Kia Ceed review

Category: Family car

Tidy handling and a reassuringly long warranty, but there are better all-rounders out there

Kia Ceed 2021 front cornering
  • Kia Ceed 2021 front cornering
  • Kia Ceed 2021 rear tracking
  • Kia Ceed 2021 interior dashboard
  • Kia Ceed 2021 interior rear seats
  • Kia Ceed 2021 interior infotainment
  • Kia Ceed 2021 front right tracking
  • Kia Ceed 2021 left tracking
  • Kia Ceed 2021 rear right tracking
  • Kia Ceed 2021 front cornering
  • Kia Ceed 2021 front right static
  • Kia Ceed 2021 rear left static
  • Kia Ceed 2021 right static
  • Kia Ceed 2021 headlight detail
  • Kia Ceed 2021 rear lights detail
  • Kia Ceed 2021 alloy wheel detail
  • Kia Ceed 2021 interior steering wheel detail
  • Kia Ceed 2021 interior detail
  • Kia Ceed 2021 boot open
  • Kia Ceed 2021 front cornering
  • Kia Ceed 2021 rear tracking
  • Kia Ceed 2021 interior dashboard
  • Kia Ceed 2021 interior rear seats
  • Kia Ceed 2021 interior infotainment
  • Kia Ceed 2021 front right tracking
  • Kia Ceed 2021 left tracking
  • Kia Ceed 2021 rear right tracking
  • Kia Ceed 2021 front cornering
  • Kia Ceed 2021 front right static
  • Kia Ceed 2021 rear left static
  • Kia Ceed 2021 right static
  • Kia Ceed 2021 headlight detail
  • Kia Ceed 2021 rear lights detail
  • Kia Ceed 2021 alloy wheel detail
  • Kia Ceed 2021 interior steering wheel detail
  • Kia Ceed 2021 interior detail
  • Kia Ceed 2021 boot open
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by
Neil Winn
Updated01 November 2022

Introduction

What Car? says...

It’s fair to say that anyone looking for a family car is somewhat spoilt for choice these days – so how does the Kia Ceed stand out?

Well, for starters it comes with an industry-leading seven-year warranty, along with pretty competitive pricing and a decent equipment list, especially as you move up the range. So, if you’re looking for something sensible, the Ceed seems to tick a lot of boxes on paper already.

If the promise of a long warranty and reasonable pricing doesn’t quite set your heart alight, there's more. The current Ceed is available with a line-up of engines that includes a frugal 1.0-litre petrol and a diesel with mild-hybrid technology.

Kia offers you a choice of body types, too. If you’re looking for more practicality, there’s the Kia Ceed Sportswagon estate version, or if it’s all about style for you, there’s the swoopy and svelte Kia ProCeed (also an estate). There’s even an off-road aesthetic available with the slightly jacked-up Kia XCeed.

Here, though, we’re focusing on the hatchback version. The Ceed already sounds like a worthy contender, but it’s got some strong foes to see off in the family car class.

So does the Kia Ceed have the talents to triumph over more established rivals, including the Ford Focus, Seat Leon and Vauxhall Astra? That’s something we’ll investigate over the next few pages of this review. We’ll also tell you which engines and trims are the ones to go for.

Remember, if you are thinking of buying a Ceed, or any new vehicle, we can help you make big savings on the brochure price with the free What Car? New Car Deals pages, where you could save hundreds of pounds with one of the tempting new family car deals.

Overview

The Kia Ceed is competitive in lots of areas but, unlike its best rivals, it fails to be outstanding in any area. Long warranty aside, there's little compelling reason to recommend it over the better-handling Ford Focus, the more practical Skoda Octavia or Skoda Scala, or the more refined and comfortable Volkswagen Golf. The 1.0-litre petrol in entry-level '2' trim is the sweet spot of the Ceed line-up – but we’d definitely add the optional forward collision avoidance assist system.

