Both the Venue and the CR-V have standard driver and passenger frontal airbags, front side-impact airbags, side-impact head airbags, front seatbelt pretensioners, front wheel drive, plastic fuel tanks, four-wheel antilock brakes, traction control, electronic stability systems to prevent skidding, crash mitigating brakes, lane departure warning systems, rearview cameras, driver alert monitors, available daytime running lights, blind spot warning systems and rear cross-path warning.
Compare the2025 Hyundai VenueVS 2025 Honda CR-V
Safety
Warranty
The Venue comes with a full 5-year/60,000-mile basic warranty, which covers the entire truck and includes 24-hour roadside assistance. The CR-V’s 3-year/36,000-mile basic warranty expires 2 years or 24,000 miles sooner.
Hyundai’s powertrain warranty covers the Venue 5 years and 40,000 miles longer than Honda covers the CR-V. Any repair needed on the engine, transmission, axles, joints or driveshafts is fully covered for 10 years or 100,000 miles. Coverage on the CR-V ends after only 5 years or 60,000 miles.
The Venue’s corrosion warranty is 2 years longer than the CR-V’s (7 vs. 5 years).
Hyundai pays for scheduled maintenance on the Venue for 2 years and 24,000 miles longer than Honda pays for maintenance for the CR-V (3/36,000 vs. 1/12000).
Reliability
J.D. Power and Associates’ 2024 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 19 more problems per 100 vehicles, Honda is ranked 10th.
J.D. Power and Associates’ 2024 survey of the owners of three-year-old vehicles provides the long-term dependability statistics that show that Hyundai vehicles are more reliable than Honda With 8 fewer problems per 100 vehicles in the first three years of ownership, J.D. Power ranks Hyundai higher than Honda.
Fuel Economy and Range
To lower fuel costs and make buying fuel easier, the Hyundai Venue uses regular unleaded gasoline. The CR-V with the 1.5 turbo 4-cylinder engine requires premium for maximum efficiency, which can cost on average about 84.9 cents more per gallon.
Brakes and Stopping
The Venue stops much shorter than the CR-V:
|
Venue |
CR-V |
|
60 to 0 MPH |
112 feet |
130 feet |
Motor Trend |
60 to 0 MPH (Wet) |
138 feet |
147 feet |
Consumer Reports |
Suspension and Handling
The Venue has standard front and rear gas-charged shocks for better control over choppy roads. The CR-V’s suspension doesn’t offer gas-charged shocks.
The Venue SEL handles at .81 G’s, while the CR-V Sport Touring Hybrid pulls only .79 G’s of cornering force in a Motor Trend skidpad test.
The Venue SEL executes Motor Trend’s “Figure Eight” maneuver quicker than the CR-V Sport Touring Hybrid (28.6 seconds @ .58 average G’s vs. 29.3 seconds @ .57 average G’s).
For better maneuverability, the Venue’s turning circle is 4.1 feet tighter than the CR-V’s (33.2 feet vs. 37.3 feet).
Chassis
The Hyundai Venue may be more efficient, handle and accelerate better because it weighs about 850 to 1200 pounds less than the Honda CR-V.
The Venue is 2 feet, 1.7 inches shorter than the CR-V, making the Venue easier to handle, maneuver and park in tight spaces.
Ergonomics
The power windows standard on both the Venue and the CR-V have locks to prevent small children from operating them. When the lock on the Venue is engaged the driver can still operate all of the windows, for instance to close one opened by a child. The CR-V prevents the driver from operating the other windows just as it does the other passengers.
Recommendations
Consumer Reports® recommends both the Hyundai Venue and the Honda CR-V, based on reliability, safety and performance.