2015
Kia K900

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$59,900
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Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • 4dr Sdn Premium
    Starts at
    $54,500
    15 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Premium Unleaded V-8
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Luxury
    Starts at
    $59,900
    15 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Premium Unleaded V-8
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

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2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900 2015 Kia K900

Notable features

Full-size luxury sedan
Kia's first V-8
Eight-speed automatic transmission
Rear-wheel drive
Numerous high-end features

The good & the bad

The good

Great value in features and size
Smooth, sophisticated powertrains
Big, comfortable seats
Rear legroom
Full-color head-up display

The bad

Vague, unsophisticated steering
Ride over broken pavement
Front styling too much like Cadenza
Some interior quality issues
Limited front-seat headroom

Expert 2015 Kia K900 review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By Aaron Bragman
Full article
our expert's take

The 2015 Kia K900 feels like a Kirkland brand luxury sedan from Costco — tasty and much less expensive than a name-brand model, but falling short in sophistication, refinement and cachet.

Outside of South Korea, the idea of a super-plush, full-size, rear-wheel-drive Kia luxury sedan seems like the answer to a question nobody asked. The company has made amazing strides in the past decade with its smaller economy cars (a Kia Forte won our 2014 Compact Challenge, and the latest Soul is awfully good), and even the midsize Optima (Cars.com’s Best of 2011 Award winner) has been selling well. But crafting a car to go up against the likes of Lexus, Mercedes-Benz and BMW? The question isn’t whether Kia can do it or not, it’s is it really necessary?

Kia seems to think it is, and that’s why the new-for-2015 Kia K900 is being brought to our shores. A long, V-8-powered flagship sedan that shares its chassis with the last-generation Hyundai Equus, the K900’s mission in the U.S. market isn’t exactly clear. An expensive luxury sedan from a mass-market brand hasn’t been a successful concept here (see: Volkswagen Phaeton). Not to mention, Hyundai already has two perfectly good luxury cars for sale in the Genesis and Equus (compare all three here). So while we can’t quite determine why it’s here, we can at least determine if it’s any good.

Exterior & Styling
In eight years of taking home new automobiles to test, something happened with the K900 that I have never experienced before. One night, during dinner, a man rang my doorbell and begged to be allowed to see the car in my driveway. He then gushed over how gorgeous the K900 was. This hasn’t happened with any Rolls-Royce, Porsche, Bentley or Maserati I’ve driven. I can’t entirely disagree with him — it’s attractive, in a generic luxury car kind of way. The styling certainly bears a resemblance to other Kia products, with the distinctive hexagonal grille and C-pillar design aping the smaller Optima sedan. But it breaks no ground in any dimension, aside from just looking like a really big Kia. The technology is here — full LED headlights and taillights are standard — but the front camera and radar assembly look like an afterthought in the middle of the chrome mesh grille.

How It Drives
While definitely pleasant to look at, the Kia K900 is less pleasant to drive. As a passenger, especially in the rear, you’re likely to enjoy the space provided by the long wheelbase and deep leather seats, but from the driver’s seat things are less than stellar. The fault is not with the powertrain; Kia’s 5.0-liter V-8 is a fully modern power plant, a smooth and torquey mill that delivers seamless power and is perfectly matched to the car’s standard eight-speed automatic transmission. It moves the K900 off the line with the ease of 420 horsepower and operates on the highway at a muted hum that’s as refined and polished as any Lexus. The K900 gets top marks for its motor and transmission combination.

Unfortunately, that’s where the polish and refinement ends. While the car is quiet, the ride, handling and steering all need another generation to be properly worked out. On smooth pavement the K900 does fine, but introduce rough asphalt or concrete and the steering wheel dances in your hands while chatter filters into the cabin through the suspension, sending up creaks and squeaks in the interior trim that are very un-Lexus-like.

I was able to compare the K900 back to back with an Audi A7, a comparably sized and priced luxury car, which reaffirmed my conclusion that the steering is the main culprit in the disappointing driving experience. Over the same pavement, the Audi experienced none of the unpleasant steering-wheel tremors that were so prevalent in the K900.

The K900 is available only with that 5.0-liter V-8 engine, although the EPA has certified a 3.8-liter V-6 that may be coming later. The V-6 has better fuel economy, rated 18/27/21 mpg city/highway/combined, while the V-8 checks in at 15/23/18 mpg. My testing netted about 20 mpg thanks to a few longer highway trips, which isn’t bad for such size, comfort and power.

Interior
The K900 is a mixed bag inside, which is where a luxury car is supposed to truly shine and coddle its occupants. The equipment is very good, especially the big, multi-adjustable seats. Covered in cream-colored leather with contrasting piping, the seats in my test car stood out as being extremely comfortable for all occupants, but especially for rear passengers, who have amazing amounts of legroom to explore.

