Making sense of Hyundai’s Ioniq 5 electric vehicle (EV) lineup has never been easier.

The Korean brand’s established electric SUV has entered 2026 with just four variants, all powered by the same 84kWh battery, dropping the old range-opening 63kWh option and raising the base price by $6400 in the process.

That followed range-wide price increases of $2300 in 2025, and led to the introduction of a handful of new variants. The second-cheapest variant is now called the Elite RWD rather than the Dynamiq, and it’s no longer available as an all-wheel drive grade.

The Epiq has been replaced by the 2026 Hyundai Ioniq 5 N Line Premium on test here, which is now all-wheel drive exclusively and gets the previously optional N Line pack as standard.

Is the new sporty variant worth its hefty price tag, or do the cheaper, rear-drive options still make more sense?