I’ll be honest: I’ve never really been an EV person.

Give me a family-friendly SUV with lots of cargo space, a comfortable ride, and enough room for all the random things moms seem to accumulate in their vehicles, and I’m happy. Electric vehicles have always felt a little intimidating to me. I worried about charging. I worried about range. And if I’m being completely honest, I assumed I’d constantly be thinking about where the nearest charger was.
Then I spent a week driving the Kia EV4 Wind GT-Line.
And now I get it.
The Charge That Wouldn’t Quit
The first thing that surprised me was the range.
The EV4 offers up to 552 kilometres of estimated range in its long-range configuration, which is among the best in its class. Kia designed the EV4 to prioritize efficiency, helping drivers spend less time charging and more time driving.
As a busy mom, I wasn’t setting out on some epic road trip. We were doing real-life driving: school runs, errands, activities, grocery pickups, and all the little trips that seem to fill every week.
And somehow, one charge lasted the entire week.

I kept waiting for the moment when I’d need to think about charging, and it never really came. For the first time, driving an EV felt completely normal. There was no range anxiety, no planning my day around a charging station, and no stress.
Just driving.
The Car That Somehow Feels Bigger on the Inside
The second surprise was the size.
When I first saw the EV4, I assumed it would feel small. After all, it’s a compact electric sedan, not a large SUV.
But both my daughter and I had the exact same reaction when we climbed in.
“Why does this feel so big?”
Neither of us could quite figure it out.
The cabin feels incredibly spacious, and somehow you don’t get that low-to-the-ground feeling that many smaller cars have. We both felt like we were sitting higher than expected, with great visibility and plenty of room around us.
It’s one of those vehicles that seems to perform a magic trick. From the outside, it looks sleek and compact. From the inside, it feels much larger than it has any right to.
The EV4 is built on Kia’s dedicated E-GMP electric vehicle platform, which allows engineers to maximize interior space because there isn’t a traditional engine taking up room. The battery sits low in the floor, helping create a more open cabin while also improving stability.
The Mom Test: Passed
Let’s talk about what actually matters for family life.
Because while horsepower and battery capacity are great, parents are usually wondering something much simpler:
Will this make my life easier?
For me, the answer was yes.
The trunk is surprisingly generous and swallowed everything I threw at it throughout the week. Grocery runs? Easy. Activity gear? No problem. Random bags that somehow live in my car forever? Plenty of room.
The technology also felt intuitive rather than overwhelming.
That’s a bigger compliment than it sounds.
Many modern vehicles are packed with screens and features, but sometimes you need a tutorial just to change the climate settings. The EV4 felt different. The controls made sense, the interface was easy to navigate, and I wasn’t constantly digging through menus to find what I needed.
The available panoramic digital display combines multiple screens into one seamless setup, giving drivers easy access to navigation, media, vehicle information, and climate controls.
The Stuff Car People Will Appreciate
Now for the details that my car-loving friends would probably want me to mention.
The EV4 is Kia’s first dedicated electric sedan and rides on the company’s Electric Global Modular Platform (E-GMP). This is the same architecture that underpins several of Kia’s award-winning EVs.
The long-range models use an 81.4-kWh battery pack and support DC fast charging, allowing the battery to charge from approximately 10% to 80% in around 31 minutes under ideal conditions.
One of the reasons the EV4 achieves such impressive range is its aerodynamic design. Kia focused heavily on efficiency, giving the vehicle a sleek shape that helps it slip through the air more easily than many crossovers and SUVs.
The result is a vehicle that doesn’t feel like it’s constantly sacrificing practicality in the name of efficiency. It manages to be efficient while still feeling comfortable, spacious, and family-friendly.
Would I Actually Consider Owning One?
Before driving the EV4, I probably would have said no.
Now?
Absolutely.
It didn’t try to convince me to love electric vehicles through flashy gimmicks or futuristic features. It simply made everyday life easier.

It gave me enough range that I stopped thinking about charging.
It gave my family enough room that we never felt cramped.
And it delivered all the practical details I look for as a mom without feeling like a giant vehicle to park or maneuver.
The Kia EV4 Wind GT-Line ended up being one of the most surprising vehicles I’ve driven in a long time.
Not because it was electric.
But because after a week behind the wheel, I completely forgot it was.