AUTO

Kia Sonet vs Suzuki Fronx (2025)

Ntsako Mthethwa24 June 2026
Kia Sonet vs Suzuki Fronx (2025)

After two weeks with both, Fronx still makes my shortlist for pure running costs and that manual gearbox. My sister? She’d go Sonet for the boot, the auto, and the higher seat. Two right answers, two different buyers.

Introduction

Look, if you want a bit more height, a soft ride, and an automatic that takes the sting out of stop-start, the Kia Sonet 1.5 CVT EX should be on your shortlist. The Suzuki Fronx 1.5 Dualjet mild hybrid? That’s for you if you’d rather row your own gears, spend less at the pumps, and pocket a few extra grand on the sticker. Both sneak in under R400k, both dodge the Vitara/Urban Cruiser shadow, and both can be found at McCarthy or CMH dealerships right now.

Key takeaway: Sonet means daily convenience and a dealer on every corner. Fronx counters with lower running costs and a drive that’s actually entertaining.

Design & Exterior

Stance and proportions

Sonet’s the bigger beast. Park them nose-to-tail and it’s obvious. With 4110 mm length, 1790 mm width, and 1610 mm height, it gives off baby Sportage vibes. Fronx? 3995 mm long, 1765 mm wide, 1550 mm tall - it’s more high-riding hatch than shrunken SUV. Think jacked-up Baleno, not mini Grand Vitara. Sonet’s upright, Fronx is coupe-crossover with a modern slant.

Premium feel on the road

On the Sandton school run, the Sonet’s boxier lines and grille look a bit more grown-up next to the Fronx’s softer snout. Still, the Fronx packs neater LED detailing (if you spec up), and that sloping roof will get a few stares on the Sea Point strip. Here’s the kicker: Sonet’s ride height handles potholes and patched tar better, while the Fronx’s lower stance can scrape its nose on older Joburg speed bumps, like the ones peppering Linden. Colour choices? Both play it safe. Sonet buyers flock to Glacier White Pearl, and Fronx’s Opulent Red is the only one that really pops. No wild cards here, but that’s what sells.

Cabin & Practicality

Materials and infotainment

Neither’s upmarket, but they cut costs differently. Sonet 1.5 CVT EX keeps things simple: hard plastics and cloth seats. The EX gets an 8-inch infotainment screen, while the pricier trims nab the 10.25-inch unit. Over in the Fronx GLX, you’re looking at a 9-inch SmartPlay Pro+ touchscreen, wireless Apple CarPlay, and a head-up display - pretty impressive for this money. Both stick with real buttons for climate, which is a mercy if you’re adjusting things while doing 120 on the N1.

Space, boot and family duty

  • Boot: Sonet leads with 385 litres (top of the class on paper at least). Fronx trails at 304 litres.
  • Length: Sonet’s extra 115 mm counts, especially for rear knee room.
  • Height: 1610 mm in the Sonet versus 1550 mm for Fronx, so taller adults fit easier in the Kia.
  • Wheelbase: Fronx claims 2520 mm, Sonet doesn’t publish this, but Suzuki uses every millimetre inside.
  • ISOFIX: Both offer two rear ISOFIX anchors and top tethers.

Boot space? Sonet, hands down. Rear legroom? Sonet again, but not by kilometres. Infotainment? Fronx edges it here thanks to screen size and that head-up display. Materials? Honest, basic, and not pretending to be anything else.

On the Road

Kia Sonet 1.5 CVT EX

Sonet’s 1.5-litre petrol delivers 85 kW and 144 Nm, all sent to the front via a CVT. In Joburg traffic, the CVT is a blessing: smooth, unflustered, zero lurching. You’ll be grateful for it, crawling through Rosebank at lunch. But floor it on the N3 at Gillooly’s, and you get the familiar CVT drone - typical for a naturally aspirated motor at altitude, where you’ll lose 10-15% of that power. Steering’s light, ride is cushy, and if you push it, there’s some lean. On a Sunday loop past the Cradle of Humankind, the Sonet’s suspension took Hartbeespoort’s worst with barely a rattle. Only the odd head-nod from the rear seats.

Suzuki Fronx 1.5 Dualjet Mild Hybrid

Fronx’s 1.5 Dualjet puts out 77 kW and 137 Nm, plus a 12V starter-generator for mild hybrid assist. South Africans mostly go auto, but the manual is where the fun is. Suzuki’s five-speed is snappy, and at just 1035 kg, the Fronx leaps off the line in a Spar parking lot. I once coasted down Chapman’s Peak at sunset, holding third to keep that Dualjet on the boil through the bends - something the Sonet’s CVT just won’t let you do. The flipside? At 120 km/h, the Fronx is noisier and feels flighty on the Hex River pass. Sonet is more settled at speed.

