2025 Hyundai Ioniq 6
Illustrative silhouette — not the actual vehicle
Learn more · find one used
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- Failure index
- 28/100 (Low risk)
- Segment
- Sedan
- Battery
- 53-77 kWh · NMC
- Battery supplier
- SK On
- Range (WLTP/EPA est.)
- 581 km
- Fast charging
- 233 kW
- Drivetrain
- RWD/AWD
- Region
- Global
- 5-year degradation (est.)
- 8%
- Known issues
- 1st-generation ICCU still in service; charging port door and seat belt anchor recalls open; April 2026 class-action lawsuit alleges replacement ICCUs are also defective
Editorial assessment
The 2025 Ioniq 6 is the inflection point of the production run. Consumer Reports has moved the model-year reliability rating from below-average to average, and the open recall count has dropped to two: the charging-port-door panel and the April 2026 seat-belt anchor. The ICCU is still 1st-generation hardware, however, and remains subject to the failure pattern documented across the 2023–2025 cohort. The April 2026 class-action complaint alleges the replacement ICCUs installed under recall remedy are themselves defective — a claim Hyundai has not publicly contested.
Hyundai's April 2026 extension of ICCU coverage to 15 years / 180,000 miles is most valuable on the 2025 because the buyer is most likely to still own the car when long-tail failures emerge. Warranty extensions signal confidence — or containment. In this case the structure of the announcement, expanding sequentially across Korea, Europe, and finally the US, reads more like containment than confidence.
Editor's take
This is the Ioniq 6 a careful buyer can rationalize. The car is materially the same as the 2023 in the ways that matter on the road and meaningfully better in the ways that matter at the service department. Owner reports skew toward the satisfied end of the distribution. The lawsuit complicates the picture, but not catastrophically: a buyer with a healthy dealer relationship and a tolerance for occasional service visits can defend the choice.
Buy, lease, or walk away
Our take
Buy used — strong value
Used 2025 examples coming off short-term leases or first-owner trades represent the best balance the platform has offered. Heavy first-year depreciation has already happened, the warranty stack (10-year powertrain plus the 15-year ICCU extension) is intact, and the recall situation is meaningfully cleaner than the 2023–2024 vintages. Verify both open recalls are completed and that any prior ICCU service is documented.
Price guidance: Target $32,000–$38,000 USD for SE/SEL Long Range with under 25,000 mi; Limited trim should not exceed $42,000.
This is editorial commentary based on depreciation data, warranty timing, and platform risk. Not financial advice — consult a qualified professional for significant purchase decisions.
Help other owners — file with the regulator early
Regulatory complaints to NHTSA, Transport Canada, DVSA, and other authorities feed national defect databases. Each report contributes to pattern detection that can trigger formal investigations and recalls — protecting other owners of the same vehicle, not just you.
You can file a regulatory complaint at any time, even before contacting your manufacturer or dealer. The regulatory complaint is a separate channel that helps every owner of your vehicle.
Hyundai risk scores over time
Every Hyundai vehicle we rate, plotted by model year. Lower scores indicate lower reliability risk.
- This vehicle — the 2025 Ioniq 6 you're viewing
- Low risk — failure index 0–30
- Moderate risk — failure index 31–60
- High risk — failure index 61–100
Data points: 2018 Kona Electric: 75, 2021 Ioniq 5: 40, 2022 Ioniq 5: 25, 2023 Ioniq 6: 42, 2024 Ioniq 6: 38, 2025 Ioniq 6: 28, 2026 Ioniq 5: 22, 2026 Ioniq 6: 22.
What the score means
A failure index of 28/100 places this vehicle in our low risk band. Vehicles in this band typically have proven platforms, mature battery technology, and clean recall histories. Appropriate for most buyers prioritizing reliability.
See our full six-factor methodology for how this score is calculated.
Verify with your regulator
The regulator in your jurisdiction is always the authoritative source for whether your specific VIN is affected by an open safety campaign. Check the database below using your vehicle identification number.
- United States — NHTSA (US)
- Canada — Transport Canada
- United Kingdom — DVSA
- European Union — EU Safety Gate (RAPEX)
- Germany — KBA
- France — Rappel Conso
Before you buy or sign — what to verify
Our risk rating is a category-level assessment based on platform, chemistry, supplier, and documented recall history. It is not an assessment of any specific vehicle you are considering. Individual vehicle condition varies substantially based on factors outside the manufacturer's control — and those owner-side factors often matter more than the platform rating.
