The Hyundai Venue is easy to overlook, unless there’s one right in front of you on the road or you’re renting one.

That hasn’t stopped the compact SUV from selling in reasonably strong numbers, with 899 shifted in the first two months of this year. That places it fifth in Australia’s light SUV segment, albeit well down on the dominant Mazda CX-3 (2328).

But both pint-size SUVs are dwarfed in terms of popularity by the slightly larger Chery Tiggo 4, which has nearly doubled the CX-3’s sales so far this year. When it packs much newer gear at a significantly lower price, that isn’t too surprising.

What has Hyundai done in response? Raised the Venue’s prices. All four variants are now $1000 more expensive than they were at the start of 2025, including the flagship 2026 Hyundai Venue Elite on test here, which now pushes past $30,000 for the first time.

How does it stack up against its rivals now, and is it worth considering in 2026?