqualifiers — fits broadly.

Gotchas

  • Serviceable Recall paperwork has to match the exact VIN.

    Mitigation Use NHTSA and the automaker lookup, then require repair records instead of a verbal promise.

  • Built in Range is the easy place to overbuy this trim (64/100).

    Mitigation Check your commute, winter margin, and fast-charge plan before you assume the EPA number fits your use.

Pre-purchase inspection

  • 1 Run the exact VIN through NHTSA and the automaker recall lookup before discussing price.
  • 2 Compare the dashboard range estimate with the EPA 303-mile rating after a full charge.
  • 3 Confirm how much of the 10-year/100,000-mile battery warranty remains and whether it transfers.
  • 4 If road trips matter, run a short DC fast-charge session and watch whether speed tapers normally.
  • 5 Map your normal highway route and winter margin against the EPA range before you treat it as a road-trip car.
TrimIndex Intelligence
Synthesized 1 day ago
392 NHTSA Complaints 39.2 per 10K VINs · high — material safety/build concern
3 Recall Campaigns
27 Reddit Threads r/Ioniq5
125 Forum Excerpts avg +0.02 sentiment

VIN status first This model has 3 NHTSA recall records. The exact VIN lookup decides whether the car in front of you is clear.

Complaint context This scan found 392 NHTSA complaint records (39.2 per 10K VINs, high — material safety/build concern). Read the themes below before treating the raw count as the verdict.

Price anchor Current market range is $16,800-$21,644. Use that range to compare listings for the same trim, mileage, and condition.

Analyzed by TrimIndex Data Engine · Scoring methodology →

Pricing & Market Value

Original MSRP $44,000 When new (2022)
Current Market Value $16,800 – $21,644 Composite from KBB & J.D. Power
▼ 56% below original MSRP
9 / 10
Value-to-Score Ratio
Excellent deal

A70-rated trim trading 56% below MSRP. Higher discounts on higher-quality vehicles score better — this signal is orthogonal to the TrimIndex composite, not part of it.

KBB
Fair Purchase Price
$16,800
79
J.D. Power
Consumer Verified™
$21,644 Verified Fair Price

Score Breakdown

What matters most to you?

Drag the sliders to prioritize what you care about. Your TrimIndex Score recalculates instantly.

Your Score
70
/100
Battery Health
69
Weight29%
Owner Satisfaction
65
Weight24%
Build Quality
76
Weight18%
Range & Efficiency
64
Weight18%
Software & Tech
82
Weight11%

Vehicle Specifications

303
miles
EPA Range
77.4
kWh
Battery
225
hp
Horsepower
30.0
kWh/100mi
Efficiency
RWD
 
Drivetrain
Used-EV incentive finder

The federal $4,000 used-EV credit ended Sept 30, 2025.

But 10 states still run their own used-EV rebate programs — some up to $5,000. Pick your state to see what's available for this trim.

Source & disclaimer
SourceData compiled April 2026 from each state's administering agency.
DisclaimerProgram rules change. TrimIndex is not a tax advisor — confirm eligibility with your state's issuing agency before purchase.
The Financing Room · What Actually Happens

Dealers make ~$7,075 on the average car loan.

After the price is set, the finance manager runs four plays to rebuild margin. Every buyer without a pre-approval is a target. Here's exactly what they run — and what stops each one.

01 · Without pre-approval
+$645
Rate markup

78% of dealer loans carry a hidden +1.13% markup above what the lender actually charges. You never see it — it's buried in the contract. · CFPB

With pre-approval ↓
Rate is already locked

Dealer must match or beat your lender — they can't add margin invisibly. The markup play is dead on arrival.

02 · Without pre-approval
+$1,800
"What's your monthly budget?"

Once you answer, they stretch the term to hit your number. Median result: $4K less off the price, 12 more months on the loan. · Industry avg

With pre-approval ↓
One number to negotiate

Financing is done. Only the sale price is on the table — and the dealer knows it.

03 · Without pre-approval
+$1,775
GAP + extended warranty upsell

Back-office F&I profit averages $1,975/vehicle, up 8.5% YoY. These products exist — but dealer markup is 4–10x what you'd pay elsewhere. · Dealership Guy

With pre-approval ↓
You can shop it or skip it

Dealer GAP runs $500–1K. Your insurer sells the same coverage for $100–250 over 5 years. Now you know.

04 · Without pre-approval
+$2,855
Yo-yo / spot delivery

"Your loan fell through — come re-sign." This pulls your APR up +5% on average. It's legal. It works because you've already driven the car home. · Ctr for Responsible Lending

With pre-approval ↓
Financing already closed

A lender commitment letter means the deal is final. "Pending dealer approval" doesn't apply. You can't be yo-yo'd.

You overpay
~$7,075

That's 25 months of your car payment — handed to the dealer's finance department for nothing.

Your cost to get pre-approved
$0

Takes 2 minutes. No obligation to use it — but you'll walk in with all the leverage.

Lock your rate before you go to the lot.
Soft pull only No SSN required Works at any dealer

Pre-approval is a soft credit inquiry — no score impact. FICO treats all auto-loan hard pulls within 14 days as one, so you can still shop rates at the dealer.

NHTSA Recalls (3)

Nov 2024
Electrical System — Propulsion System — Charging — Module — Software
Campaign #24V868000

Hyundai Motor America (Hyundai) is recalling certain 2022-2024 IONIQ 5, 2023-2025 IONIQ 6, Genesis GV60, Genesis GV70 "Electrified," and Genesis G80 "Electrified" vehicles. The Integrated Charging Control Unit (ICCU) may become damaged and stop charging the 12-volt battery, which can result in a loss of drive power.

A loss of drive power increases the risk of a crash.

Check VIN status at NHTSA.gov
Mar 2024
Electrical System — 12v — 24v — 48v Battery
Campaign #24V204000

Hyundai Motor America (Hyundai) is recalling certain 2022-2024 IONIQ 5, 2023-2024 IONIQ 6, Genesis GV60, Genesis GV70 "Electrified," and Genesis G80 "Electrified" vehicles. The Integrated Charging Control Unit (ICCU) may become damaged and stop charging the 12-Volt battery, which can result in a loss of drive power.

