One of Kia’s senior executives globally has candidly labelled the Tasman ute’s early sales performance as a “disappointment”, with plans to address its design and powertrain already under discussion.

Speaking with Australian media in Seoul, Spencer Cho, senior vice president and head of global business planning sub-division at Kia’s global headquarters, said the Korean brand is already working on short- and mid-term “countermeasures” for the dual-cab ute in response to slow sales and customer feedback.

“Clearly we are not satisfied yet. We have a lot of expectations [for the Tasman] and we are still in the starting point, and we still have a lot of time [on our side], so we will carefully monitor the market, the reactions and early disappointment we have in the Australian market – that gave us a lot of good lessons,” Mr Cho said.

“Currently we are working on every area in which we can improve the performance of the Tasman, especially in the Australian market. We will provide counter-measures for the coming years, and we will also have other powertrain choices if we can, and also design changes or improvement or any other offerings for new features and content and technologies.”

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Kia Tasman X-Pro
Kia Tasman X-Pro

Pressed further on whether the “other powertrain choices” would include a larger engine or a hybrid powertrain, Mr Cho responded: “All the options are on the table right now.”

Beyond design and powertrain updates, Mr Cho added that any additional features and technologies that can be made available to the Tasman are also on the table.

“We are monitoring the customer feedback and market reactions throughout digital media and customer voices. As you know, Kia Australia is getting a lot of feedback from the media and also dealers and actual customers,” Mr Cho continued.

“So we are collecting all the feedback from any way of means [and] distributing that information within our company, with the R&D and design [divisions], and the purchasing or even production divisions. We are preparing for the countermeasures which we will make [to improve] the competitiveness of the Tasman.”

To the end of April 2026, the Kia Tasman has returned 1658 registrations in Australia year to date across 4×2 and 4×4 variants, with the vast majority of buyers going for the latter. By comparison, the Ford Ranger does more than double that volume in a month.