Kia Australia is pleased with the early interest in its new electric commercial van, the PV5 Cargo, but has set an unassuming sales target of just 50 units per month as it prepares for potential supply constraints.
The PV5, which will be available imminently in a sole ‘Cargo S’ delivery van variant, is the first Kia vehicle of its kind, and the South Korean brand’s first van to appear in Australian showrooms since 2006.
Kia Australia has set a modest sales target of 50 units per month for the PV5, but it expects to exceed that target based on early responses from fleet buyers in particular.
Kia Australia product planning general manager Roland Rivero admits the company’s 50-per-month target is conservative, but doesn’t expect it to be the limit once the PV5 goes on sale later this month (June 2026).
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“The anecdotal feedback coming through from our dealers, and people from fleets that our fleet team have showcased the product to, suggests that there’s every opportunity that we could sell above that,” he told CarExpert at the PV5’s Australian media launch.
“Supply will be one of the things that we’ve got to juggle, because globally it’s a success, particularly in Europe. We’ve got to haggle for supply, but 50 a month is our current target.”
Priced at $55,990 before on-road costs, the PV5 Cargo is cheaper than most of its direct rivals. These include smaller compact electric vans like the Peugeot e-Partner ($59,990 plus on-roads) and Renault Kangoo E-Tech (from $61,990 plus ORCs), as well as larger mid-size electric vans such as the LDV eDeliver 7 ($67,358 plus ORCs), Ford E-Transit Custom (from $77,890 plus ORCs) and Volkswagen ID. Buzz Cargo ($69,990 plus ORCs).
However, it has been undercut by similar sized models in the new Farizon V7E (from $49,990 drive-away) and upcoming LDV eDeliver 5 (from $47,990 drive-away). Though it’s all-electric, the PV5 is also set to compete with segment stalwarts like the Toyota HiAce and Ford Transit Custom.
Kia Australia’s competitive PV5 pricing is consistent with overseas markets including Europe. According to Korean outlet Seoul Economic Daily, Kia sold 3086 PV5s in Europe in April 2026 alone, contributing to a total sales figure of 10,429 in the van’s first six months on sale in that market.
Kia Australia CEO Dennis Piccoli said that overseas sales success, including the PV5’s position as one of Kia’s best-selling EVs in South Korea, could limit stock availability in Australia.
He echoed Mr Rivero’s sentiment – and recent comments from Kia Australia – about local demand, adding that the response to the electric van has been “overwhelmingly positive”.
“[Supply] is a little on the tight side. If we had our way, we probably would have launched in May rather than June, to be perfectly honest with you, at the end of the financial year,” he told CarExpert.
“But the take-up in [South Korea] and in the UK, where they’ve already launched, has been exceptionally good.
“The orders that are coming through from the network have been much stronger than what we’d have anticipated. The early signs are okay and, if anything, I suspect that we’ll be lobbying for more cars in the next two to three months,” he said.
If the PV5 meets Kia Australia’s target of 50 sales per month, it would hardly be a segment-shaker. To put that figure in context, Renault shifted 48 examples of its larger Trafic in May 2026 – a diesel-only van that starts at $52,990 before on-roads.
It’s also a considerable distance from the segment-leading HiAce, which posted a whopping 1001 deliveries in May 2026, and still some way off the lower-selling Transit Custom’s 284 units.
That said, that target would put Kia’s new commercial vehicle ahead of some other electric vans currently on sale locally. The Farizon V7E recorded just 13 deliveries last month, the Peugeot Partner (including e-Partner) recorded 19, and the Volkswagen ID. Buzz Cargo recorded 38.
The Australian PV5 range will soon expand, as Kia has confirmed it’ll introduce a high-roof version of the Cargo, followed by a seven-seat people-mover variant later in 2026.
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