That rear compartment is where the K900 is best enjoyed, especially in cars, like my tester, featuring a $6,000 VIP package that brings fully adjustable, power-reclining, heated and ventilated back seats that even have a power lumbar adjustment. The front seats don’t feel nearly as spacious, however, with headroom strangely compromised due to a steeply raked windshield.

Dash materials are also mixed, and some quality-control issues are evident, such as wood trim on the center console that looks and feels warped and wavy. Lots of shiny black plastic is meant to feel like rich piano-black lacquer, but instead just feels like fingerprint-magnet shiny black plastic. Outward visibility is good. The low belt line and light-colored leather made for an airy cabin, aided by the standard, massive panoramic moonroof overhead. It’s also very quiet in the K900, even at full throttle or highway speeds.

Ergonomics & Electronics
One area where the K900 doesn’t skimp on luxury goods is in the electronics department. The car features one of the most advanced head-up displays I’ve yet seen in an automobile as an option: a full-color display that has options for text color, size, position and graphics content. The multimedia equipment is Kia’s top-spec UVO system, which features all the connectivity options you can imagine, plus a full suite of apps to keep you entertained. The interface is a bit busy, but the clickwheel and button control layout is similar enough to other systems that using it doesn’t require a steep learning curve.

A navigation system is standard, as is a Lexicon premium surround-sound audio system. The display is a 9.2-inch LCD, but it’s not a touch-screen, so you’ll never get fingerprints all over it. Inputting navigation addresses and the like, however, is less straightforward. Another 12.3-inch full LCD resides behind the steering wheel, replacing the traditional gauges with fully electronic ones, and they look slick.

The K900 is quite well-equipped with features people expect in luxury cars, such as a power-closing trunk, a powered rear sunshade, LED headlights — even optional powered, soft-closing doors, and all for just about $66,000. This Kia luxury sedan is better equipped, much better equipped, in fact, than size-competitive vehicles from BMW or Mercedes-Benz that cost tens of thousands of dollars more.

Cargo & Storage
Storage pockets and cubbies abound in the K900, but its trunk isn’t the biggest among competitors. At just 15.9 cubic feet it’s certainly sizable, but it’s not even as big as corporate sibling Hyundai Equus’ trunk, at 16.7 cubic feet. The Lexus LS 460 has a very large 18.0-cubic-foot trunk, while the long-wheelbase BMW 750 Li offers up an equally big 17.7-cubic-foot trunk. The Kia’s rear seats fold in a 60-40 split to extend long items into the passenger compartment.

Safety
The new-for-2015 K900 has not yet been crash-tested. As befits a modern luxury car, the K900 has a multitude of advanced safety technology, much of it standard equipment. A front and rear parking camera display is standard, as is lane departure warning, rear cross-traffic alert, blind spot detection, automatic rain-sensing windshield wipers and full-length side curtain airbags. Optional are things like a surround-view monitor and adaptive cruise control with automatic full-stop capability. See all the K900’s standard safety equipment here.

Value in Its Class
This is where Kia makes its play for the K900’s existence. Maybe you want a Lexus-like, coddling, full-size luxury sedan without the wallet-draining effects with which such large cruisers tend to come? The K900 starts at just $60,400 (including destination charge), which won’t get you even close to its primary size competitors. My test car included the one and only option available: the $6,000 VIP package, which brings adaptive cruise control, powered door closers, electronic gauges, the head-up display, powered front headrests, power-reclining ventilated rear seats, and more. The total tab for this cushy cruiser came to just $66,400 — considerably more than your average Optima, but dramatically less than competitive full-size luxury cars with similar equipment.

Ironically, the K900’s biggest competitor may be the car on which it’s based from Kia’s sister company, Hyundai. The Equus rides on the same platform, has similar interior space, an identical wheelbase, the same 5.0-liter V-8 engine, and even costs within a couple thousand dollars of the K900. The K900 basically is an Equus, with different suspension tuning, very different styling and an even less prestigious nameplate. Hyundai’s own updated, less-expensive, and slightly smaller Genesis sedan doesn’t have the legroom that the K900 does, but it has a more formal style and better interior materials, making it a potential competitor, as well.

