DETROIT/SEOUL — Kia Motors said on Friday it had started a recall of some 56,000 Soul and Sorento vehicles sold in the United States and
South Korea due to defective wiring harnesses that could cause fires, Reuters reported.
DETROIT/SEOUL — Kia Motors said on Friday it had started a recall of some 56,000 Soul and Sorento vehicles sold in the United States and
South Korea due to defective wiring harnesses that could cause fires, Reuters reported.
Some harnesses supplied by Johnson Controls for lighting in 2010 model-year Soul cars and 2011 model-year Sorento SUVs were
improperly soldered, leading to possible electrical shorts, Kia said in a letter to U.S. safety regulators on August 30.
There were no reports of accidents or injuries due to the issue, which was identified in June, said Kia, an affiliate of South Korea's Hyundai Motor Co. Kia determined that a recall was needed on August 23.
Through August, Kia Soul sales had more than doubled in the United States to nearly 44,000 from the first eight months of 2009. The Soul has been marketed to the same younger drivers targeted by Toyota Motor Corp's Scion brand.
Kia will replace the wiring harnesses, it said.
The U.S. recall covers 23,972 Soul cars produced from September 7, 2009, through June 8, 2010, and 11,213 Sorento vehicles built from October 23, 2009, through July 30, 2010, according to the notice filed with the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
In August, NHTSA launched a probe into possible steering defects in the 2010 model-year Soul after a driver said a steering shaft detached from the steering wheel in a two-month-old vehicle and fell onto the driver's side floor, causing a complete steering loss and limited braking.
NHTSA also has opened a preliminary probe into possible steering problems in the 2011 model-year Hyundai Sonata sedan, a key introduction for the automaker and its best-selling vehicle in the United States.

Deal volume ebbed and flowed throughout 2025, but product performance remained steady, according to automotive technology and data intelligence solutions provider StoneEagle.
Read More →
Between 2020 and 2025, gigafactory capacity grew six-fold and is set to grow another 118% by 2030, according Benchmark data.
Read More →
Americans’ view of present business conditions, the labor market and family finances, though, are still in the dumps, and if they plan to buy cars, many target used units.
Read More →
Auto loan originations rose over 6% year-over-year in the third quarter of 2025, but TransUnion predicts a slight decline in auto loan growth this year, making it an outlier in the company's overall lending forecast.
Read More →
A new top 10 list ranks the least expensive for average full insurance coverage on a clean driving record and high driver credit scores.
Read More →
Rob Mancuso – president of Mancuso Automotive – will present a Keynote at the 2026 event.
Read More →
Edmunds’ editorial team tested 300-plus vehicles to help determine the Top Rated Awards for 2026, and one brand stood out with multiple rankings, including Best of the Best.
Read More →
February forecast has new-vehicle deliveries still off from last year at this time amid high prices and vanished EV incentives. But J.D. Power sees business picking up from here as automakers target growth.
Read More →
Study finds that adopters are true believers and that their satisfaction with the vehicles is growing, including for public charger experience, despite pullback of federal incentives.
Read More →
The sector generates over $64 billion in annual economic impact in South Carolina, making it the largest and fastest-growing manufacturing subsector in the state.
Read More →