Hyundai Ioniq (2019)
2019 Hyundai Ioniq
CarHunch analysed 7,916 real MOT records for the 2019 Hyundai Ioniq.
Real test outcomes — pass rates, defect profiles, mileage data — from verified DVLA records. Updated as new MOTs are recorded.
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The 2019 Hyundai Ioniq is a genuinely reliable car, with an 88.6% first-time pass rate that sits well above the UK average of 80%, and only 15.2% of vehicles ever recording a dangerous defect—a reassuringly low figure. Both the hybrid and electric variants perform almost identically, so your choice between them won't affect reliability prospects.
At a median 42,673 miles for a five-year-old car, these Ioniqs are running lower than typical, which bodes well for longevity. The average of 0.63 failures per vehicle is impressively low, though the 3.1 advisories suggest minor wear items crop up during testing—budget for routine suspension and brake maintenance as the car ages, and always check the full MOT history before purchase to spot patterns in what's being flagged.
The 2019 Hyundai Ioniq passes its MOT first time at roughly the UK average rate (90.3%) — solid but worth checking this vehicle's history carefully.
These stats describe 7,916 vehicles as a group. The specific vehicle you're looking at could be the one good example or the one outlier. Run its registration to find out.
What tends to go wrong
Across 7,916 vehicles — figures show how many had each issue flagged at least once in their MOT history.
Data covers a 3-year window centred on 2019.
See this vehicle's full MOT history & AI hunches
Spot recurring advisories, hidden issues, and how it compares to 7,916 Hyundai Ioniq cars.
Before you buy a 2019 Hyundai Ioniq
Based on MOT data from 7,916 vehicles — here's what to check.
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Check the full MOT history.
15.2% of these vehicles have had a dangerous defect recorded -
recurring advisories often signal problems years before they become failures.
Search the reg on CarHunch for the full MOT history, reliability stats and a free AI-powered analysis of that exact vehicle. -
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Brake pipes, sills and subframes are the key areas on a vehicle this age — structural rust is hard to spot without getting underneath. A mechanic will check all of this before you commit, and give you a concrete basis to negotiate on price.
Inspection
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Outstanding finance, insurance write-offs and clocking won't appear in the MOT records — a dedicated history check covers all of this. Our link gets you 20% off automatically.
History
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Pass Rate by Fuel Type
| Fuel type | Vehicles | Pass rate | Avg failures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hybrid Electric (Clean) (94%) | 7,452 | 90.2% | 0.64 |
| Electric (6%) | 454 | 91.7% | 0.47 |
Colour Breakdown
Based on 41,372 Hyundai Ioniq vehicles registered in the UK — across all years. From DVLA registration records.
Mileage Distribution
Most 2019 Hyundai Ioniq vehicles sit in the blue band. If the vehicle you're looking at is outside it, it's either unusually low or high mileage for its age.
Half of all 2019 Hyundai Ioniq vehicles fall between 28,096 and 62,424 miles.
2019 Hyundai Ioniq — Still on the Road
Almost all 2019 Hyundai Ioniqs are still on the road.
Strong survival — 7,213 vehicles still getting MOTs in 2025, 96% of the peak.
Based on vehicles from this manufacture year that had at least one MOT test in each calendar year. Data from 2020–2025.
* The 2020 dip reflects the government's COVID-19 MOT exemption, which allowed certificates to be extended by six months — fewer tests were conducted that year.
MOT History Averages
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Compare with another model
See how the 2019 Hyundai Ioniq stacks up against a rival.