A loss of drive power increases the risk of a crash.

Check VIN status at NHTSA.gov
May 2022
Parking Brake — Electrical — Control Module — Software
Campaign #22V324000

Hyundai Motor America (Hyundai) is recalling certain 2022 Ioniq 5 vehicles. A software error in the Shifter Control Unit (SCU) may disengage the parking mechanism, which can allow the vehicle to rollaway.

Vehicle rollaway can increase the risk of a crash or injury.

Check VIN status at NHTSA.gov

NHTSA Complaints (392 total · 39.2 per 10K US vehicles · high — material safety/build concern)

322
Battery
47
Safety
19
Build Quality
3
Software
Severity 1 Cosmetic 2 Minor 3 Repeat Visit 4 Stranding 5 Crash / Injury
Frequency Isolated report Emerging pattern Common pattern
5
Safety Sep 15, 2025

The contact owns a Nuna Car Seat, Model Name: Rava, Model Number: (N/A), Model Type: (N/A), Manufactured Date: October 2023. The contact stated that the harness buckle was easy to release while attempting to secure the child in the car seat. The contact received notification of NHTSA Campaign Number: 24C002000 (Child seat). The manufacturer was made aware of the failure. The contact stated that the repair kit that was sent to repair the recall was an inadequate repair and did not address the safety concern regarding the harness buckle. The manufacturer was notified of the issue but offer no additional assistance. The contact was also denied a replacement car seat despite the car seat being under warranty.

Common ODI #11687618
5
Safety Dec 17, 2024

Drove less than one mile and the car suddenly dropped from 45 mph to 20 and would not accelerate (I was almost rear ended by a bus). I was able to pull off the road and the battery died.

Common ODI #11631373
4
Safety Feb 23, 2026

I was on the freeway and went into limp mode and almost got into a traffic accident. My ICCU unit failed after two recalls on it.

Common ODI #11720110
4
Safety Feb 20, 2026

I was traveling on the freeway when I got a warning saying “check electrical.”i started to pull over on the freeway and my car went into “turtle mode “and I made it off the offramp but almost got rear ended. I was half a mile from home so I limp home in a tow truck towed off. It was determined it is the ICCU.

Common ODI #11719583
4
Safety Jan 27, 2026

The component that malfunctioned is the Integrated Charge Control Unit (ICCU) and related high-voltage charging system in my 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5. The ICCU controls AC (Level 2) charging, DC fast charging functions, and power delivery. The ICCU assembly and charging components were serviced and replaced by an authorized Hyundai dealer and are available for inspection through service records. This defect created a safety risk because the vehicle experienced complete charging failure and reduced-power operation. Loss of charging capability can leave drivers stranded, and reduced-power “turtle mode” conditions can limit acceleration and vehicle performance, creating hazards in traffic. The charge port has also not locked during charging, creating a potential risk of electrical arcing during DC fast charging. The failure was reproduced and confirmed by an authorized Hyundai dealer. In approximately January 2025 the vehicle would not charge and remained at the dealership for an extended period (about January through June 2025). After diagnosis and consultation with Hyundai technical support, the dealer replaced the ICCU assembly and high-voltage fuse. The vehicle and charging system have been inspected multiple times by Hyundai service centers. Hyundai issued recall campaigns in 2023 and 2024 involving ICCU software updates and fuse-related work, but these did not prevent the later failure requiring full ICCU replacement. Prior symptoms included abnormal charging behavior and eventual total loss of AC charging capability during the 2025 failure, making home charging impossible. After the ICCU replacement, the vehicle exhibited unusually loud cooling fan operation during Level 2 charging, documented by the dealer. There were also charging-port safety concerns. After one service visit, an important DC pin cover/cap was not properly installed until corrected on a return visit, leaving charging components exposed.

Common ODI #11713986
4
Safety Jan 21, 2026

I am writing to report a serious safety incident involving my 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 and to request a thorough investigation and guidance on next steps. On Jan. 3, 2026, at approximately 6:15 p.m. on a snowy day, we parked our car in the driveway of a weekend rental home near Lake Tahoe, CA. The driveway had a slight slope toward the house, and we backed the car down the driveway with the rear of the car facing the house. My husband turned off the car, then all five occupants exited the vehicle, closed the doors, and began unloading items from the trunk. The car began rolling backwards toward us and the house. It only stopped after pinning my husband into a snowbank created by a snowplow. The other three adults and our [XXX] niece narrowly avoided being struck. While pinned behind the vehicle, my husband had to dig out some snow to reach into his pants pocket and retrieve the key fob. I then moved the car forward a few feet to free him. Although he was pinned in the snow, my husband was (thankfully) not seriously injured. After freeing my husband, I put the car in Park and turned it off. In this model, the parking brake engages automatically; there is no separate parking brake button or lever. A few minutes later, without anyone in or near the vehicle, the car again rolled backwards down the driveway into the same snowbank. Tracks in the snow clearly indicate that the wheels rotated and the car rolled; it was not sliding on ice with the brakes applied. In other words, the parking brake and/or Park mechanism failed to hold the vehicle in place in sub freezing, snowy conditions. The temperature at this location and time was in the mid 20s °F. After returning home from our trip, we took the car to our Hyundai service center, which has performed all maintenance since we purchased it in 2022. The service center performed all standard diagnostics but was unable to replicate the failure conditions. INFORMATION REDACTED PURSUANT TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(B)(6)

Common ODI #11712790
4
Safety Jan 11, 2026

Intergrated Charging Control Unit has failed. This is a safety related issue because it’s failure can make the vehicle immediately inoperable which does not allow the driver any time to safely pull to the should have the roadway.

Common ODI #11710475
4
Safety Dec 28, 2025

Shift gear was not engaging then i noticed the knob was slightly sticking out so I pushed it back in. The car changed gear then but it happened again a couple days later but this time the knob fell off while i was trying to push it back in. Brought to the dealers for inspection in September within a week after the problem started. Followed up twice now with no update as to when it will be fixed, I was told they will need to order part and that the entire shift gear will need to be replaced. They didn’t seem to be concerned about the safety of driving the vehicle around meantime. My husband used my car for a long trip while i was out of the country and he said the shift gear fell again. If it gets loose the gear does not engage.

