West Palm Beach Hyundai
2301 Okeechobee Blvd
West Palm Beach, FL 33409

Compare the2026 Hyundai Santa FeVS 2026 Honda Passport

2026 Hyundai Santa Fe
2026 Honda Passport

Safety

Both the Santa Fe and Passport have child safety locks to prevent children from opening the rear doors. The Santa Fe has power child safety locks, allowing the driver to activate and deactivate them from the driver's seat and to know when they're engaged. The Passport’s child locks have to be individually engaged at each rear door with a manual switch. The driver can’t know the status of the locks without opening the doors and checking them.

Both the Santa Fe and Passport have rear cross-traffic warning, but the Santa Fe has Rear Cross-Traffic Collision-Avoidance Assist (automatically applies the brakes) to better prevent a collision when backing near traffic. The Passport’s Cross Traffic Monitor doesn’t automatically brake.

Both the Santa Fe and the Passport have standard driver and passenger frontal airbags, front side-impact airbags, driver knee airbags, side-impact head airbags, front and rear seatbelt pretensioners, height adjustable front shoulder belts, four-wheel antilock brakes, traction control, electronic stability systems to prevent skidding, crash mitigating brakes, daytime running lights, lane departure warning systems, blind spot warning systems, rearview cameras, rear cross-path warning, driver alert monitors, available all wheel drive and around view monitors.

Warranty

The Santa Fe comes with a full 5-year/60,000-mile basic warranty, which covers the entire truck and includes 24-hour roadside assistance. The Passport’s 3-year/36,000-mile basic warranty expires 2 years or 24,000 miles sooner.

Hyundai’s powertrain warranty covers the Santa Fe 5 years and 40,000 miles longer than Honda covers the Passport. Any repair needed on the engine, transmission, axles, joints or driveshafts is fully covered for 10 years or 100,000 miles. Coverage on the Passport ends after only 5 years or 60,000 miles.

The Santa Fe’s corrosion warranty is 2 years longer than the Passport’s (7 vs. 5 years).

Reliability

To reliably power the ignition and other systems and to recharge the battery, the Santa Fe has a standard 150-amp alternator. The Passport’s 130-amp alternator isn’t as powerful.

J.D. Power and Associates’ 2025 Initial Quality Study of new car owners surveyed provide the statistics that show that Hyundai vehicles are better in initial quality than Honda vehicles. J.D. Power ranks Hyundai third in initial quality, above the industry average. With 6 more problems per 100 vehicles, Honda is ranked 6th.

Engine

The Santa Fe’s 2.5 turbo 4-cylinder produces 49 lbs.-ft. more torque (311 vs. 262) than the Passport’s 3.5 DOHC V6.

As tested in Car and Driver the Hyundai Santa Fe is faster than the Honda Passport:

Santa Fe

Passport

Zero to 60 MPH

6.3 sec

7.3 sec

Zero to 100 MPH

16.1 sec

20 sec

5 to 60 MPH Rolling Start

6.7 sec

7.5 sec

Passing 30 to 50 MPH

3.3 sec

4.2 sec

Passing 50 to 70 MPH

4.4 sec

5.3 sec

Quarter Mile

14.8 sec

15.7 sec

Speed in 1/4 Mile

96 MPH

90 MPH

Top Speed

135 MPH

110 MPH

Fuel Economy and Range

On the EPA test cycle the Santa Fe gets better mileage than the Passport:

MPG

Santa Fe

FWD

2.5 turbo 4-cyl.

20 city/29 hwy

AWD

2.5 turbo 4-cyl.

20 city/28 hwy

XRT 2.5 turbo 4-cyl.

