The 2020 Kia Soul X-Line. |
San Diego, California. |
We had decided to stretch the Martin Luther King three-day weekend to five days and I was planning on driving down, as we did for Memorial Day. With lunch in Los Angeles, figure it's anywhere between a nine-and-a-half and an eleven hour drive, depending on the totally undependable traffic through L.A. and Orange County.
And then I see that Southwest is having a fare sale. Forty-nine bucks a seat. Sold! I reached out to the prep and delivery people at Page One Automotive, who prepare, maintain and deliver about half of the cars I write about and ask if they'd be able to have a car for me in San Diego for five days. And waiting for us when we landed was the 2020 Kia Soul X-Line. Thank you, Page One Los Angeles and Brian Pineda!
For 2020, there are six Soul trims. Last summer, we drove and loved the hot GT-Line, a turbocharged fire-breather with 201 horsepower from a 1.6-liter four with a seven-speed dual clutch automatic.
The other five Souls come with a two-liter, normally aspirated four making 147 horsepower and what Kia calls an IVT---intelligent variable transmission. And the good news is, it has more than enough power for everyday use. The EPA fuel economy estimate is 27 city/33 highway.
The base Soul LX can be had for as little as $17,490. The X-Line is four rungs up the six-rung model ladder and has a base price of $21,490. Here's what you get standard:
- 16-inch steel wheels with wheel covers.
- Anti-lock braking with brake assist.
- Traction control.
- Electronic stability control.
- Vehicle stability management.
- Hill-start assist control.
- Tire pressure monitoring.
- Android Auto and Apple CarPlay.
- AM/FM/mp3 radio with seven-inch touchscreen and rear camera.
- Air conditioning.
- Power windows, power door locks and power outside mirrors.
- Remote keyless entry.
- Bluetooth.
- Steering wheel-mounted audio controls.
- Cruise control with steering wheel-mounted controls.
- Tilt and telescoping steering column.
- Center console with armrest and storage bin.
- 60/40 split folding rear seat.
- Auto on-off headlights.
- Rear privacy glass.
The only extra-cost option in our test vehicle? Carpeted floor mats for $130.
With $995 inland freight and handling, the bottom line on the window sticker reads $22,615. Which is astonishingly low for a car with so much in the way of usability, features and space. The Soul is a great choice for urban commuters---and would be a fine all-around car besides.