Autoblog and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article.The eighth-generation Hyundai Avante, known everywhere outside Korea as the Elantra, has just made its global debut at the 2026 Busan Mobility Show. It's arrived looking nothing like the car it replaces. Gone are the sharp creases and origami-like design of the seventh gen, which spent the last six years dividing opinion in parking lots. What's here instead is cleaner, more grown-up, and draws its visual DNA from the Azera and the IONIQ V. A North American reveal is still a few months out, but the direction is clear.HyundaiView the 2 images of this gallery on the original articleBigger, Calmer, and Actually Pretty HandsomeThe outgoing car measured 184.3 inches on a 107.1-inch wheelbase. The new one grows meaningfully, stretching to a 108.3-inch wheelbase that actually nudges past the Honda Civic's 107.7 inches. Sure, that makes for compact sedan bragging rights, but bragging rights nonetheless. The Parametric Dynamics bodywork is largely gone, replaced by aggressively flared fenders, a flat roofline, and vertical LED taillights framing a horizontal light strip across the boot lid. Inside, the twin-screen setup gives way to a 17-inch central display running Pleos Connect, Hyundai's new Android Automotive platform with an AI assistant called Gleo baked in. A compact 9.9-inch instrument cluster sits up near the windshield base, Toyota-fashion. And yes, physical buttons for the climate controls are still there.Hybrids, Performance, and a Sedan ComebackKorea gets the new two-motor TMED-II hybrid system pushing around 155 hp, Vehicle-to-Load charging included, so you can run a kettle off your compact sedan, which is either very practical or very unnecessary depending on who you ask. The base 147-hp 2.0-liter four-cylinder carries over. An Elantra N is confirmed with a new 2.5-liter turbo replacing the beloved 2.0, though whether a manual gearbox makes the journey across is still unconfirmed.HyundaiView the 2 images of this gallery on the original articleAdvertisementAdvertisementMeanwhile, Hyundai sold nearly 129,000 Elantras in the US last year, with 2026 numbers tracking upward even as some of its own SUVs soften. Sedans are having a quiet, stubborn resurgence, and if the new Elantra is anything to go by, Hyundai is more than happy to be right in the middle of it.This story was originally published by Autoblog on Jun 26, 2026, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Autoblog as a Preferred Source by clicking here.