Luxe Deluxe: 2025 Genesis GV80 3.5T

A rolling chill zone

The 2025 GV80 mid-size, super-luxe SUV from Genesis. Photo courtesy of Genesis
The 2025 GV80 mid-size, super-luxe SUV from Genesis. Photo courtesy of Genesis

Driving is tiring, right? All that stop-start traffic. All that lane changing. All that try-not-to-miss-your exit stuff.

How cool then would it be to find some in-car way to lower your heart rate, prevent your teeth from gnashing, and avoid those clenched knuckles and muted screams at your fellow drivers?

A shot of Jose Cuervo is one solution but remember you’re behind the wheel. Or maybe a little front seat transcendental meditation, chanting a few mantras. Repeat after me: Ommmmm.

The GV80 boasts a 300-horsepower turbocharged 2.5-liter four-cylinder, or a 375- horsepower twin-turbo 3.5-liter V6. Photo courtesy of Genesis
The GV80 boasts a 300-horsepower turbocharged 2.5-liter four-cylinder, or a 375- horsepower twin-turbo 3.5-liter V6. Photo courtesy of Genesis

But an even better alternative would be to take a drive in the newest 2025 GV80 mid-size, super-luxe SUV from Genesis, and experience its wonderfully named “Mood Curator.”

One tap of an onscreen button gives you the choice of Vitality, Care, Delight, and Comfort settings. Each one will play a calming video on the GV80’s brand new 27-inch mega-screen display—think billowing silk in a breeze—while turning on the deep-tissue massaging front seats.

It’ll also spritz the cabin with some zen-enhancing fragrance, and play some super-chill tunes on the 18-speaker, 1400-watt surround sound Bang & Olufsen stereo. Oh no, not the Kenny G.

A 27-inch infotainment screen sprawls across the dash. Photo courtesy of Genesis
A 27-inch infotainment screen sprawls across the dash. Photo courtesy of Genesis

All sounds pretty cheesy, I know. But during one particularly nerve-wracking, pulse-pounding, rush-hour I-75 commute, I remembered the Mood Curator button, gave it a tap and, guess what? It worked.

Adrenaline eased, frustration went away, and I swear my heart rate dropped.

And what really should be part of the Mood Curator suite of features is the GV80’s brilliant Highway Driving Assist II set-up. This will keep the car perfectly centered in your lane, change lanes with a tap of the turn signal, slow and even stop when traffic ahead does, and even let you take your hands off the wheel. For a while.

New for 2025 are the grille with even more bling, teeny-cube LED headlights, and more aggressive-looking lower front bumper and skid plate. Photo courtesy of Genesis
New for 2025 are the grille with even more bling, teeny-cube LED headlights, and more aggressive-looking lower front bumper and skid plate. Photo courtesy of Genesis

Seems the whole mantra of this refreshed 2025 GV80 is to calm and relax those inside. Everything from its active noise cancellation, to added sound-deadening material stuffed into every crevice and thicker laminated glass. It’s like driving in a padded cell at Leavenworth. Not that I’d know, of course.

While the GV80 has been around for five years, the goodness of its original design made any major makeover not necessary. But we all benefit from a little freshening, right?

For the 2025 model year, the Genesis gets a new grille with even more bling, teeny-cube LED headlights, and more aggressive-looking lower front bumper and skid plate, plus new 20- and 22-inch wheel designs.

All-metal Genesis badges adorn the inside and outside. Photo courtesy of Genesis
All-metal Genesis badges adorn the inside and outside. Photo courtesy of Genesis

Step up into the cabin and the big change is that new 27-inch infotainment screen sprawling across the dash. And unlike so many others, this is easy to work with courtesy of crystal-clear graphics, oversize tiles to press, and intuitive menus.

What hasn’t changed is the GV’s single-minded focus on luxury, quality, and sheer elegance. Few other automakers do diamond-quilted-and-perforated Nappa leather like Genesis.

And the devil is in the details, like the switch from plastic to all-metal Genesis badges on the inside and out. You’d be hard-pressed to notice, but it’s one more measure of the company’s striving for excellence.

Diamond-quilted-and-perforated Nappa leather seats in the GV80. Photo courtesy of Genesis
Diamond-quilted-and-perforated Nappa leather seats in the GV80. Photo courtesy of Genesis

What hasn’t changed is what’s under the hood. And that’s just fine. There’s still a choice of a 300-horsepower turbocharged 2.5-liter four-cylinder, or a 375- horsepower twin-turbo 3.5-liter V6. Both are mated to a smooth-shifting 8-speed automatic and standard all-wheel drive.

If there’s a criticism, it’s that there’s no hybrid or plug-in hybrid option. A zero emission, all-electric version is rumored to be coming in mid-2026.

But a week spent with a top-of-the-line GV80 3.5T Prestige AWD, $82,150 fabulously loaded, reinforced Car and Driver’s rating of this being the “#1 Best Mid-Size Luxury SUV,” ahead of such powerhouses as Porsche’s Cayenne, the BMW X5, Volvo XC90, and Audi Q8.

All-wheel drive comes standard. Photo courtesy of Genesis
All-wheel drive comes standard. Photo courtesy of Genesis

That 3.5-liter twin-turbo V6 is still one of the most refined and responsive engines out there, with it creamy-smooth power delivery, muscley mid-range thrust, and whisper-quiet cruising.

For sportier, more dynamic handling you’d need to go German, but the precise, nicely weighted steering, capable handling, and magic-carpet ride fit the GV80’s character perfectly.

GV80 pricing kicks off with the 2.5T at $60,050 and climbs to $75,150 for a 3.5T. Even the base model will satisfy anyone’s lust for luxury and definitely put you in the right mood.

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