Common ODI #11707684
4
Safety Aug 5, 2025

When coming to a stop on a slight incline, the vehicle will come to a full and complete stop and occasionally begin to roll backwards after half a 2nd without changing brake pedal position. If the brake pedal is not push further down, the vehicle will continue to roll backwards. I have tested this on multiple IONIQ 5 models with the same result (2022 and 2023). This could cause a collision if there is another car behind the problem vehicle. No warning lamps. Both vehicles have done this since new. Nothing is wrong with either of the vehicles according to multiple dealers.

Common ODI #11678826
4
Safety Apr 21, 2025

Leaving an appt and the car gave a battery! Warning. While is was looking for a place to pull over the Stop Check Vehicle Electric System. I pulled into a parking lot when the Turtle came up and I was barely able to back into a space. The car was dead within 10 mins of leaving until I parked. I commute daily on an interstate and that would not have given me much time to pull of the interstate to a safe location. Longer warning is needed. Dealer has the car and confirmed it is the ICCU unit and no eta on the part. Yet they are selling 2025 Ionic 5.

Common ODI #11656128
4
Safety Mar 15, 2025

While driving on the highway in foggy conditions, the smart cruise control system and forward safety system suddenly shut off while I was going 70 miles an hour. This almost resulted in a car rear ending me due to the sudden deceleration. The following day, with clear weather, the same issue happened again despite nothing appearing to have caused this issue while I was driving. This is a very serious concern to suddenly stop on a highway.

Common ODI #11648554
4
Safety Feb 9, 2025

The contact owns a 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5. The contact stated that after the vehicle was parked on a slight incline on the road, the gear shifter was shifted to park(P), and the vehicle was turned off. The contact stated that while exiting the vehicle, the vehicle started to roll backward. The contact was able to jump back into the vehicle and depress the brake pedal to stop the vehicle. The contact stated that the vehicle was still in park(P); however, when the brake pedal was released, the vehicle started rolling away again. The contact had not engaged the parking brake. The contact stated that the vehicle was turned off and restarted and was able to shift into park(P) and the vehicle remained stationary. The contact stated no warning light was illuminated. The contact had not taken the vehicle to a local dealer or independent mechanic. The vehicle was not diagnosed or repaired. The manufacturer was not informed of the failure. The contact researched online and related the failure to NHTSA Campaign Number: 22V324000 (Parking Brake); however, the VIN was not included. The failure mileage was approximately 25,000.

Common ODI #11641695
4
Safety Aug 14, 2024

Car has suddenly lost power three times while driving at low speeds or while stopped (eg at a stop light). I have turned off the power (EV start button) and then turned it back on, and the car restarts and starts moving again. The sudden loss of power seems dangerous-- I am concerned that if someone is following close behind me, they will be unable to brake and I will be rear-ended. Please note that I purchased this vehicle used and the problem started occurring the 2nd day I drove the car. (The car was bought back by a dealer in FL under the state lemon law and was subsequently purchased by a dealer in NJ, from whom I purchased the car.) I suspect the same problem was occurring when the vehicle was bought back by the Fl dealer, and it was not properly fixed.

Common ODI #11608839
4
Safety May 8, 2024

When the passenger front seat is occupied, the airbag disengaged warning light is illuminated; I have taken it to Hyundai service twice and they find no malfunction, yet the light remains illuminated

Common ODI #11587921
4
Safety Apr 18, 2024

While driving, the 'check EV system' light comes on, intermittently what will happen is that when stopped the car will put itself in park, when it is in park I can not get it out of park, thus unable to move forward, it has also happened while reversing (and not stopped). I need to cycle the car on and off a bunch of times in order for it to finally turn back on. This is very dangerous while on the road stopped in a busy intersection and has potential for a crash. I have brought it to a dealer 4 times and they do not know what is wrong and cannot fix it. [XXX] INFORMATION REDACTED PURSUANT TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(B)(6)

Common ODI #11583980
4
Safety Mar 19, 2024

My vehicle was fully charged. About 1 mile after leaving my house, I received a warning message on my display (vehicle electrical system error or similar). Shortly after I received another message that power was reduced, then finally, "stop driving". I pulled into the nearest driveway and called roadside assistance. At that point, the vehicle was COMPLETELY dead. No lights or power whatsoever. I could not activate the car to shift into neutral. I had my vehicle towed to the dealership. They said it was due to a faulty ICCU and fuse. After about a week they were able to replace the ICCU, fuse and update the software.

Common ODI #11578415
4
Safety Feb 14, 2024

Driving down I95 at 75mph. Heard loud "thunk" and car lost both power and brakes. Warning lights on the dashboard said to check brake system. I was unable to pull onto the shoulder due to construction barricades in place. The car slowed to 10mph and continued until I was able to pull over onto the shoulder. This was very dangerous given the highway traffic speeds, construction zone with limited emergency pull over space, and due to it being night time. Turning it off and on again restored power but it happened 4 more times before I was able to make it to an exit. This seems to be a common issue with this model. I have already performed the ICCU recall that was supposed to address this

Common ODI #11572251
4
Safety Dec 3, 2023

The car gave an warnings of “Check Electric Vehicle System@ and started slowing down in the middleman of the road. I could have been easily rear ended or got into a serious injury. After googling, it seems almost all if not most of ioniq 5 are having this issue after certain mileage

Common ODI #11558382
4
Safety Nov 8, 2023

In stop and go traffic on freeway, car was moving at about 5 miles an hour but car kept moving, collision warning and automatic braking did not activate. Had to turn off car and coast to a stop. Nearly collided with vehicle in front

Common ODI #11554265
4
Safety Nov 1, 2023

Every so often when I am driving on the highway, the car just looses power and I may catch a message that flashes on my display, "Emergency Braking". The event last no longer than about a second. When this phantom braking happens, so far, it has not been so severe to feel dangerous just unsettling!

Common ODI #11553133
4
Safety Aug 29, 2023

Vehicle suspension in the rear feels unsettled when coming to a stop using regenerative brakes. If you hit a small pothole or recessed manhole cover the rear of the vehicle feels like the rear suspension is jumping. I've taken it to the dealer and they noticed it and also it occurred on a new ioniq 5 they had on the lot also.

