If automotive history teaches us anything, it's that interesting things tend to happen when carmakers step outside their comfort zone. The short-lived Kia Stinger GT-S is a case in point: yes, the Korean giant knew how to build front-engined execs, but it had not previously attempted to step so blatantly on the toes of its European rivals in a premium market that they dominated.
The rear-drive flagship was a siren call to anyone considering a similarly fast Audi or BMW. And, as it tends to, Kia came to play: the Stinger looked brilliant and drove very pleasantly because it was overseen by industry heavyweights Peter Schreyer and Albert Biermann, men who knew what it took to make a 370hp fastback appeal to European buyers. Appeal it did, though mostly to car hacks bored to tears with the long-running German hegemony of the wider segment.
Badge snobbery, snowballing SUV sales and admittedly punchy running costs ultimately held the GT-S back - although they were also among the reasons that ensured cult status almost immediately. That and the fact that its 3.3-litre twin-turbocharged V6 was a subdued sort of peach, enabling a sub-5 second 0-62mph time, and the Stinger itself which drove like a genuinely accomplished GT - one with a limited-slip differential and reasonably good idea of what fun-to-drive should feel like.
Unsurprisingly, all this made the punchiest version a seem like an even better bargain secondhand than when it was new, though its relative scarcity (certainly compared with the German rivals it failed to outsell) meant that prices did not arrive at the cliff edge some had expected. Only now, some three years since the Stinger disappeared from UK showrooms - and eight years since it launched - has the GT-S consistently turned up at the £20k mark.
Here’s one with 52k on the clock, and another with 63k, both almost on the button. And a slightly leggier one at £19k. Admittedly, the subject of today’s spotted is slightly pricier, but it looks terrific in Ceramic Grey over full black leather, and boasts the kind of service history you’d want from a car departing the safety net of Kia’s transferable seven-year warranty.
Of course, for now, the Stinger’s reputation is sustained by the idea that its demise had a lot more to do with external issues than its own qualities - whether or not it becomes a genuine future classic will depend on a good deal more on how the latter is viewed over time. But from where we’re sitting, the GT-S looks like a practical, fast, comfortable and good-looking fastback with no little amount of Q-car intrigue or basic talent. It makes an increasingly compelling case for preservation.
SPECIFICATION | KIA STINGER GT-S
Engine: 3,342cc V6, twin-turbocharged
Transmission: 8-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 370@6,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 376@1,300-4,500rpm
CO2: 225g/km (WLTP)
MPG: 28 (WLTP)
First registered: 2017
Recorded mileage: 39,700
Price new: £42,495
Yours for: £22,989
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