Hyundai Australia won’t kill off its high-performance N models despite increasing pressure from the Federal Government’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES).

Speaking with CarExpert, Hyundai Australia chief operating officer Gavin Donaldson said that tightening emissions caps under the NVES regulations add pressure and potential penalties, but the Korean brand has no plans to pull petrol-powered N cars like the i20 N and i30 N as Hyundai Europe has.

“We think there’s a place for a high-performance ICE engine [in our lineup],” said Mr Donaldson.

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Hyundai i20 N
Hyundai i20 N

“Our N products were probably about $5.1 million in penalties, and you know if we take that out, we’re in credit… I don’t know [competitors’] strategies, but for us we were in a deficit [against NVES] purely because we have a brand that we want to keep in Australia.”

Earlier this week, the Australian Government released the first results under its New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES), with around two-thirds of brands beating their emissions targets.

Type 1 vehicles (passenger cars and SUVs) had a headline limit of 141g/km of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions for 2025, with Type 2 vehicles – including utes, vans, and large off-road SUVs like the Ford Everest – having a headline limit of 210g/km.

Hyundai Motor Company posted an ‘interim emissions value’ of 84,563 units, meaning it’ll need to trade credit units with another company by December 31, 2027 or risk a penalty in February 2028 of $50 multiplied by their final emissions value.

Hyundai Ioniq 5 N
Hyundai Ioniq 5 N