Common ODI #11541676
4
Build Quality Jul 22, 2023

The Draw-tite 76589 was purchased through Uhaul Canada for my 2022 Ioniq5. After a few months of use with a light trailer according to the specifications of Hyundai, Uhaul and Drawtite, it tore of a part of the vehicles frame. After the inspection at U-Haul and Hyundai dealership, they concluded that the problem occured because the hitch wasn't designed to mount on the specified by Hyundai mounting spot, hence it caused the damage. There are many cases like that on Ioniq5 forum as well as at different hitch installing companies who used this model. This model is now discontinued, although still sold, and was replaced by a 76632 model which mounts to the right location. Horizon Global did not contact the customers, not their distributors/dealers and doesn't compensate the customers who contacted them. After 7 months I still have the hitch on the car if you want to inspect it.

Common ODI #11533911
4
Safety Jun 21, 2023

Hyundai's connected car service (bluelink) suffered an outage that resulted in driver profiles on many Hyundai vehicles being deleted/reset. No notice was provided and the profiles were not recovered. As a result, the vehicles did not funtion as expected. Driver assist settings were set to default (steering, braking, and acceleration functions included). Hyundai provided instructions on how to set up a new profile in response rather than restoring the customer data to their personally owned hardware (car).

Common ODI #11528266
4
Safety Jun 18, 2023

This is an electric vehicle that features “iPedal” driving, what Hyundai refers to as one-pedal driving. The main safety issue is that when you decelerate using one pedal, which is a fairly aggressive deceleration, the brake lights do not come on unless you lift your foot entirely from the accelerator or apply the brake pedal (which one would rarely do in iPedal mode). Hyundai needs to rethink their concept of operations for how their brake lights should operate. People are at risk of getting rear-ended. I didn’t realize this was how the vehicle operated until I was almost rear-ended today. Please push them to fix this issue.

Common ODI #11527751
4
Safety Jun 17, 2023

Accelerator failed to engage on two occasions. 5/18/2023: First while driving on highway at 70MPH. Car slowed down gradually and I pulled onto shoulder. 5/19/2023: Again the next day driving 35 MPH. Pulled off road onto private driveway. On both occasions I turned car off and back on and it resumed normally. Fortunately no accident or traffic problem. I brought car to the dealer (Country Hyundai Northampton) to be checked and they could not find a problem.

Common ODI #11527596
4
Safety May 25, 2023

The IONIQ 5, like other electric vehicles, uses regenerative breaking. Regenerative breaking can be set at level 1, 2, 3, or i-pedal mode. This determines the strength in which the car will engage regenerative breaking automatically when the position of the accelerator petal is raised above the current speed. i-pedal mode is full one-pedal driving, allowing the driver to slow to a stop without use of the break pedal at all. At level 2, 3, or i-pedal, the car is capable of decelerating at a significant rate even when the driver is still pressing down on the pedal. For example, if you consider it as a percentage and take "foot off the pedal" as 0%, and "pedal pressed as far as it can go" as 100%, a driver could be traveling at 70 mph on the highway, with the pedal pressed at around 60%. The driver could then lift the pedal to only 30%, and the regenerative breaking would then slow the car to, say, 30 mph. This deceleration can be very strong when set to a high regen level. However, the break lights do not illuminate unless the driver takes their foot completely off of the accelerator. In i-pedal mode especially, it is possible to decelerate from highway speed to a near stop in only a matter of seconds, without the break lights ever activating. Other EV manufacturers illuminate the break lights based on the cars measured deceleration when using regenerative breaking, and do not have this issue. If the driver has driven other EVs in the past and prefers the one pedal driving mode, it is likely they will not even know that their break lights are not illuminating during heavy deceleration, creating a significant danger of being rear ended when driving in heavy traffic.

Common ODI #11523937
4
Safety May 24, 2023

This vehicle's brake lights do not come on when using regenerative braking. The regenerative braking can bring this car to a complete stop fairly quickly and the brake lights should come on. Several near misses of people almost rear-ending me, and a few got mad enough that I feared a road rage incident. This after only owning the car for 2 weeks.

Common ODI #11523849
4
Safety May 24, 2023

The brake lights do not come on when slowing down in i-Pedal mode unless you completely let go of the accelerator, representing a massive safety concern. The drivers behind you do not know you are slowing down even though your deceleration is quite sharp

Common ODI #11523851
4
Safety May 15, 2023

While driving on highway I got below messages “Safety Functions are limited radar block warning message” Warning message went away after 15 minutes but then “Stop Vehicle Check Power Supply” warning message appeared and vehicle slowed on highway and stopped after 2 miles. Dealer replaced ICCU and Fuse that controls high voltage (charges 12v battery from main battery).

Common ODI #11522378
4
Safety Mar 27, 2023

Hi! My vehicle went under a recall repair last month. Once completed, the acceleration significantly decreased in the ECO drive train mode. The other modes are working as before. I have been advised that this recall service was required by the NTSB. There are reports of this occurring on credible websites as well. I did report it to Hyundai, they didn't believe me. So, I am reporting this to you. Please fix my car!

Common ODI #11514327
4
Safety Mar 1, 2023

The ioniq 5 has a one pedal driving mode, where the car will come to a complete stop without needing to press the brake pedal, similar to other EV's. In this mode, the gas pedal operates differently then in a conventional car - pressing the pedal approximately 1/3 of the way down represents neutral, where the car coasts. Pressing the pedal less then that - between 1/3 and not pressing it at all, applies braking power to the car, either through regenerative braking or the application of the physical brakes. The issue is, the brake lights on the rear of the vehicle do not light up when the gas pedal is depressed any amount. If you press the gas pedal as lightly as possible, the car will brake a fair amount but there is no warning to driver's behind that you are decelerating. I have twice been almost rear-ended, both times while slowing down in one pedal mode. I suspect the lack of brake lights until you take your foot fully off the gas pedal is a contributing factor. Other Ioniq 5 users have experienced the same issue.