  • Entry-level versions represent good value for money
  • Class-leading warranty
  • Decent-sized boot
  • Not especially generous for rear seat space
  • Weak safety and security ratings
  • Unsettled ride over rough surfaces
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Performance & drive

What it’s like to drive, and how quiet it is

Engine, 0-60mph and gearbox

Three petrols and a diesel make up the Kia Ceed engine line-up. The cheapest petrol engine, the 118bhp turbocharged three-cylinder 1.0 T-GDi, provides performance that most buyers will find quite adequate (0-60mph takes 11.2sec), and is our pick of the range. Similar 1.0-litre turbocharged engines in rivals have more low-down shove, though – you need to rev the Ceed harder to get the best out of it.

If you want more poke, there’s a 158bhp turbocharged 1.5 T-GDi petrol which covers 0-60mph more than two seconds quicker than the 1.0 T-GDi, although the 1.5 can still suffer with some initial hesitation at low revs, and you still need to thrash the Ceed for a quick burst of pace. However, it is reasonably punchy once you’ve wound it up.

Kia Ceed image
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There’s one choice of diesel power in the shape of the 134bhp 1.6 CRDi, which pulls eagerly and offers flexible performance. Apart from the entry-level 1.0 T-GDi, it's the slowest choice in the range and is only really for those who do big miles and want to benefit from the decent fuel economy.

Suspension and ride comfort

If comfort is your absolute top priority, you might want to strike the Ceed from your shortlist and look instead at the Skoda Scala or VW Golf – two of the most comfortable cars in the class.

As with the Seat Leon, the Ceed isn’t overly firm, and maintains its composure over larger obstacles, such as speed bumps, but it fails to be quite so absorbent as the Scala or Golf over rough town roads or pockmarked A-roads. It’s not stupefyingly crashy, though, and upgrading from 16in to 17in wheels doesn’t make the ride noticeably worse, as can be the case with some of its rivals.

Kia Ceed 2021 rear tracking

Handling

The Kia Ceed’s relatively quick steering gives it a good cornering turn-in so initially it seems to have pretty tidy handling.

When you push it harder, though, you discover that the steering doesn't feel anywhere near as rich as in a Ford Focus, or as progressively weighted as that of the Golf and Skoda Octavia. The upshot is that you feel less confident about placing the Ceed accurately in bends.

While the Ceed feels generally nimble and flows nicely along a country road at seven-tenths pace, in fast cornering it doesn't feel particularly grippy at the rear.

Noise and vibration

We certainly wouldn’t call the Kia Ceed noisy, but it's not as refined as the likes of the Golf and Focus. The 1.0 T-GDi petrol engine sends a fair few vibrations through the controls and, like the larger 1.5, sounds a little coarse when revved. The 1.6 CRDi diesel, meanwhile, is downright clattery like oil-burners of old.

The Ceed's slightly notchy manual gearbox isn't as slick as the Focus's but it’s precise and easy to use otherwise. A seven-speed dual-clutch automatic gearbox is available but we’d stick with the manual to keep the price down.

At motorway speeds, the Ceed burdens you with quite a bit of road roar, although it suffers from slightly less wind noise than the Skoda Octavia and its suspension is quieter over bumps.

Interior

The interior layout, fit and finish

Driving position and dashboard

Entry-level Ceeds have a good range of adjustment for the driver's seat and steering wheel, while the pedals are nicely in line with the seat and steering wheel, so you don’t sit in a crooked position. If you upgrade to 3 trim, you’ll get electrically adjustable lumbar support to fend off backache.

As more and more features are crammed into the touchscreens of modern cars, it’s refreshing to see that the Ceed gets big, clearly marked buttons that are easy to reach, along with good old-fashioned knobs for the air-conditioning system.

Visibility, parking sensors and cameras

Forward visibility is pretty good, with relatively thin windscreen pillars making it easy to see out of junctions. The view through the back is less impressive, especially over the shoulder. That's down to the small rear screen and thick pillars behind the rear doors blocking your view. It's much the same in many of the Ceed's rivals, though, and at least all variants get a reversing camera as standard to make life that bit easier.

