8/10Hyundaii10£8,940 – £13,505City car that feels more grown up than its size would suggest. Hyundai has hit on a winner here.
8/10Hyundaii40 Tourer£21,390 – £29,370Another convincing effort from Hyundai and a tempting alternative to the more obvious Mondeo.
7/10HondaJazz£13,900 – £18,610Not sexy, not fun, not a heartstring-tugger, but by gum is this a clever car. Brilliantly fit for purpose
7/10Hyundaii40£20,140 – £28,020Hyundai arrives to worry the Ford Mondeo – and the impressive i40 certainly does that.
7/10HondaCivic Tourer£18,590 – £25,165The Civic Tourer’s all about one thing: space. Want more than one thing? Consider a Golf Estate.
7/10Hyundaii20£11,540 – £18,065Worthy supermini that majors on ease of use and grown-up design. Fun is in short order though.
7/10Hyundaii30 Tourer£16,795 – £25,240Sensible and worthy, but pretty desirable too. Tons of room in the back, but little driving fun to be had
7/10HondaHR-V£19,105 – £26,665Not as good to drive as we hoped, but the interior design and space makes up for it. Solid effort
7/10Hyundaii30£15,740 – £27,440A very rational car in standard form, which will make your life easy, but not exciting. The i30 N hot hatch manages to make it easy AND exciting. It's ace
6/10HyundaiKona£15,980 – £24,440Go ahead if you like the look of it. If you don't, rivals are just as good.
4/10Hyundaii800£24,840 – £27,290Failed your family planning classes? You need a Hyundai i800. More budget airline than captain's chair, but needs must.
4/10Hyundaiix20£14,980 – £18,530This mini-MPV offers loads of space and of course, that spectacular warranty, but sadly it's dreary to drive. You'd be better off in the i30.
HyundaiIoniq£20,740 – £31,540At last, a hybrid that doesn’t make you suffer for its green ideals. Top of the class.