Common ODI #11509793
4
Safety Oct 1, 2022

I parked the car end visited a store. Upon turning the car back on, the car freaked out and indicated that I needed to "Stop vehicle and check brake system." At the same time, the check engine light illuminated and the car entered limp home mode. CEL codes C164286 & C238001 appeared. The next day I brought the car to a Hyundai dealer who "fixed" the issue by removing a component that is unrelated to the braking and security systems and the car became drivable again for ~300 miles. I then went on two business trips and returned home. I drove the car and it again experienced the same error upon turning the car on. The braking system still functioned, but all electronic features were disabled by the car and braking involved a lot of force on the brake pedal to get the car to stop. For as long as I've owned the car, it has (infrequently) flashed the "Check automatic lane change system" when the car is turned on but the error goes away and doesn't return for weeks to months. The car is now back with the dealer who "fixed" the issue originally but their EV tech isn't always there to look at cars, even though the issue is not necessarily EV related as all cars (should) have brakes. Original incident: 9/8/2022, Second Occurrence: 9/30/2022

Common ODI #11487512
4
Safety Jul 21, 2022

Vehicle parked and unattended. Shifter control unit failed and vehicle rolled away. Vehicle front damage.

Common Crash involved ODI #11475351
4
Safety Jun 27, 2022

The contact owns a 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5. The contact received notification of NHTSA Campaign Number: 22V324000 (Parking Brake). The contact stated that while the vehicle was parked in a parking garage, the vehicle rolled away and crashed into a wall, causing damage to the front end. The vehicle was not diagnosed nor repaired by an independent mechanic or dealer. The manufacturer was not made aware of the failure. The failure mileage was approximately 700.

Common Crash involved ODI #11471307
4
Safety Jun 26, 2022

The contact owns a 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5. The contact stated while driving at 80 MPH and approaching a red light, the brake pedal was depressed however the brakes failed to respond. The contact engaged the emergency brakes to stop the vehicle but the vehicle would not stop causing the vehicle to rear-ended the vehicle in front of him and causing that vehicle to lose control and hit another vehicle. The contact was not injured and he was unsure if anyone else was injured. A police report was filed. The vehicle was towed to the dealer where the vehicle was diagnosed and the contact was unsure of the diagnosis. The vehicle was not repaired. The manufacturer was not notified of the failure. The failure mileage was 11,200.

Common Crash involved ODI #11471225
4
Safety Apr 6, 2022

I started my car up right after charging on a rainy day at 2500 miles exactly and got 5 warnings. Check battery, lane assist warning, abs warning, parking brake warning, forward collision warning and bling spot collision avoidance warning lights were on. More or less all these systems triggered a fault. I tried turning it off and on to no luck. As I drove to the dealer my breaks became steadily lighter and lighter with the manual break even clicking at times. My breaking distance was doubled by the time that i got there. Other owners are seeing the same issue. It sounds quite similar to the Kona Electric recall (20V-748). My car is unsafe to drive.

Common ODI #11460054
3
Battery Apr 28, 2026

While the vehicle was parked in a garage and charging overnight, I briefly went to the vehicle to retrieve an item from the back seat. I was barefoot at the time. I opened the driver‑side rear door and reached inside with my right hand while my left hand was near the upper door area where the door seal is located. When my left hand grazed the door frame, it felt unusually sharp. When I touched the area again to determine what was sharp, I received a significant electric shock. There were no warning lights, messages, or prior symptoms before the incident. The presence of electrical current on an exterior door surface poses a safety risk during normal vehicle use.

Common ODI #11734481
3
Battery Apr 28, 2026

I tried to start car and it started but would not go into drive. A message saying "12v battery voltage low. Stop safely." Was on the screen. I turned the car off and back on and was able to drive home. Once home I tried to charge the car but it would not charge. However I left it plugged in and came back several hours later and the car had charged some. I started the car and the messages did not appear. The next day i went to drive the car and the car was totally dead. The auto key would not unlock the car. Thank goodness, I was not driving when the battery died. I took it to the dealer. This is the 2nd 12v battery I have had to replace in 4 years. The first replacement was covered under warranty. I asked them to try to identify the root cause of the 12v batteries dying so quickly and they claim it is only the 12v battery. I feel unsafe driving the car now knowing it could happen at any moment again, maybe while driving. I think the problem is related to the ICCU as my symptoms are very similar to other people with ICCU issues.

Common ODI #11734611
3
Battery Apr 26, 2026

2022 Ioniq 5 SE. ICCU failed April 2026 with around 29325 miles. Original owner. Purchased June 2022. I had the original Recall 272 software update performed back in February 2025, but the hardware still failed a year later. **Timeline of Failure:** 1. **Phase 1 (The Trigger):** Level 2 charging stopped unexpectedly before reaching the limit. It tripped my house breaker and unfortunately killed my Level 2 EVSE (Grizzl-E) with a stuck relay. Didn't think too much of it because I had to be somewhere. Car started up normally and I was able to drive throughout the day with no problems. 2. **Phase 2 (The Warning):** The next day, I attempted Level 1 charging. It immediately tripped the breaker. I tried another outlet on a different breaker; the breaker didn't trip, but the car failed to initiate a charge after three attempts. 3. **Phase 3 (Dashboard Error):** After third failed attempt with the L1, I took a peek inside and saw the dashboard had a yellow triangle. With the charger still plugged in, I sat in the driver's seat and turned the car on. The **"Check EV System"** error appeared. I turned off the car and went inside to call the dealer. I called the dealer and they said I can have it towed there. They also scheduled an appointment for the next morning. I went back to car to attempt to position the car to make it easier for the tow truck, but the check ev error was not there when I turned on the car. It said ready and I was able to drive around the block a few times so I figured I'll just try to drive to the dealer. I drove the car to the dealer the next morning. It took **one week** to get my car back. **Diagnostics & Parts Replaced:** The dealer confirmed the following codes and performed a full hardware replacement: * **DTC P1E1300:** AC Power Module Failure * **DTC P1A9096:** DC/DC Converter Fault * **ICCU Part:** `36400-1XAA0-AQQH` * **HV Fuse:** `375F2-GI040-QQH` * **Coolant:** Install of Pink Antifreeze (`00232-19098`)

Common ODI #11734110
3
Battery Apr 22, 2026

The ICCU unit went out rendering the car inoperable

Common ODI #11733413
3
Battery Apr 21, 2026

The car lost power while driving and an electrical warning was displayed on the screen. The issue was later diagnosed as a failure of the ICCU and blown fuse that had been previously recalled and replaced. Now it needs to be replaced again.

