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I think the Genesis is more comparable to the cadi XTS in size not the CTS, and than your talking more money
The new Hyundai AG is more like the XTS (tho no AWD version).
This comparison was a bit silly - pitting 2 midsize luxury sedans at the opposite ends of the spectrum.
Personally, prizing handling, I'd take the CTS V-Sport.
I think the new Genesis is a departure from the old. The new is now more large luxury car more than the sports sedan it set out to be in 09. Not sure why that departure. Seems like it may be cutting into the Equus sales or prompting the old Genesis drivers to the Equus.
If you want a harsh busy ride with even better handling maybe take a look at a BMW.
I think it's a worthwhile comparison. For me specifically, I'm considering both cars slightly used. I use to own a 2010 CTS-V and really like the new CTS. That being said I have a Lotus Evora and don't necessarily need a ton of performance capability for my daily driver. I really like the direction Hyundai went with the Genesis. It seems to me like it would be good enough and adds a lot of practicality into the equation.
I plan on staring a family soon and wouldn't mind having something I'm not tempted to play around with all the time for my daily driver. I currently have an 08 Acura TL Type S that does a great job, but I want something more modern with tech and luxury.
What I've seen is CTS V-Sports (premium trim) with sub 20K miles around $40K and the 5.0 Genesis with Ultimate package with sub 20K miles for $35-40K. So they are both in the same ballpark (given the Genesis is a model year newer and usually less miles). I still need to drive the Genesis, I've only sat in one. I think I'll like it but need to compare these two head to head. To me they are both fairly close in terms of mixing performance with luxury, but the vsport shines with performance, where the Genesis shines with usability and I'd call convenient luxury. My wife has a fully loaded Cadillac ATS and the CUE system is a joke at those price points. Both cars though pack a ton of technology and bells and whistles. Both have edgy styling that makes a statement. I'm likely a few months out from making a decision on one, but looking forward to learning more. I'm a car junkie and have already spent a ton of time researching.
Welcome! You sound like a real car enthusiast.You'll definitely need to drive both the CTS V-Sport and the Genesis Sedan before making any decisions. I test drove a V-Sport and it just didn't put a smile on my face the way the Genesis Sedan did. They're both very nice cars and you can't go wrong owning either one...
Thanks, agreed. I always start off car searches with, maybe I'll just consider both and wait to find the best deal and jump on it. However, after driving a car, my favorite emerges and then I have to have the car I like most. I'm probably 70/30 Genesis unless I just don't like the way it drives. The Vsport might be a better option for me if I didn't have a sports car too. I think it would give me what I'm looking for if I needed one car that did it all. However, I plan on always having some type of sports car so I'm growing more interested in a luxurious car that is just easy to drive to work every day. I'm not abandoning my thrill of driving, so I'll need it to still handle and enough power to maneuver around and not feel soulless.
For anyone interested, here's my car pedigree. I'm a tuner at heart but growing older, I like tinkering, just not as much fun as it use to be:
Honda CRX SI (B16A)
Mazda RX7 Turbo (10th Anniversary)
Honda Prelude SI 4WS
Mazda RX7 Turbo
Mazda RX7 (3rd Gen)
Nissan Sentra SE-R Spec V
Mazda RX-8
Honda Prelude
Porsche 911 (996 C4)
Acura Integra GS-R Turbo (Track Duty)
Acura TSX
BMW M3 (e46)
Subaru BRZ (supercharged)
Cadillac CTS-V
Acura TL Type S
Lotus Evora