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Kia stands by slow-selling Tasman ute: “We’ve got to make it work”


Kia’s local boss is standing by the Tasman ute, saying “we will continue to work exceptionally hard to make sure that it is a success in the Australian market”.

Speaking with media at the launch of the new EV4 electric sedan, CEO for Kia Australia – Damien Meredith – got on the topic of Tasman before journalists had a chance to bring it up.

“First thing I want to say about Tasman is that we’ve got great faith in Tasman as a product, and we will continue to work exceptionally hard to make sure that it is a success in the Australian market,” Mr Meredith said.

“We’re not making or looking for excuses in regards to its slow start. It’s only been on the market for seven months, it hasn’t been in market in seven years. We’ve got a lot of work to do, and we know that it’s a great product and it will work within the Australian market.

“You’re also aware that Australia asked for this product – so we do have to make it work,” Mr Meredith added.

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After launching in July 2025, the Tasman notched up 4196 registrations across 4×2 and 4×4 variants. At the current rate, the Tasman won’t even hit 10,000 sales after the first 12 months of being on sale, which is less than half of the Korean brand’s initial projections for its first dual-cab ute.

Adding more pain is the fact two of the top three vehicles sold in Australia last year were dual-cab utes – the Ford Ranger and Toyota HiLux – which both eclipsed 50,000 units for the calendar year, or more than five times that of the Tasman.

Just a couple of months ago some of Kia’s local executives told CarExpert entry-level, fleet-focused variants hadn’t started as strongly as the company hoped, with a renewed focus on fleet business moving into the new year.

“We can see where we’re missing out. [We] see how our X-series [X-Line, X-Pro] cars are going, and the price points they sit at, they’re going relatively well. We see a gap in the [entry-level] S range, we’re not getting our fair share there, where the other brands seem to be playing pretty well and getting a lot of volume,” Dennis Piccoli, COO of Kia Australia said during a Q&A.

“That partially is due to the fleet content with Tasman is not where it needs to be, but that is coming together. I think you’ll see with Tasman is there will be a hockey stick [in sales performance] through 2026, without a shadow of a doubt.

“On Tasman, our goals were always quite ambitious. The reality is, that [dual-cab ute] segment has become far more fragmented,” Mr Piccoli continued.