Common ODI #11732961
3
Battery Apr 18, 2026

Finished charge, low battery indicator on the dashboard. started to drive, within mile "pull over immediatedly" well documented and continued flaw with vechile ICCU component (that I had the software "patches" applied). Car will no longer accept charge (so now has the remaining charge before being a 3 ton brick) and cannot not be driven as if the 12v battery loses charge (which it will) I will lose powersteering and brakes.

Common ODI #11732158
3
Battery Apr 9, 2026

The 2022 ioniq 5 was bought used with 43k MI and within 2k miles of driving in 50-85F climate and 7kwh l2 charging I witnessed the orange check EV light flash while I was driving on the highway. I exited and powrr cycled the car and the EV light remained. The next morning the orange check EV light was gone. I went to the dealership for a diagnostic and they said they could not replicate the error code or had found any history of the error code coming up without proving to me or showing me any substantial evidence that they tested for anything at the Escondido Hyundai dealership in California. I escalated the issue with Hyundai corporate and was assigned a case manager that ultimately gave me the same answer that they could not replicate any codes and that I should take the car back and drive normally. After extensive research I found that the orange check ev light is a more dangerous sign than the red check ev light because it indicates that the ICCU unit is about to fail. Research shows that due to thermal stress the ICCU will inevitably fail after the orange check AV light comes on. Further research shows that Hyundai had officially stated a 1% failure rate for the ICCU unit in all of their EVs built on the e-gmp cars to date but some projections are at 10% failure rate or higher and that Hyundai Kia is downplaying the issue similarly to how they tried to do the same with the Theta 2 GDI engines that they had been sued and were responsible to pay over $300 or so million dollars as well as $24 million to a employee whistleblower a few years ago. I highly suggest that the nhtsa or other organizations that have the power to force Hyundai Kia to do the right thing so that no further lives are at risk from these ICCU units that have flawed designs that have not been fixed,only remedied via software update or replaced with refurbished units at the most with inevitable failure as thermal stress is experienced.

Common ODI #11730459
3
Battery Apr 4, 2026

In summer 2025, the ICCU (Integrated Charging Control Unit) failed and was replaced under a Hyundai recall at no cost. On December 4, 2025, warning lights reappeared. College Park Hyundai diagnosed a faulty battery related to the prior ICCU failure. I paid out of pocket for a 12-volt battery replacement and additional maintenance, as the dealership claimed the battery was not covered. A “Check Electric Vehicle System” warning appeared immediately after I picked up the vehicle that same day. On December 5, 2025, I returned the vehicle to College Park Hyundai with 20,415 miles. They diagnosed a failed main EV drivetrain battery requiring warranty replacement. As of April 5, 2026, my vehicle has been at the dealership for 122 consecutive days with no repair completed, no replacement battery received, and no estimated completion date. Despite repeated follow-ups, I have received no meaningful updates on repair status or battery availability. I have been without my vehicle for four months with no resolution in sight. This extended delay represents a significant safety concern and an unacceptable failure of Hyundai’s warranty obligations.

Common ODI #11729307
3
Battery Apr 1, 2026

Upon starting the car, it made an audible "pop", and the dash indicated to check the 12V power supply and "low available power" with a turtle indicator, and an "EV!" warning lamp. The car struggled to accelerate out of the parking lot, and within a minute, the dash displayed a "power failure" message, and the car lost all ability to accelerate while on the road, forcing an emergency pull-over. The 12V system completely failed while waiting for a tow truck, complicating the already poorly-documented and complicated process of disengaging the vehicle's automatic parking break for loading onto the flatbed trailer. The dealership performed diagnostics and confirmed an ICCU failure. After waiting for parts and technician availability, the ICCU was replaced with part number 36400-1XAA0-AQQH "ICCU Assy" and returned to me 32 days later.

Common ODI #11728749
3
Battery Mar 29, 2026

I am filing this complaint regarding Hyundai Motor America's failure to complete a vehicle repair in a timely manner on my 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 (VIN: [XXX] ), which has been at Hyundai of Leander, an authorized Hyundai service center in Leander, Texas, since September 2025 — more than six months — awaiting a replacement high-voltage battery. (Case No. XXX) I purchased this vehicle in September 2025 from Apple Sport Imports in [XXX]. The vehicle was sent immediately to Hyundai of Leander for an open repair and I never took full delivery. I was informed the replacement battery was initially allocated to a different dealership and a new order could not be placed until approximately January 2026. As of March 2026, Hyundai's own case manager confirmed in writing on March 30, 2026 only that they are working to determine the battery's arrival date with no confirmed completion date provided. Since November 2025, I have made 5 monthly payments of $513.92 totaling $2,569.60 on a vehicle I have never driven, with a sixth payment of $513.92 due in April 2026. I am also flagging a potential records discrepancy for NHTSA's awareness. When I checked my VIN on Hyundai's recall lookup website, Recall 272 — covering an ICCU software update, fuse replacement, and ICCU replacement on 2022-2024 MY IONIQ 5 vehicles — is listed as a Closed Campaign with a completion date of October 24, 2025. My vehicle was physically at Hyundai of Leander awaiting parts on that date and remains there today. I do not know whether this recall is related to the current open repair, but I am flagging the potential discrepancy for investigation. When I raised this with Hyundai of Leander's service department, I received no clear explanation. I am requesting that NHTSA investigate Hyundai Motor America's recall fulfillment practices and the accuracy of their recall completion records for this vehicle. INFORMATION REDACTED PURSUANT TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(B)(6)

Common ODI #11727928
3
Battery Mar 25, 2026

On January 19, 2026, the vehicle lost power while driving and required a tow to the local dealership. After inspection, the dealership determined that the ICCU was at fault and needed to be replaced. The ICCU part was backordered. The vehicle was inoperable for 6 weeks as we waited for the part to be available and installed.