Owner behavior matters more than most people realize
Two identical 2025 Hyundai Ioniq 6s can be in dramatically different condition at the same odometer reading. The variables that matter most:
- Driving style. Hard acceleration, aggressive braking, and high-speed cornering accelerate wear on battery cells, suspension components, tires, and brake systems. An owner who regularly uses full regenerative braking without balancing with normal friction braking will wear rotors differently than a smooth driver — and neither is the manufacturer's fault.
- Charging habits. Routine DC fast-charging to 100% on NMC or NCA battery chemistry accelerates degradation materially. An LFP-equipped variant charged daily to 100% is fine; an NCA Long Range variant charged that way is not. Charging habits over three or four years can make a 20-point difference in effective battery health between otherwise identical vehicles.
- Climate exposure. Vehicles kept in garages last dramatically longer than those parked outdoors in extreme climates. Salt exposure on coastal routes or heavily salted winter roads accelerates corrosion of undercarriage components regardless of manufacturer.
- Scheduled maintenance. Manufacturers publish specific inspection requirements — typically every 12-24 months — that are conditions of full warranty coverage. Owners who skip these inspections may have valid warranty claims denied, which is not the manufacturer failing the owner but the reverse.
The pre-purchase inspection checklist
Before buying any used EV — especially one in our Moderate, High, or Critical risk bands — commission a pre-purchase inspection from a qualified EV technician. Not a general mechanic, not the dealer selling the vehicle, not a friend with tools. A technician with documented EV service experience.
The inspection should include at minimum:
- Battery state-of-health diagnostic scan. Every major EV platform exposes battery SOC and capacity data through the OBD2 port or manufacturer diagnostic tools. A three-year-old vehicle should retain 90%+ of original capacity; a five-year-old should retain 85%+. Substantially worse numbers indicate either platform issues or abuse.
- Tire condition and wear pattern analysis. Uneven wear indicates alignment issues or aggressive cornering. Mismatched tire brands or sizes across axles indicates the owner cut corners on replacement. Season-inappropriate tires (summer tires year-round, worn-out all-seasons in snow regions) indicate poor upkeep broadly. Tire tread depth and rotation history are among the most reliable diagnostics of overall owner care — a well-maintained vehicle almost always has well-maintained tires.
- Service record review. Ask for complete service history. Dealer-stamped maintenance logs, software update records, and any warranty claims filed. Gaps in the service history matter. Multiple address changes in the service records may indicate the vehicle traveled between owners faster than typical — worth investigating why.
- Visual inspection for signs of abuse. Undercarriage damage, curb rash, curb-struck wheels, aftermarket modifications without documentation, and signs of collision repair not disclosed by the seller.
- Recall campaign completion verification. Run the specific VIN through the regulator databases linked above. Every applicable recall campaign should show "remedy completed" status. If campaigns are outstanding, get them completed before taking possession — campaigns that were not completed by the previous owner may transfer to you as the new registered owner.
Manufacturer maintenance requirements matter for warranty
EV manufacturers typically require specific inspections at defined intervals — often every 12 or 24 months — as a condition of full warranty coverage. These include brake fluid changes, cabin filter replacements, coolant system inspections, tire rotations, and software updates. Owners who neglect these requirements may have warranty claims denied even for issues entirely unrelated to the neglected item.
Check the specific owner's manual for your Hyundai Ioniq 6 to understand what inspections are required and when. A vehicle with a complete documented inspection history is measurably more valuable — and lower risk — than an otherwise identical vehicle without maintenance records. When buying used, verify the service history yourself with the manufacturer's dealer network; don't rely solely on what the seller tells you.
What this rating means, specifically
A high failure index score indicates that the category of vehicle (this model, this year, this platform) carries elevated risk relative to alternatives. It does not mean any specific 2025 Hyundai Ioniq 6 you encounter will fail. Conversely, a low failure index score does not guarantee a specific well-maintained vehicle is risk-free — a neglected low-risk vehicle can easily be worse than a well-maintained high-risk vehicle.
The rating is a starting point for due diligence, not a substitute for it.
This rating is an editorial assessment based on publicly available data and is not a safety rating, reliability guarantee, or buying recommendation. Individual vehicle condition varies substantially based on owner maintenance, driving style, charging habits, and environmental exposure. A high risk score does not predict failure of any specific vehicle, and a low risk score does not guarantee reliability. Always commission a pre-purchase inspection from a qualified EV technician, verify recall completion through the manufacturer and relevant regulator, and review complete service history before any significant purchase decision.