SA road verdict

For pure comfort on the N2 or M1, Sonet wins. If you want something light on its feet for Karoo back roads or a breakaway to Colesberg, Fronx is the one with personality.

Specs & Ownership

Side-by-side spec table

SpecKia Sonet 1.5 CVT EX (2024)Suzuki Fronx 1.5 Dualjet MHEV (2023)
Engine1.5L Petrol1.5 Dualjet Mild Hybrid
Power85 kW77 kW 
Torque144 Nm137 Nm
GearboxCVT auto5-speed manual
DriveFWDFWD
Combined fuel consumption7.2 L/100kmNot published locally (manufacturer claim ~5.5 L/100km on the manual)
Length4110 mm3995 mm
Height1610 mm1550 mm
Kerb weightNot published1035 kg
WheelbaseNot published2520 mm
5-year estimated TCO (ZAR)R406 400R230 000

What the TCO numbers actually say

That R176 400 gulf in the five-year total cost of ownership is no rounding error. Fronx’s lighter build, cheap-to-run hybrid system, and Suzuki’s more affordable service plans all tilt the scales. In practice, Sonet’s 1.5 usually beats the claimed 7.2 L/100km - I’ve managed 5.8 L/100km in mixed use with an older EX - but Fronx still sips less. Tyres? Suzuki’s 16-inchers are cheaper at Tiger Wheel & Tyre than anything you’ll slap on a high-grade Sonet. Kia’s after-sales network is much wider, and that counts if you’re in Polokwane or Mthatha, where Suzuki’s reach isn’t as strong.

Verdict

It’s closer than the badges suggest, and that’s the point.

  • Pick the Sonet if you’re doing family-of-four commutes, want the biggest boot, need an auto, and care about ground clearance for our potholes. Kia’s dealer network from East London to Nelspruit is another big plus. Logical, comfort-first choice.
  • Go Fronx if value is king: better fuel numbers, cheaper to service, and class-leading resale. Plus, it’s genuinely fun - lighter, more playful, and a treat on a Route 62 run.
  • Sonet again, if a 1.0T DCT is in your future. Kia lets you step up the range. Fronx’s lineup is flatter.
  • Wait, if you might stretch for the upcoming Hyundai Venue facelift or Toyota Starlet Cross. Both are landing soon and could shake things up.

After two weeks with both, Fronx still makes my shortlist for cost and that manual shift. My sister? She’s Sonet all the way - boot, auto, higher seat. Two right answers, two different shoppers. That’s how a real-world comparison lands…

Summary

Kia Sonet 1.5 CVT EX or Suzuki Fronx 1.5 Dualjet mild hybrid? It’s a proper South African showdown for buyers stuck between compact crossovers, spanning everything from looks to boot space, ride quality, and what your bank account will think in five years.

People Also Ask

Is the Kia Sonet worth the premium over the Suzuki Fronx?
Need a bigger boot, higher ground clearance, or an automatic for Joburg gridlock? Sonet 1.5 CVT EX makes sense, and you’re paying for genuine practicality plus dealer reach. Mostly driving solo or as a couple? Fronx delivers close to the same usefulness for a lot less per month.
Which is better for long-distance SA driving?
Sonet wins. More cabin space, higher stance, and a CVT that makes Joburg-to-Durban hauls far less tiring. Fronx is up for it but noisier at 120 km/h and feels lighter in side winds, especially on the N1 north of Beaufort West. Sonet is just the better highway cruiser.
Which has better fuel economy in real-world SA driving?
That’s Fronx. Its mild hybrid setup switches off at stops and helps on pull-away, while the 1035 kg kerb weight is a big plus. Sonet’s 7.2 L/100km is honest, but Fronx usually sits in the mid-5s with barely any effort.
Which holds its value better after three years?
Suzuki’s residuals are tough to beat in the budget league, and Fronx is riding that wave. Sonet does okay, but 2024 EX Auto units already show a 20-25% drop versus new, hinting that fleet sales are taking the shine off private resale.
Which is safer in entry trim?
This is trickier. Fronx GL/GLX specs in SA give you six airbags and ESP right across the range. Sonet EX runs fewer airbags than EX Plus and SX trims, which bump up to six. If safety kit is your make-or-break, Fronx edges it at this price.
Which is better for new drivers?
Sonet gets my nod, mainly because the CVT means no stalling and the higher seat helps with low-speed visibility in suburbs like Observatory or Melville. Fronx manual is sweet, but you’ll need solid clutch control. On Cape Town hills, Sonet is just easier to live with for rookies.
Kia Sonet vs Suzuki Fronx (2025) | Auto.co.za Comparisons