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Kia has denied rumors of an imminent facelift for the Tasman, but price cuts for the slow-selling ute are possible

Light up Australia has bluntly denied rumors that the Korean brand is undergoing a facelift due to its polarization Tasman ute, but says it is examining all options to boost the model’s low sales figures.

“There is no accelerated facelift for the Tasman,” said Raymond Pok, product planning manager at Kia Australia Daily Sparkz.

“Our focus is to continue (Tasman’s) success in this current form. The normal timelines and life cycles for Tasman will be where they are in terms of a facelift.”

These comments followed various rumors and reports that suggested Kia was working to revamp the Tasman’s polarizing appearance in response to ongoing criticism since its launch. These include a sighting of a camouflaged ute in early 2025 and seemingly AI-generated images of the ute that emerged later last year.

However, Mr Pok’s confirmation doesn’t mean there won’t be a facelift. It’s likely that Kia will introduce at least some tweaks to the Tasman in the next few years as part of a mid-life update, although there’s no concrete information on this yet.

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In any case, it’s no secret that the Tasman hasn’t met Kia’s own sales forecasts, let alone compete with Australia’s best-selling small car. With 1167 sales so far this year, it is well behind the Ford Ranger 4×4 (11,592) and the Toyota HiLux 4×4 (8951) and even behind the Mitsubishi Triton 4×4 (4856) and the Mazda BT-50 4×4 (2358).

Damien Meredith, CEO of Kia Australia, said Daily Sparkz that the brand’s first ute on the market is underperforming and current sales figures are well below the brand’s original forecast of 20,000 annual sales.

“No, it hasn’t performed as expected. We definitely wanted more volume from Tasman – that didn’t happen,” he said.

Even though the Tasman is less than a year on the market after its release in mid-2025, it falls well short of Kia’s own expectations and the popularity of its competitors, including the best-selling Ranger 4×4, which routinely finds more than 50,000 new homes each year.