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Nope. Nope. Nope.
We own a 2024 Hyundai Ioniq 5. Like most of the online users in the Facebook groups, we are experiencing significant unresolved issues with the ICCU and high voltage battery. Currently the car has been out of service for 90+ days with no ETA for return. Hyundai won't agree to pay for a rental car. The dealer won't give us a comparable loaner car. The car is cool, but the way it fails is terrifying. Basically there's a loud pop inside the car and suddenly you lose power at highway speeds and pray you can get off the road before you get hit by a truck. There is no pattern to it. It happened to us four different times. Hyundai has issued recalls for the ICCU part on the vehicle, but the recall is just replacing the ICCU part with the same part all over again. Some people have had their ICCU fail three times. If you don't believe me check the NHTSA complaints for the vehicle. Every day there are another 5 complaints. The Ioniq 5 gets complaints at a rate 15x higher than the Ford F150. When all of this happens to you (and it will happen if you buy this car) you will be stuck trying to deal with Hyundai's customer service. It's terrible. They take months to get back to you and refuse to help in meaningful ways. Any payments come with you signing something saying that you won't ever sue them and that the matter is fully resolved. Happy to answer any questions, but I would absolutely steer clear of this deal. EDIT: I didn't mention the high voltage battery issues. Apparently a bunch of those were defective too. The Ioniq Guy (on youtube) whose whole channel is talking about this car had two high voltage batteries fail (both his normal car and his loaner car from their media fleet) between December and January. Then, when the battery that was expedited due to him being an influencer was installed it was installed incorrectly and he had to go back two or three times to get it fixed right. The issue with the battery seems to be that in early 2025 they shipped defective car batteries from Hungary. Rather than proactively replacing them they are just waiting for them to fail. When they fail you have to wait 4-6 months for a replacement battery EDIT 2: If for some reason you choose to ignore what I am writing here and buy this vehicle please take a few minutes to review the lemon law in your state. lemon law claims on these vehicles are the one thing that Hyundai is forced to respond to. lots of people have lemoned these cars. keep in mind that your cash will be held up for months as they go through their process. |
frontpageBlubluthehusky posted Feb 08, 2026 04:20 AM
Item 1 of 7
Item 1 of 7
frontpageBlubluthehusky posted Feb 08, 2026 04:20 AM
Hyundai Motor Finance Offer: 2026 Hyundai IONIQ 5 Electric SUV
(Offer Varies by Dealer)up to $10,000 Dealer Choice Bonus Cash
$35,000
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We own a 2024 Hyundai Ioniq 5. Like most of the online users in the Facebook groups, we are experiencing significant unresolved issues with the ICCU and high voltage battery. Currently the car has been out of service for 90+ days with no ETA for return. Hyundai won't agree to pay for a rental car. The dealer won't give us a comparable loaner car.
The car is cool, but the way it fails is terrifying. Basically there's a loud pop inside the car and suddenly you lose power at highway speeds and pray you can get off the road before you get hit by a truck. There is no pattern to it. It happened to us four different times.
Hyundai has issued recalls for the ICCU part on the vehicle, but the recall is just replacing the ICCU part with the same part all over again. Some people have had their ICCU fail three times. If you don't believe me check the NHTSA complaints for the vehicle. Every day there are another 5 complaints. The Ioniq 5 gets complaints at a rate 15x higher than the Ford F150.
When all of this happens to you (and it will happen if you buy this car) you will be stuck trying to deal with Hyundai's customer service. It's terrible. They take months to get back to you and refuse to help in meaningful ways. Any payments come with you signing something saying that you won't ever sue them and that the matter is fully resolved.
Happy to answer any questions, but I would absolutely steer clear of this deal.
EDIT: I didn't mention the high voltage battery issues. Apparently a bunch of those were defective too. The Ioniq Guy (on youtube) whose whole channel is talking about this car had two high voltage batteries fail (both his normal car and his loaner car from their media fleet) between December and January. Then, when the battery that was expedited due to him being an influencer was installed it was installed incorrectly and he had to go back two or three times to get it fixed right.
The issue with the battery seems to be that in early 2025 they shipped defective car batteries from Hungary. Rather than proactively replacing them they are just waiting for them to fail. When they fail you have to wait 4-6 months for a replacement battery
EDIT 2: If for some reason you choose to ignore what I am writing here and buy this vehicle please take a few minutes to review the lemon law in your state. lemon law claims on these vehicles are the one thing that Hyundai is forced to respond to. lots of people have lemoned these cars. keep in mind that your cash will be held up for months as they go through their process.
Exercise caution with these cars. The ICCU issues are still real. Consider these cars disposable and only buy if you are OK without having your car for extended periods and driving a random loaner like a Tucson while getting warranty work done.
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And...to make it worse there is currently a national backlog on ICCU replacements with no ETA for new stock. I am hearing there are dealers in the SF area with 25+ Ioniq 5s on the lot waiting for ICCUs.
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Exercise caution with these cars. The ICCU issues are still real. Consider these cars disposable and only buy if you are OK without having your car for extended periods and driving a random loaner like a Tucson while getting warranty work done.
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If you don't need a car urgently....WAIT.
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With that said, if that's the first thing that comes to your mind before even purchasing a particular model, you should probably ask yourself is that really a time-wasting path I want to go down ?
Bots or are people really that obtuse to knowing that if (any) product is first fundamentally subpar, the offered "discount" really holds little weight.
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When we got it we financed at 0.99% for 4 years.
Went through costco and still negotiated at the dealership
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