Is the Kia Sportage 2016–2021 reliable?
The Kia Sportage QL (2016–2021) is one of the most sensible used SUV purchases in this price bracket. It's practical, well-equipped, and benefits from Kia's 7-year manufacturer warranty — which on many used examples is either still active or recently expired, providing a useful maintenance paper trail.
The Sportage's reputation for reliability is generally deserved. It's not the most exciting thing to drive and the infotainment lags behind class leaders, but the mechanicals are solid and parts are affordable. The main risks are the 7-speed DCT dual-clutch gearbox on petrol models, and the diesel DPF on cars used for urban driving.
The 1.6-litre petrol manual is the pick of the range for most buyers — straightforward, reliable, and cheap to run. The diesel makes sense only if you cover genuine motorway miles regularly.
Known faults — what to watch for
These are the issues that come up repeatedly in owner forums, Which? reliability surveys, and DVLA MOT data. Not every car will have them — but every buyer should ask about them.
7-speed DCT gearbox shudder
The 7-speed dual-clutch transmission on 1.6T petrol Sportages suffers from the same low-speed judder that affects Ford's PowerShift and VW's DSG. Hesitation and shuddering when pulling away from junctions is the primary symptom. Kia issued software updates but the fix is not always permanent. The 6-speed torque converter automatic on 2.0-litre models is more reliable.
High risk on 7-speed DCTDiesel DPF blockage on short trips
The 1.7 and 2.0-litre diesel Sportages are competent motorway cars but suffer DPF blockage when used predominantly for short urban journeys. Forced regeneration costs £100–£150; a damaged DPF replacement is £800–£1,500. Ask specifically about the car's typical daily use before viewing any diesel.
Medium risk for urban useInjector seal failure on diesel
The 2.0-litre diesel engine can develop leaking injector seals, causing a ticking or tapping noise from the engine bay and a diesel smell inside the car. It's not catastrophic but requires prompt attention. Listen carefully for any tapping on the test drive of a diesel Sportage.
Medium risk on 2.0 dieselInfotainment system faults
Kia's touchscreen system from this generation is prone to occasional freezing and Bluetooth connectivity issues. Software updates address most of these. Test the system fully at the viewing and check whether updates have been applied.
Low riskRattling panoramic sunroof
The panoramic sunroof — a popular option on higher-spec Sportages — can develop a rattle at motorway speeds as the seal ages. Not a water leak risk in early stages but annoying. Drive at speed with the sunroof closed during the test drive and listen for any movement.
Low riskDon't buy blind — check the car's full history first
Finance owing, previous write-offs, and clocked mileage won't show up on a visual inspection. Our report surfaces all of it instantly.
Check this car's history — £9.99 →MOT failure patterns
We analyse real DVLA MOT records across thousands of UK-registered examples from this generation. The data below reflects actual test outcomes — not manufacturer claims.
| Failure item | How common | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Front brake pads and discs | SUV weight means faster brake wear. Budget £250–£400 for full front brake job. | |
| Tyre wear | SUV tyres cost £100–£160 each on larger rims. Check all four for remaining depth. | |
| DPF warning light | Immediate MOT failure if active. Check before any diesel test drive. | |
| Suspension arm bushes | Common on higher mileage urban-use Sportages. £200–£350 to rectify. | |
| Exhaust system | Corrosion on older examples in colder climates. Listen for blowing during test drive. |
Pro tip: Always check whether the Kia 7-year warranty was maintained by verifying that all services were carried out at Kia dealerships — independent servicing invalidates the warranty. This is visible in the service history. PlateSure's full check pulls every MOT result, mileage reading, and advisory — instantly, for £9.99.
The Nissan Qashqai is the direct rival — the Sportage wins on warranty history and boot space, the Qashqai on refinement and resale. The Hyundai Tucson is mechanically near-identical and worth comparing on price.
What should you pay?
Sportage prices are competitive against Qashqai equivalents. The 7-year warranty backstory should show in the service record — use gaps as negotiating leverage.
What to check at the viewing
- Check the gearbox — 7-speed DCT on 1.6T carries risk. 6-speed torque converter on 2.0-litre is more reliable.
- Test the DCT at low speed — any judder or hesitation is a live fault.
- Verify warranty history — all services should be at Kia dealerships to have maintained the 7-year warranty.
- On diesel models, ask about typical daily use. Urban-only use is a DPF risk.
- Listen for injector tapping on 2.0 diesel during the test drive.
- Test the panoramic sunroof if fitted — drive at speed with it closed and listen for rattles.
- Test the infotainment system and check software updates have been applied.
- Check all four tyres — SUV rubber is expensive.
One of the smartest used SUV buys if the history is right
The Kia Sportage 2016–2021 is a genuinely strong used SUV purchase. The 7-year warranty means many examples have been dealer-serviced throughout their life, giving you a more reliable paper trail than most rivals. The manual petrol is the straightforward choice; the DCT requires careful checking. Avoid the diesel for urban use. Run a full history check — Sportages are popular and above-average rates of outstanding finance are common in this segment.
Frequently asked questions
Is the Kia Sportage reliable?
Generally yes — it has a solid reliability record across multiple surveys. The main risk is the 7-speed DCT gearbox on petrol models, which shares the judder issues common to this style of transmission. Manual and torque-converter automatic versions are more dependable.
Does the Kia 7-year warranty transfer to a second owner?
Yes — the Kia 7-year warranty is transferable to subsequent owners, provided the car has been serviced at authorised Kia dealers throughout. Always verify the service history to confirm dealer stamps at every interval.
Petrol or diesel Kia Sportage?
Petrol for mixed or urban use, diesel only for regular long motorway journeys. The 1.6-litre petrol manual is the most reliable combination. Diesel carries DPF risk on short journeys that outweighs the fuel saving for most buyers.