

The first-generation Hyundai Santa Fe SM is an older, simple, five-seat SUV from the period when compact and midsize crossovers were becoming mainstream. In 2.4 MPI form, it is not a fast vehicle, but it offers a practical cabin, good ground clearance, a conventional petrol engine, and a full-time 4WD system on markets where the four-cylinder all-wheel-drive version was sold.
The key detail with this exact specification is market variation. Hyundai’s North American literature rated the 2.4-liter inline-four at 138 hp, while many European-market 2.4 4WD listings show 145–146 PS. Fulltime 4WD availability also varied by region and trim. For any used example, the VIN plate, local owner’s manual, and drivetrain layout should be checked before ordering parts or comparing figures.
Fast Facts
- Strong points include simple MPI fuel injection, a roomy five-seat cabin, and useful all-weather traction.
- The full-time 4WD system is automatic and does not require driver-selected modes.
- The 2.4 engine is durable when the timing belt, oil, and cooling system are serviced on time.
- Rust in salt-belt climates can be a serious ownership issue, especially around suspension and subframe areas.
- Plan timing-belt service about every 96,000 km / 60,000 miles or 6 years, unless local documentation states otherwise.
Table of Contents
- Santa Fe SM 2.4 4WD Profile
- Santa Fe SM 2.4 Specifications
- Santa Fe SM 2.4 Trims and Safety
- Reliability Issues and Recalls
- Maintenance and Used-Buyer Checks
- Driving Feel and Economy
- Santa Fe Rivals Compared
Santa Fe SM 2.4 4WD Profile
The Hyundai Santa Fe SM was Hyundai’s first global SUV and used a heavily revised passenger-car platform rather than a separate ladder frame. That matters because it drives more like an early crossover than a traditional off-roader. The structure, steering, suspension, and cabin layout were aimed at family use, bad-weather confidence, and light utility rather than rock-crawling or heavy towing.
The 2.4 MPI version uses Hyundai’s G4JS-family four-cylinder petrol engine in most markets. It is a naturally aspirated, multi-point injected, 16-valve engine with a timing belt. It favors simplicity over peak output. In 138 hp specification, performance is adequate rather than lively, especially with 4WD weight and passengers on board. It is best suited to calm daily driving, rural roads, winter use, and moderate highway cruising.
The Fulltime 4WD system on the SM Santa Fe is a mechanical automatic system. Hyundai described the earlier setup as using a Dual Drive Differential with a viscous coupling and a normal torque bias of about 60 percent front and 40 percent rear. There are no driver-selectable low-range gears, locking differentials, or serious off-road controls. Its advantage is ease of use: the system works in the background and can improve traction on wet, snowy, loose, or uneven surfaces.
As a used buy today, the Santa Fe 2.4 4WD makes the most sense for someone who values low purchase cost, mechanical simplicity, decent ride comfort, and practical load space. It is less attractive for buyers expecting modern refinement, advanced driver-assistance systems, high fuel economy, or sharp acceleration. It is also now old enough that condition matters more than model year.
The most important purchase question is not whether the Santa Fe SM was good when new. It is whether a specific surviving example has avoided rust, overheating, timing-belt neglect, transmission abuse, and cheap repairs. A well-maintained 2.4 can be a useful budget SUV. A neglected one can quickly cost more than it is worth.
Santa Fe SM 2.4 Specifications
The figures below summarize the 2003–2004 Santa Fe SM 2.4 MPI Fulltime 4WD as commonly listed for this generation, with market differences noted where they matter. Always verify by VIN, engine plate, emission label, and local service literature.
| Category | Specification |
|---|---|
| