Honda Accord Crosstour
Hatchback · Gasoline · FWD
vs
Hyundai Ioniq Plug-in Hybrid
Hatchback · Hybrid · FWD
Honda Accord Crosstour
Car A
Honda Accord Crosstour
A five-seat, FWD gasoline family car that emphasizes space, reliability, and safety, with a generous 660 L trunk. Performance is competent rather than sporty, and at $30,000 it offers good value for growing families and road trips.
5 seatsHatchbackGasoline5-star safety190 hp
Hyundai Ioniq Plug-in Hybrid
Car B
Hyundai Ioniq Plug-in Hybrid
A compact plug-in hybrid focused on efficiency and daily usability, offering up to 50 km electric range and a useful 443 L trunk. Best for budget-focused city and family duties; less suited to performance or cargo-heavy needs.
5 seatsHatchbackHybrid5-star safety1.6 L/100kmHybrid
Why compared more reliablebetter valuecomparison picksame body typesame seats

Usage fit

Family 74 / 67
City 45 / 66
Budget / value 65 / 75
Road trip 59 / 41
Performance 30 / 32
Cargo 37 / 24
Practical 57 / 59
Premium 30 / 22
Winter 30 / 26

Scores out of 100. Blue = Honda Accord Crosstour · Orange = Hyundai Ioniq Plug-in Hybrid

Specs side-by-side

Spec Honda Accord Crosstour Hyundai Ioniq Plug-in Hybrid
Values are representative — confirm for your market and trim.

Pros & cons

Honda Accord Crosstour

  • Large 660 L cargo area suits family gear and road trips.
  • Signals a focus on reliability and safety.
  • Good value in its segment at $30,000.
  • Adequate daily performance (190 hp, 0–100 km/h in 7.5 s).

Hyundai Ioniq Plug-in Hybrid

  • 50 km electric range covers most city commutes and errands
  • Rated 1.6 combined consumption keeps running costs down and is efficient for its class
  • Practical 5-seat layout with a 443 L trunk suits small families
  • At 25,900, it offers good value in its segment

Verdict

Pick Honda Accord Crosstour if…
Efficiency & everyday ease
Honda Accord Crosstour is the choice if fuel economy and city-friendly driving are your priority.
Pick Hyundai Ioniq Plug-in Hybrid if…
Reliability edge
Hyundai Ioniq Plug-in Hybrid scores higher on reliability — worth considering for long-term ownership.

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