Competitors from actual luxury brands are decidedly more expensive, yet offer a more refined motoring experience for both driver and passengers. The long-wheelbase Lexus LS 460, that brand’s latest flagship, offers up a considerably less powerful V-8, comparable safety equipment and a much nicer interior, but a multimedia system that feels a generation behind the Kia. It also requires significantly more money to get into: The Lexus’ starting price is $79,365, and it goes up from there. Even that, though, pales in comparison to a V-8-powered BMW 740 Li, the long-wheelbase flagship model from the German automaker. You’ll need a whopping $91,950 to get in the door there, and that won’t even get you equipment like blind spot warning, a powered rear sunshade and ventilated seats, all of which push the BMW’s price over $102,000. See how the K900 compares with competitors here.

That gets us looking at the Kia’s value proposition again. It may not be as refined as some of its high-priced competitors, but the generic K900 offers an amazing amount of technology, equipment and comfort for tens of thousands of dollars less than name-brand luxury cars. And just like that box of Tasty O’s Oat Ring breakfast cereal, it’s good enough for cost-conscious consumers who don’t absolutely need Cheerios.

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Detroit Bureau Chief
Aaron Bragman

Detroit Bureau Chief Aaron Bragman has had over 25 years of experience in the auto industry as a journalist, analyst, purchasing agent and program manager. Bragman grew up around his father’s classic Triumph sports cars (which were all sold and gone when he turned 16, much to his frustration) and comes from a Detroit family where cars put food on tables as much as smiles on faces. Today, he’s a member of the Automotive Press Association and the Midwest Automotive Media Association. His pronouns are he/him, but his adjectives are fat/sassy.

2015 Kia K900 review: Our expert's take
By Aaron Bragman

The 2015 Kia K900 feels like a Kirkland brand luxury sedan from Costco — tasty and much less expensive than a name-brand model, but falling short in sophistication, refinement and cachet.

Outside of South Korea, the idea of a super-plush, full-size, rear-wheel-drive Kia luxury sedan seems like the answer to a question nobody asked. The company has made amazing strides in the past decade with its smaller economy cars (a Kia Forte won our 2014 Compact Challenge, and the latest Soul is awfully good), and even the midsize Optima (Cars.com’s Best of 2011 Award winner) has been selling well. But crafting a car to go up against the likes of Lexus, Mercedes-Benz and BMW? The question isn’t whether Kia can do it or not, it’s is it really necessary?

Kia seems to think it is, and that’s why the new-for-2015 Kia K900 is being brought to our shores. A long, V-8-powered flagship sedan that shares its chassis with the last-generation Hyundai Equus, the K900’s mission in the U.S. market isn’t exactly clear. An expensive luxury sedan from a mass-market brand hasn’t been a successful concept here (see: Volkswagen Phaeton). Not to mention, Hyundai already has two perfectly good luxury cars for sale in the Genesis and Equus (compare all three here). So while we can’t quite determine why it’s here, we can at least determine if it’s any good.

Exterior & Styling
In eight years of taking home new automobiles to test, something happened with the K900 that I have never experienced before. One night, during dinner, a man rang my doorbell and begged to be allowed to see the car in my driveway. He then gushed over how gorgeous the K900 was. This hasn’t happened with any Rolls-Royce, Porsche, Bentley or Maserati I’ve driven. I can’t entirely disagree with him — it’s attractive, in a generic luxury car kind of way. The styling certainly bears a resemblance to other Kia products, with the distinctive hexagonal grille and C-pillar design aping the smaller Optima sedan. But it breaks no ground in any dimension, aside from just looking like a really big Kia. The technology is here — full LED headlights and taillights are standard — but the front camera and radar assembly look like an afterthought in the middle of the chrome mesh grille.

How It Drives
While definitely pleasant to look at, the Kia K900 is less pleasant to drive. As a passenger, especially in the rear, you’re likely to enjoy the space provided by the long wheelbase and deep leather seats, but from the driver’s seat things are less than stellar. The fault is not with the powertrain; Kia’s 5.0-liter V-8 is a fully modern power plant, a smooth and torquey mill that delivers seamless power and is perfectly matched to the car’s standard eight-speed automatic transmission. It moves the K900 off the line with the ease of 420 horsepower and operates on the highway at a muted hum that’s as refined and polished as any Lexus. The K900 gets top marks for its motor and transmission combination.

Unfortunately, that’s where the polish and refinement ends. While the car is quiet, the ride, handling and steering all need another generation to be properly worked out. On smooth pavement the K900 does fine, but introduce rough asphalt or concrete and the steering wheel dances in your hands while chatter filters into the cabin through the suspension, sending up creaks and squeaks in the interior trim that are very un-Lexus-like.

I was able to compare the K900 back to back with an Audi A7, a comparably sized and priced luxury car, which reaffirmed my conclusion that the steering is the main culprit in the disappointing driving experience. Over the same pavement, the Audi experienced none of the unpleasant steering-wheel tremors that were so prevalent in the K900.