19 city/25 hwy

Passport

AWD

RTL 3.5 DOHC V6

19 city/25 hwy

TrailSport 3.5 DOHC V6

18 city/23 hwy

Brakes and Stopping

The Santa Fe stops much shorter than the Passport:

Santa Fe

Passport

70 to 0 MPH

167 feet

181 feet

Car and Driver

60 to 0 MPH (Wet)

142 feet

144 feet

Consumer Reports

Tires and Wheels

The Santa Fe Limited’s tires provide better handling because they have a lower 45 series profile (height to width ratio) that provides a stiffer sidewall than the Passport’s 60 series tires.

For better ride, handling and brake cooling the Santa Fe Calligraphy has standard 21-inch wheels. The Passport’s largest wheels are only 18-inches.

Suspension and Handling

The Santa Fe has standard front and rear gas-charged shocks for better control over choppy roads. The Passport’s suspension doesn’t offer gas-charged shocks.

The Santa Fe’s drift compensation steering can automatically compensate for road conditions which would cause the vehicle to drift from side to side, helping the driver to keep the vehicle straight more easily. The Passport doesn’t offer drift compensation steering.

The Santa Fe Calligraphy HTRAC AWD handles at .84 G’s, while the Passport TrailSport pulls only .80 G’s of cornering force in a Car and Driver skidpad test.

The Santa Fe Calligraphy HTRAC AWD executes Motor Trend’s “Figure Eight” maneuver quicker than the Passport TrailSport Elite (27.1 seconds @ .64 average G’s vs. 27.9 seconds @ .62 average G’s).

For better maneuverability, the Santa Fe’s turning circle is 1.1 feet tighter than the Passport’s (37.9 feet vs. 39 feet).

Passenger Space

The Santa Fe offers optional seating for 7 passengers; the Passport can only carry 5.

The Santa Fe has 32.9 cubic feet more passenger volume than the Passport (152 vs. 119.1).

The Santa Fe has .6 inches more front headroom, 3.3 inches more front legroom and 1.4 inches more rear legroom than the Passport.

Servicing Ease

The Santa Fe uses gas struts to support the hood for easier service access. The Passport uses a prop rod to support its heavy hood. It takes two hands to open the hood and set the prop rod, the prop rod gets in the way during maintenance and service, and the prop rod could be knocked out, causing the heavy hood to fall on the person maintaining or servicing the car.

Ergonomics

The Santa Fe Calligraphy has a standard heads-up display that projects speed, navigation instruction and driver assistance information readouts in front of the driver’s line of sight, allowing drivers to view information without diverting their eyes from the road. The Passport doesn’t offer a heads-up display.

The power windows standard on both the Santa Fe and the Passport have locks to prevent small children from operating them. When the lock on the Santa Fe is engaged the driver can still operate all of the windows, for instance to close one opened by a child. The Passport prevents the driver from operating the other windows just as it does the other passengers.

The Hyundai Santa Fe stands out above the Honda Passport by offering not one, but two Qi-compatible phone chargers. This convenience helps travelers with multiple devices to keep powered up on-the-go. Wireless charging eliminates lost or cluttered charging cables and one of them provide more flexibility.

The Santa Fe Limited/Calligraphy’s Smart Parking Assist can parallel park or back into a parking spot by itself, starting, stopping and changing direction automatically. Remote Smart Parking Assist will park and retrieve your car remotely: press a button and watch it park itself. This is ideal for tight locations. The Passport doesn’t offer an automated parking system.

Model Availability

The Santa Fe is available in both front-wheel drive and four-wheel drive configurations. The Passport doesn’t offer a two-wheel drive configuration.

Recommendations

Consumer Reports® recommends both the Hyundai Santa Fe and the Honda Passport, based on reliability, safety and performance.

J.D. Power and Associates rated the Santa Fe first among midsize suvs in owner reported satisfaction. This includes how well the vehicle performs and satisfies its owner’s expectations. The Passport isn’t in the top three.

The Hyundai Santa Fe outsold the Honda Passport by almost three to one during 2025.

West Palm Beach Hyundai | 2301 Okeechobee Blvd West Palm Beach, FL 33409

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