Hyundai Santa Cruz, Venue and Sonata Lead Segments in JD Power 2026 Quality Study
Hyundai has posted one of its stronger showings in the JD Power 2026 U.S. Initial Quality Study, with three of its models finishing first in their segments for the fewest reported problems in the crucial first 90 days of ownership. The Santa Cruz, Sonata and Venue each topped their categories, while the Kona and Elantra ranked second in theirs. For shoppers, the results are a useful early read on how trouble-free a new 2026 vehicle is likely to be straight out of the gate.
The standout is the Santa Cruz, the compact unibody pickup that has now led the Midsize Pickup segment for a third consecutive year. Consistency like that is hard to fake in a study built on owner-reported problems, and it suggests buyers cross-shopping the Santa Cruz against rivals can do so with some confidence in its day-one quality.
What the Initial Quality Study Measures
JD Power scores initial quality in problems per 100 vehicles, or PP100, counting every issue owners report during their first 90 days with a new car. A lower number is better, because it means fewer faults, glitches and annoyances per 100 vehicles. The 2026 edition draws on responses from 78,514 buyers and lessees of new 2026 model-year vehicles, making it one of the larger samples of real owner experience in the industry.
The headline for the wider market is encouraging. JD Power reported that overall initial quality improved significantly year over year, with fewer problems logged across nine of the ten categories it evaluates. After several years in which new technology and supply chain disruption pushed problem counts higher, that broad improvement points to automakers getting a firmer grip on quality across the board, not just at a single brand.
Three Hyundai Models Top Their Segments
Beyond the Santa Cruz, the Sonata took top honors in its segment, a notable result for a traditional midsize sedan in a market that has tilted heavily toward SUVs and trucks. Buyers who still prefer a sedan and the lower running costs and easier access that come with it have a strong quality argument for the Sonata. The subcompact Venue rounded out the trio of segment leaders, underlining that Hyundai’s quality showing was not confined to a single price point or body style.
That breadth carries weight against the competition. In the midsize pickup class the Santa Cruz goes up against the Ford Maverick and the Honda Ridgeline, two strong sellers, so a third straight segment win on initial quality is a real selling point rather than a one-year fluke. The Sonata competes with mainstays like the Toyota Camry and Honda Accord, and the Venue sits at the affordable end of the SUV market where buyers are especially sensitive to anything that goes wrong early. Topping those fields suggests Hyundai’s quality gains reach from its cheapest models to its more specialized ones.

Two more models landed near the front of their fields. The Kona ranked second among small SUVs, a closely fought class where Hyundai pairs everyday usability with a long list of safety and connectivity features. The Elantra also placed second in its segment, giving Hyundai five vehicles inside the top two of their respective categories. For a single brand, that spread across pickups, sedans and SUVs is a meaningful endorsement of how consistently its lineup is built.

Infotainment Remains the Industry’s Weak Spot
One finding in the 2026 study is worth every shopper’s attention regardless of brand. Infotainment was the only category of the ten that got worse rather than better, and JD Power tied much of that to smartphone connectivity. Problems with Android Auto and Apple CarPlay integration were a leading source of complaints, the kind of dropped connections and laggy mirroring that owners notice every single drive.
That detail is a reminder to test the technology, not just the test drive route. Anyone buying a new car this year would do well to pair their own phone during the dealer visit, run navigation and music through the screen, and confirm that wired or wireless connection behaves the way they expect. A car can score well overall and still frustrate on the one feature drivers reach for most.
What It Means for Buyers
Initial quality is not the same as long-term dependability, which JD Power measures separately by surveying owners of older vehicles. A strong IQS result says a car arrives with fewer defects and rattles in the first three months, while dependability tracks how it holds up years down the road. Both are useful, and shoppers should weigh them together rather than treat one as the full picture.
Still, the first 90 days shape a lot of how owners feel about a new car, and a quiet, fault-free start counts for plenty. With three segment wins and two runner-up finishes, Hyundai gives buyers a concrete data point to set against price, warranty coverage and the drive itself. Paired with the brand’s long warranty terms, the 2026 results strengthen the case for putting the Santa Cruz, Sonata, Venue, Kona and Elantra on a short list, provided that all-important phone connection checks out on the test drive.