The K900 is available only with that 5.0-liter V-8 engine, although the EPA has certified a 3.8-liter V-6 that may be coming later. The V-6 has better fuel economy, rated 18/27/21 mpg city/highway/combined, while the V-8 checks in at 15/23/18 mpg. My testing netted about 20 mpg thanks to a few longer highway trips, which isn’t bad for such size, comfort and power.

Interior
The K900 is a mixed bag inside, which is where a luxury car is supposed to truly shine and coddle its occupants. The equipment is very good, especially the big, multi-adjustable seats. Covered in cream-colored leather with contrasting piping, the seats in my test car stood out as being extremely comfortable for all occupants, but especially for rear passengers, who have amazing amounts of legroom to explore.

That rear compartment is where the K900 is best enjoyed, especially in cars, like my tester, featuring a $6,000 VIP package that brings fully adjustable, power-reclining, heated and ventilated back seats that even have a power lumbar adjustment. The front seats don’t feel nearly as spacious, however, with headroom strangely compromised due to a steeply raked windshield.

Dash materials are also mixed, and some quality-control issues are evident, such as wood trim on the center console that looks and feels warped and wavy. Lots of shiny black plastic is meant to feel like rich piano-black lacquer, but instead just feels like fingerprint-magnet shiny black plastic. Outward visibility is good. The low belt line and light-colored leather made for an airy cabin, aided by the standard, massive panoramic moonroof overhead. It’s also very quiet in the K900, even at full throttle or highway speeds.

Ergonomics & Electronics
One area where the K900 doesn’t skimp on luxury goods is in the electronics department. The car features one of the most advanced head-up displays I’ve yet seen in an automobile as an option: a full-color display that has options for text color, size, position and graphics content. The multimedia equipment is Kia’s top-spec UVO system, which features all the connectivity options you can imagine, plus a full suite of apps to keep you entertained. The interface is a bit busy, but the clickwheel and button control layout is similar enough to other systems that using it doesn’t require a steep learning curve.

A navigation system is standard, as is a Lexicon premium surround-sound audio system. The display is a 9.2-inch LCD, but it’s not a touch-screen, so you’ll never get fingerprints all over it. Inputting navigation addresses and the like, however, is less straightforward. Another 12.3-inch full LCD resides behind the steering wheel, replacing the traditional gauges with fully electronic ones, and they look slick.

The K900 is quite well-equipped with features people expect in luxury cars, such as a power-closing trunk, a powered rear sunshade, LED headlights — even optional powered, soft-closing doors, and all for just about $66,000. This Kia luxury sedan is better equipped, much better equipped, in fact, than size-competitive vehicles from BMW or Mercedes-Benz that cost tens of thousands of dollars more.

Cargo & Storage
Storage pockets and cubbies abound in the K900, but its trunk isn’t the biggest among competitors. At just 15.9 cubic feet it’s certainly sizable, but it’s not even as big as corporate sibling Hyundai Equus’ trunk, at 16.7 cubic feet. The Lexus LS 460 has a very large 18.0-cubic-foot trunk, while the long-wheelbase BMW 750 Li offers up an equally big 17.7-cubic-foot trunk. The Kia’s rear seats fold in a 60-40 split to extend long items into the passenger compartment.

Safety
The new-for-2015 K900 has not yet been crash-tested. As befits a modern luxury car, the K900 has a multitude of advanced safety technology, much of it standard equipment. A front and rear parking camera display is standard, as is lane departure warning, rear cross-traffic alert, blind spot detection, automatic rain-sensing windshield wipers and full-length side curtain airbags. Optional are things like a surround-view monitor and adaptive cruise control with automatic full-stop capability. See all the K900’s standard safety equipment here.

Value in Its Class
This is where Kia makes its play for the K900’s existence. Maybe you want a Lexus-like, coddling, full-size luxury sedan without the wallet-draining effects with which such large cruisers tend to come? The K900 starts at just $60,400 (including destination charge), which won’t get you even close to its primary size competitors. My test car included the one and only option available: the $6,000 VIP package, which brings adaptive cruise control, powered door closers, electronic gauges, the head-up display, powered front headrests, power-reclining ventilated rear seats, and more. The total tab for this cushy cruiser came to just $66,400 — considerably more than your average Optima, but dramatically less than competitive full-size luxury cars with similar equipment.