Common ODI #11727197
3
Battery Mar 24, 2026

ICCU failure occurred while vehicle was operating at 30 MPH, after being charged the night prior and unplugged in the morning at 100% capacity. A sudden pop was heard, and the vehicle indicated that an electrical fault would require the vehicle to be shut down as soon as safely possible. The vehicle went into limp mode and would not exceed 25 MPH.

Common ODI #11726962
3
Battery Mar 22, 2026

Car gave a "electrical error" message and would no longer charge at any charger. It slowly lost power and eventually stopped driving fully on the highway. The dealer says the ICCU is responsible. I inquired if this recall was not fixed already, they said it was but can still happen and the ICCU is not resolved truly, the software is just a temporary fix according to them. The vehicle will need a new ICCU.

Common ODI #11726476
3
Battery Mar 19, 2026

My ioniq 5 EV experienced an integrated charge control unit (ICCU) failure. A couple days prior to complete failure, we were unable to charge the vehicle using either level 1 or level 2 chargers. Our local Hyundai service center advised us that it was likely an ICCU failure and was unsafe to drive, due to the possibility of sudden loss of drivetrain power. The vehicle was towed to our local service center (CardinaleWay Hyundai El Monte in El Monte, California) and the ICCU completely failed after arriving at the service center. The vehicle is still at the service center and we have been advised that there is a nationwide shortage on replacement parts, with backorders of weeks to months.

Common ODI #11725730

Showing top 50 of 392 complaints (sorted by severity, most recent first). Full records available via NHTSA ODI search.

What Owners Are Saying

▲ +0.90Satisfaction

"Thanks for your help! Big thanks to everyone for your help! I finally bought a Hyundai Ioniq 5 in Finland, and I’m very happy with it! I really appreciate everyone who took the time to reply—your insights were incredibly helpful. • u/Few-Consideration-17, thanks for explaining the difference between AWD and RWD heating systems. That’s an important factor for Finland, we are freezing cool! :) • u/kimguroo, your advice about the lack of battery preconditioning in the 2022 RWD model was crucial, it was unexpected thing • u/cardinalkgb, really valuable info on the extended range of the RWD / AWD • u/naturtok, your comment on AWD traction and handling reassured me that it was a solid choice. • u/snipsuper415, thanks for the warning about battery preconditioning—it made a difference in my decision. • u/undermark5, your explanation of how preconditioning affects charging was really helpful. • u/South_Butterfly6681, great argument for RWD in warmer climates, but in Finland, AWD seemed like the way to go! • u/zeeper25, your thoughts on trim levels and digital mirrors were really useful. • u/miguel-elote, your story about V2L and hurricane power backup was inspiring! That feature alone makes Ioniq 5 a game-changer. Hope we won’t have hurricanes in Finland, but still :) • u/SyntheticOne, thanks for the detailed breakdown of AWD vs. RWD performance and features. • u/Ztasiwk, your point about real-world range differences between AWD and RWD helped clarify things. • u/DarkXanthos, your insights on HUD, the panoramic roof, and key features helped me choose the right trim. When I touched one with panoramic roof - I refused to choose any other :) • u/DavidReeseOhio, your details about ICCU and Limited trim features were much appreciated. Thanks again to everyone who shared their experience! This is an awesome community—I’m glad I asked here. AWD, 2022, 50000 km, Premium tier (panoramic roof, all assistants, all electronic seats, preconditioning), black"

— r/Ioniq5 · 2026
▲ +0.85Battery

"Tracked my old Ioniq 5 after return - 2 1/2 years 30,000 + miles - battery still 100% On March 28th, I turned in my leased 2024 Hyundai Ioniq 5 Limited AWD (30,580 miles / $41,000 residual) to a local Hyundai dealership in Illinois and leased a new 2026 AWD Limited ($557 OTD including taxes and fees, 36 months, 10K/year). This week, I followed the car on Bluelink. Over three days, it was transported 640 miles and ended up in Richmond, Virginia at a 100% EV reseller — “Recharged” — a CarMax-like company that inspects, reconditions, and, most importantly, tests and rates remaining battery health. For better or worse, I always charged to 100% after roughly 60–150 miles between charges. Recharged’s battery health report, using a Voltest device, shows 100% state of health and indicates that 95% of charging was slow charging — which accurately reflects my home Level 2 charging at 11 kW, with only occasional 350 kW fast charging via Electrify America during the 2 years of free charging that came with the 2024 Ioniq 5. It’s now listed for sale on Recharged.com for $31,998."

— r/Ioniq5 · 2026
▲ +0.80Satisfaction

"Hyundai IONIQ 5 ourique Jan 28, 2022 Ioniq 5 3 Weeks and 600kms Ioniq 5 RWD 72,6kWh Vangad+plug&power+ASF cyber gray MY22 (November SW), my first EV. I'm very happy with my choice, the car has a good build quality, good inside space, very comfortable, with more than enough power, a good size+equipment/price relation (even compared with ICE vehicles). The... 2813KHibbsy replied Aug 5, 2023 Hyundai IONIQ 5 chek39 Feb 5, 2022 IONIQ 5 - First Impressions"

— Ioniqforum · 2026
▲ +0.70Range

"Driving speed and some tricks like using L0 at times play a big role. I'm also in the Phx area with temps between 115 and 119F, and the need of turning the A/C to Auto 3 at 73F (also still in Eco mode). The estimated range shown is based on no A/C use and shows you on one screen the difference. I typically drive with HDA at 62-66 mph in ECO mode. My estimated range at 100% SoC is now around 345mi, 303-306 at 90%. With our temps here, Battery Care is sometimes running the entire 38mi commute, about 25mi in the morning when it is "cooler", about 100F. - Arial - Book Antiqua - Courier New - Georgia - Tahoma - Times New Roman - Trebuchet MS - Verdana Post Reply Hyundai IONIQ 5 Kinwai1986 Mar 3, 2022 Ioniq 5 range decreased with supercharge"

