Tucson vs Santa Fe: Live Pricing Comparison

Side-by-side market data from every active US dealer listing of both models. Updated daily.

The short answer

Right now Tucson is the cheaper option by a median of $7,415, and Tucson has more active inventory across the country, which usually means more negotiating leverage. The full numbers below show how each model is priced and how much room dealers are giving on each.

 TucsonSanta Fe
Active listings33,06521,341
Median selling price$34,645$42,060
Lowest active price$29,440$36,240
Highest active price$45,370$54,615
Average markup vs MSRP+$1,093+$1,179
% priced below MSRP0.2%7.8%
BrandHYUNDAIHYUNDAI
Tucson
Cheapest Tucson listings →
Santa Fe
Cheapest Santa Fe listings →
Tucson
Tucson market overview →
Santa Fe
Santa Fe market overview →

How this comparison is built

The numbers above are live from our database, refreshed every 24 hours from manufacturer and dealer inventory systems. Median price is the middle selling price of all active listings — a more honest number than the average, which gets pulled around by a handful of fully loaded trims. Markup is the difference between the advertised selling price and total MSRP (sticker plus dealer-installed options). A negative markup means the vehicle is priced below sticker.

Inventory levels matter for negotiation: when there are more active listings of a model, dealers compete harder on price. Higher percentages of below-MSRP listings indicate models where buyers consistently pay less than sticker.