All versions have heated door mirrors, a front wiper de-icer and automatic lights as standard. If you upgrade to 3 trim, you'll get automatic wipers and rear parking sensors thrown in.

Kia Ceed 2021 interior dashboard

Sat nav and infotainment

In entry-level 2 trim, the Kia Ceed comes with a 8.0in touchscreen infotainment system that features DAB radio, Bluetooth and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone mirroring. If you don’t want to use your phone's navigation app, you can choose 2 Nav trim to get in-built sat-nav as well as the larger 10.25in touchscreen which all models above the 2 get.

While some people might not like the screen's floating look, which makes it look like a tablet computer that's been glued to the top of the dash, it does save you from having to look down to use it. The system is responsive in both screen sizes, with menus that are reasonably logically laid out.

It's not perfect, though. For example, there's not physical shortcut button to take you straight to the phone menu, and some icons are too small to hit easily on the move. It's a marked improvement over the infotainment in the VW Golf but the Seat Leon and Skoda Octavia have higher-definition screens with clearer graphics.

Quality

Entry-level 2 models miss out on the piano-black trim that’s standard higher up the range and adds visual appeal to the Ceed’s interior, which otherwise looks a little dull compared with rivals such as the Mazda 3. It’s well screwed together, though, and offers plenty of tactile squishy plastic, along with well-damped controls. 

It's not as classy inside as the more expensive Audi A3 or BMW 1 Series, as you might expect of a cheaper car, but it feels rather more upmarket than the Ford Focus and Vauxhall Astra.

Passenger & boot space

How it copes with people and clutter

Front space

Even tall people will be able to get comfortable in the front of the Ceed, thanks to seats that go back a long way, good head room and plenty of room in the footwell.

Elsewhere, the door bins are a reasonable size, plus there’s storage under the front armrest, a couple of cupholders and useful cubbies for wallets and phones.

Rear space

The Ceed provides enough room for a couple of six-footers in the back but leg room is merely average, and it's tighter than in rivals including the Ford Focus, Skoda Octavia and Skoda Scala.

The rear bench is well shaped and comfortable, and the floor is almost flat (there’s a very small central floor tunnel), making life sweeter for someone in the middle seat than in most rivals. Rear storage is limited with small door bins, but access to the back is good because of the decent-sized door openings.

Kia Ceed 2021 interior rear seats

Seat folding and flexibility

The Ceed has 60/40 split-folding rear seatbacks as standard (the 3 trim Kia Ceed Sportswagon gets the more practical 40/20/40 seats) but that’s about it. If you’re hoping for a sliding and reclining rear bench or a fold-flat passenger seat – which some versions of the Octavia get to help you load really long items – you won’t find them here.

Front passenger seat height adjustment is standard on all models except entry-level 2 trim. Passenger lumbar adjustment is added on 3 trim and above, but only the driver gets electric seat movement.

Boot space

The Kia Ceed's boot has a reasonably low loading lip, is impressively deep and is a usefully uniform shape. It offers 395 litres of space (a little more than you'll find in the VW Golf and Ford Focus), which is enough for five carry-on suitcases under the parcel shelf. That's good, but no match for Skoda's Octavia and Scala – they can swallow 11 and seven cases respectively. 

The Ceed comes with a useful height-adjustable boot floor as standard on all models. With the rear seats folded, you get a smooth and mostly flat extended load bay right up to the back of its front seats.

Buying & owning

Everyday costs, plus how reliable and safe it is

Costs, insurance groups, MPG and CO2

Kia is no longer the budget brand it once was, so pricing is competitive rather than ultra-cheap next to rivals such as the Ford FocusSkoda Octavia and Skoda Scala, especially as you move up the trim and engine ranges. If you stick to our favoured 1.0 T-GDi in 2 trim, it works out comparatively decent value, though. Significant discounts have always been available, so make sure you check out the Kia Ceed Deals on our free What Car? New Car Deals pages.