— Ioniqforum · 2026
▽ 0.95Software

"Hyundai Ioniq 5 major issue: Sudden lurching/braking. Requires $8,000+ fix: Traction Motor Assembly, MCU, Rear Motor Assembly replacement. I'm mainly posting this so that other people with this problem can find info on it. Despite several previous searches, it seems like I'm one of the first few posting about it. We (my husband and I) have a 2022 RWD SE model of Hyundai Ioniq 5 with 160,000 miles on it. We bought it a couple years ago for $30,000 and it had 22,000 miles on it. (Edit: we rechecked, it's at about 53,000 miles a year). For a used car, it was basically new because it was previously a lease car from that same Hyundai dealership. There were no previously reported problems, accidents, and it had a good service history. Despite being driven constantly, it was well taken care of, including coolant changes at the dealership. We serviced it consistently, got new tires as needed, etc. It drove great and it really performed fantastically! Super comfortable, fun to drive. Until... Our issue seemed small at first: The car would randomly lurch, resulting in a sudden loss of acceleration. Imagine the feeling of a heavy gear shift in a non-luxury gas car. Or imagine somebody randomly tapping the brake. Sometimes, but not always and *not* predictably, we would get a yellow warning message if the battery was near full (90%-98%). Something like **\[Regeneration not available, battery fully charged\]**. This was mildly concerning but at most annoying. We tried to figure out what caused it at first...We couldn't tell if weather was a factor, but this happened during cool winter months (about 20-40 degrees F). Car speed, driving uphill or downhill, weight load, etc did not seem to affect the issue frequency. We actually had an OBD2 car code reader, and initially didn't find anything but in the middle of the saga did see a historic error code about motor overcurrent. This went on for about a month. Speed limit function was not turned on. We turned off everything that could be remotely software related too. We were not getting the "power limited" turtle icon (if you are, here's a link to that issue: After we saw the motor overcurrent error we took it in to the dealership service center. But since the issue was triggered randomly / intermittently and the driver couldn't influence frequency, the techs couldn't reproduce it. They didn't charge us and told us to come back if it kept happening. Well, it kept happening, but we decided that we could live with it and still be pretty happy with the car as long as nothing got worse. So of course it got way worse. Within a couple of weeks, the car gave us a critical error and while it didn't shut off, it would not accelerate / maintain spe"

— r/Ioniq5 · 2026
▽ 0.90Satisfaction

"So they refused to tell you the incidence of this fault, but played it down as if it was very rare, instead of the 2% - 10% range that Consumer Reports indicated from their research. We don't know any better than that because Hyundai refuses to be honest with us. The only real bit of information was the news that they're going to push yet another software update out to owners in the vague hope it might do something, and the assurance, "yeah, we'll keep fixing this thing when it fails - but only on the older models". Not my idea of stellar customer service. Never again."

— r/Ioniq5 · 2026
▽ 0.90Software

"4128KJ23 replied Aug 9, 2024 Hyundai IONIQ 5 JC007 Jun 20, 2022 Ioniq 5 major Issue 3 month old i5 is now having a concerning issue. The 1st and most important is the i5 has taken off on its own when I selected Nuetral from Drive and will continue to speed up, putting my foot on the brake will slow the car but it's still trying to go releasing the brake it will continue to... 105.3Klcssmanagementandcon replied Dec 24, 2023 Jmu1986 Aug 29, 2022"

— Ioniqforum · 2026
▽ 0.80Build Quality

"Hyundai Ioniq 5 rear clicking/metallic sound - Solved I want to share my experience with a metallic clicking noise coming from the rear of my Hyundai IONIQ 5 (2022). First of all, this is NOT the common issue that’s fixed by replacing the tailgate rubber stoppers (TSB 24-BD-012H) or applying tape to the tailgate latch. This particular problem occurs in cars with a glass roof or solar roof (which I have). There is also an official Hyundai TSB for it (TSB HSE23-91-P660-NE). I ended up fixing it using whatever I had on hand: hammer, flathead screwdriver and two self-tapping screws (DIN 7504 K, 6.3x90 — not 100% sure about the exact size, but something similar should work). Here’s what I did: * Disconnected the 12v battery terminal * Folded down the rear seats * Removed the upper plastic trim in the trunk * Unscrewed the rear passenger ceiling handles * Removed 3 clips from the rear headliner * Slightly lowered the rear part of the headliner to access the areas described in the TSB (Be careful not to deform the headliner — it actually restores itself pretty well after reassembly.) * Inserted a screwdriver into the seam with purple sealant and hit it firmly with a hammer in about 5 different spots along the joint * Did the same with a screw — tapping it in across multiple points * Finally, I hammered one screw deeper toward the center of the car and checked by hand that it was seated very firmly. * Repeated the same process on the other side * Folded the seats back up * Placed extra cushions between the headrest and the headliner to prevent movement * Went for a test drive. If the noise disappears completely, I recommend driving at least another 50 km to confirm the fix before reassembling everything. Yes — I left the screws in place. They don’t interfere with the headliner. I understand there are probably more appropriate solutions, but this is what I had available. So yeah… kind of absurd that even with an active warranty, you still end up fixing this yourself. Now about the official Hyundai dealer in Norway: At first, I went to the dealer and they replaced the tailgate rubber stoppers — no result. Then I tried taping various potential contact points and adjusting the lower bump stops — still nothing. I went back to the dealer a second time, clearly explaining the issue and even showing them TSB HSE23-91-P660-NE as a possible cause. They attempted to fix it, but it didn’t help — in fact, the noise got worse about a week later.On my third visit, they simply refused to take the car in, saying that this noise is “normal for this model.” In my opinion, Hyundai has the worst service I’ve experienced. No matter what issue I bring up, their default answer is: “this is how it’s supposed to be.” For example, my battery preconditioning wasn’t working due to outdated BMS software. At first, they claimed the feature was only available on 2025 models. It took me a full month to prove otherwise. Eventually, they contacted headquarters and received upda"

— r/Ioniq5 · 2026

Showing 8 of 72 owner excerpts (sorted by sentiment strength)

Frequently Asked Questions

The read 2022 Hyundai Ioniq 5 RWD (Long Range) · Score 70/100 · 9/10 value · 3 recalls, 392 complaints (39.2/10K VINs) across 27 Reddit threads.

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