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Although South Korea’s average gasoline price has topped ₩1,980 per liter (about $1 per liter), cooling the used-car market overall, certain Niro hybrid models are bucking the trend and gaining value.
A prime example is Kia’s compact SUV, the Niro hybrid.
While larger-displacement models have seen deeper depreciation, buyers are gravitating to the Niro hybrid for its outstanding fuel economy and overall value, and that demand is keeping prices firm.
“Buy an SUV for the price of a Morning”… the ₩15 million (about $10,200) magic
Used-car platform K Car’s April price outlook shows that, despite a broad decline in domestic used-car values, the Niro hybrid’s market price rose 0.6% month-over-month.

Analysts say the unusual resilience in price traces back to compressed pricing tiers among Korea’s mass-market brands.
For example, a new Kia Morning in an upper trim (Prestige, etc.) typically costs around ₩14–15 million (about $9,520–$10,200) out the door.
But on the used market, buyers can pick up a first-generation Niro hybrid equipped with ADAS and a clean accident history for roughly ₩15 million (≈ $10,200).
Shoppers seeking a 2022–2023 second-generation model (the All‑New Niro) should expect to pay in the low–mid ₩20 million range (roughly $13,600). Still, higher‑mileage examples can be found for under ₩20 million—around ₩18–19 million (about $12,240–$12,920)—which lowers the entry barrier for many buyers.
Monthly fuel bill: ₩100,000 (about $68)… fuel economy that cuts through high pump prices

Beyond the fact that you can trade up from a city car to a compact SUV for a similar price, the Niro’s strongest selling point is its low operating cost.
The Niro hybrid’s official combined fuel economy is around 20 km/L (about 47 mpg).
At current fuel prices (assumed here at ₩2,000 per liter — about $1 per liter), driving 1,000 km (about 621 miles) a month for commuting would cost roughly ₩100,000 (≈ $68) per month.
That’s nearly half the fuel cost of a comparable conventional gasoline SUV over the same distance.

An industry source says that if high fuel prices persist, the shift toward used Niro hybrids—which combine lower upfront cost with substantially lower running costs—will only become more pronounced.











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