Kia has become more competitive in its finance deals recently, with the Ceed coming with very reasonable monthly payments on a PCP arrangement – even next to the good-value rivals mentioned above. Leasing rates are also on the money, so to speak, although residual values aren’t likely to be as good as those of the Seat Leon or VW Golf.

There's less good news if you're a company car driver paying benefit-in-kind (BIK) tax. Despite having relatively small engines, petrol versions of the Ceed are not particularly fuel-efficient when compared with the equivalent Leon or a mild-hybrid Focus, with the Ceed also having higher official CO2 emissions than the best rivals, pushing up your tax bill. The diesel, which uses mild-hybrid technology, is a little more competitive in this regard, with the best fuel economy in the line-up. You need to be doing 15,000 miles a year for it to make financial sense, though.

If maximising your miles per gallon on short journeys is important to you, you’d be better off looking at the hybrid-powered Toyota Corolla.

Equipment, options and extras

No Ceed is poorly equipped, and with the exception of metallic paint, Kia doesn’t really offer options. That can be a bind, though, because it means an expensive trim upgrade is necessary if there's a specific feature you want, but the same is true of the Seat Leon.

Entry-level 2 trim gets 16in alloy wheels, automatic headlights, a leather trimmed steering wheel and gear lever, air-con, cruise control, all-round electric windows, electrically adjusted and heated door mirrors, plus the rear-view camera and infotainment package we mentioned earlier. We’d stick with 2 trim to keep the price down, because there are better cars for the same price as higher trims.

That said, if you are really taken by the Ceed, an upgrade to 3 trim is worth a look if you can wrangle a good discount. It adds the better infotainment system and rear parking sensors, along with privacy glass, power-folding door mirrors, an automatically dimming rear-view mirror, dual-zone climate control, rain-sensing wipers and larger 17in alloy wheels. Higher trim levels are too pricey to justify.

Kia Ceed 2021 interior infotainment

Reliability

Kia has a fine reliability record, finishing ninth out of the 30 manufacturers featured in the 2021 What Car? Reliability Survey – above all the makers of the Ceed’s main rivals apart from Toyota and Mazda. In the wider family car class, the Ceed did well, finishing seventh out of 24 rivals, far ahead of volume rivals such as the Focus and Vauxhall Astra.

Even if you do have a problem, Kia’s fantastic seven-year, 100,000-mile warranty is the longest currently available on a new car.

Safety and security

The Kia Ceed seems quite promising for safety when you look at the standard safety equipment you get with all trim levels: automatic emergency braking (AEB), lane-keeping assistance and a driver attention monitoring system.

However, when safety experts Euro NCAP tested it, they found some concerns. The driver’s head made contact with the steering wheel in a frontal collision while protection for the front passenger’s chest was poor in a side-on crash test with a pole. As a result, it gets four stars out of five, which is very rare in this class and indicates that the Ceed is less safe than many rivals, including the Ford Focus and the outstandingly safe Mazda 3.

According to Euro NCAP, you can make it potentially safer by adding the Advanced Driving Assistance Pack, which includes traffic sign recognition, rear cross-traffic alert, blind-spot monitoring and an upgraded AEB system that includes pedestrian and cyclist detection. It's standard on the higher trims but optional on the lower ones, and bumps the Ceed’s overall rating up to five stars. While it could help you to avoid an accident, the same weaknesses described above still apply if you do have one. On top of that, security expert Thatcham has shown the Ceed to be relatively easy to break into and steal, despite having a standard alarm and immobiliser.

At a glance
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RRP price range £22,595 - £31,200
Number of trims (see all)4
Number of engines (see all)2
Available fuel types (which is best for you?)petrol
MPG range across all versions 46.3 - 51.4
Available doors options 5
Warranty 7 years / 100000 miles
Company car tax at 20% (min/max) £1,295 / £1,915
Company car tax at 40% (min/max) £2,590 / £3,830
Available colours