Hyundai Shows Refreshed Elantra N in Shanghai

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

If you liked those styling tweaks given to the upcoming Elantra (née Avante), you’ll surely enjoy Hyundai’s treatment of its upcoming N variant. Shown this week at the Shanghai Auto Show, the N sallies forth with styling improvements found on the standard car – turned up to 11, of course.


While the Elantra N rear fascia looks very similar to last year’s model, the front end takes on a sharper look and bins some of the odd shapes which made it look like a surprised sculpin. The sleek and smooth nose has a light bar bookended by new headlamps (maybe Mercury was simply ahead of its time) and appropriately grumpy angles have been given to the bumper and intake areas.

Sharp character creases remain on its flanks, flummoxing anyone seeking to affix business decals and giving those who wrap cars for a living more nightmares than they can handle. The machine shown in these images has a different set of wheels than previously seen on an Elantra N, though those could be region-specific and swapped out at any time. We hope the black badges make it here, as well.

Something else we hope isn’t lost in translation? The current car’s manual transmission. While there is no indication of any sort the N’s stick is on the chopping block, we’re always weary of dour bean-counting losers inside companies who’ll push for cost savings at the expense of driving fun. At present, the Elantra N makes 276 horses from a turbocharged 2.0L inline-four, along with appropriately entertaining crackle-n-bang settings for the exhaust.

That reminds us – in the autumn of last year, an Elantra N owner was hauled over and informed by a blustering cop that the car was illegal in its existing operation mode and it would cost $7,000 to remove the offending parts and make it kosher. Er, right. Leaving aside all observations about how people in positions of authority can cause lots of headaches simply because they are ill-informed or simply having a bad day, recent updates to the case indicate the driver no longer owns the Elantra N. All the details are at that link but the TL;DR is that Hyundai bought back the car even though it was operating exactly as designed.


The 2024 Elantra, and its N variant, will likely show up on this side of the pond within the next 12 months.


[Images: Hyundai]


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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

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  • Mountainman Mountainman on Apr 18, 2023

    Looks way better in the front. Guaranteed no more horsepower. Still a hard pass from me, but I am a total hatchback snob.

    • See 1 previous
    • John R John R on Apr 20, 2023

      "For example, I think Kia made a mistake with the Stinger.....a mechanically neat machine, but way too loooong."

      🤔 You know that the Stinger was designed to compete with cars as long as the 5-series, A7, Dodge Charger, etcetera, yeah?














  • Spookiness Spookiness on Apr 19, 2023

    "entertaining crackle-n-bang settings for the exhaust."

    This is an OEM thing now? Ugh. EV transition can't come fast enough.

    At least I won't have to endure simulated gunshot sounds day and night.

  • Golden2husky This was a common topic at work - kids learned how to drive, and now another car is needed. I was amazed at all the excuses made about how their kid must have a new car. Used cars are a "risk" for breakdown, they are not as safe, etc...which is all BS of course. How much difference in safety is there between a new car and the same model that is five years old? Maintained cars don't break down very often. I've driven cars for far, far longer than most and have been towed exactly twice in my entire driving career (about 800,000 miles). While I wouldn't put my daughter into a 15 year old car and let her drive across the country, I would be fine with a 5 year old car that was well cared for. Let's be realistic - new drivers are likely to get into a fender bender - why do that to a new car. I was thrilled to get an 8 year old car for college back in the day even though my folks could afford to buy all of us new cars if they wanted to. If you Want to buy your kid new, go ahead. Just don't freak out when they come home with a fresh dent.
  • CanadaCraig Can you eventually go to prison for driving without a licence in the US?
  • CanadaCraig To hell with the UAW.
  • CanadaCraig First I'll answer the question. YES. Toyota, Mazda and Subaru are doing the right thing. That said... If only those pushing for an all EV world would care as much about the 1 BILLION earthlings that make less than $1 a day.
  • Redapple2 All this BEV investment. A bigger impact (less oil consumption) would have been made if we had made PIG UP trucks smaller since 2000 and not HUGEr. (And raised gas tax by $2-3/gallon.)
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