Ironically, the K900’s biggest competitor may be the car on which it’s based from Kia’s sister company, Hyundai. The Equus rides on the same platform, has similar interior space, an identical wheelbase, the same 5.0-liter V-8 engine, and even costs within a couple thousand dollars of the K900. The K900 basically is an Equus, with different suspension tuning, very different styling and an even less prestigious nameplate. Hyundai’s own updated, less-expensive, and slightly smaller Genesis sedan doesn’t have the legroom that the K900 does, but it has a more formal style and better interior materials, making it a potential competitor, as well.

Competitors from actual luxury brands are decidedly more expensive, yet offer a more refined motoring experience for both driver and passengers. The long-wheelbase Lexus LS 460, that brand’s latest flagship, offers up a considerably less powerful V-8, comparable safety equipment and a much nicer interior, but a multimedia system that feels a generation behind the Kia. It also requires significantly more money to get into: The Lexus’ starting price is $79,365, and it goes up from there. Even that, though, pales in comparison to a V-8-powered BMW 740 Li, the long-wheelbase flagship model from the German automaker. You’ll need a whopping $91,950 to get in the door there, and that won’t even get you equipment like blind spot warning, a powered rear sunshade and ventilated seats, all of which push the BMW’s price over $102,000. See how the K900 compares with competitors here.

That gets us looking at the Kia’s value proposition again. It may not be as refined as some of its high-priced competitors, but the generic K900 offers an amazing amount of technology, equipment and comfort for tens of thousands of dollars less than name-brand luxury cars. And just like that box of Tasty O’s Oat Ring breakfast cereal, it’s good enough for cost-conscious consumers who don’t absolutely need Cheerios.

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Factory warranties

New car program benefits

Basic
5 years / 60,000 miles
Corrosion
5 years / 100,000 miles
Powertrain
10 years / 100,000 miles
Maintenance
3 years / 37,500 miles
Roadside Assistance
5 years / 60,000 miles

Certified Pre-Owned program benefits

Age / mileage
6 years or newer / less than 80,000 miles
Basic
12 months / 12,000 miles
Dealer certification
165-point inspection

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Consumer reviews

4.4 / 5
Based on 42 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.8
Interior 4.7
Performance 4.1
Value 4.4
Exterior 4.6
Reliability 4.3

Most recent

Not a bad car if you can afford it, meaning $130 oil

Not a bad car if you can afford it, meaning $130 oil changes, 250 to 500ea. for tires. Preamina gas only. I bought it used with 80k miles, now I have 131K. The follow are the issues I've had. Bad rear tires because of the rear suspension. The back chrome part of the door handles cracking and falling off. Fortunately I was able to recover and glue back on. TPMS sensor bad. Paint on hood and truck fading really bad. No issues with the engine or transmission. Rides like a dream and the 420hp feels great on the interstate.
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 5.0
Performance 5.0
Value 4.0
Exterior 3.0
Reliability 4.0
5 people out of 5 found this review helpful. Did you?
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Smooth, quiet and very luxurious for the money!

Bought a used 2015 VIP package model with 18k miles. For the most part over the 3 years of ownership I enjoyed the comfort, smoothness of the V8 engine and all the luxuries included. I did encounter reoccurring suspension issues and tire wear eventually replacing struts 4 times including tie-rods and not to mention so many alignments. If considering buying one be sure when you test drive it on the freeway for a while with a few passengers onboard to gauge the overall health of the suspension. The suspension design is inherently weak with the back-end wobble and front-end excessive yaw indicating strut replacements are needed. It’s a shame as I liked the power and comfort this model had to offer. Eventually sold it at 48k miles due to continued suspension cost, lack of Kia dealership enthusiasm and no suitable aftermarket suspension upgrades available.
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Commuting
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 4.0
Interior 4.0
Performance 4.0
Value 3.0
Exterior 4.0
Reliability 3.0
6 people out of 6 found this review helpful. Did you?
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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2015 Kia K900?

The 2015 Kia K900 is available in 2 trim levels:

  • Luxury (1 style)
  • Premium (1 style)

What is the MPG of the 2015 Kia K900?

The 2015 Kia K900 offers up to 15 MPG in city driving and 23 MPG on the highway. These figures are based on EPA mileage ratings and are for comparison purposes only. The actual mileage will vary depending on vehicle options, trim level, driving conditions, driving habits, vehicle maintenance, and other factors.

What are some similar vehicles and competitors of the 2015 Kia K900?

The 2015 Kia K900 compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2015 Kia K900 reliable?

The 2015 Kia K900 has an average reliability rating of 4.3 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 2015 Kia K900 owners.

Is the 2015 Kia K900 a good Sedan?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2015 Kia K900. 88.1% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.4 / 5
Based on 42 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.8
  • Interior: 4.7
  • Performance: 4.1
  • Value: 4.4
  • Exterior: 4.6
  • Reliability: 4.3

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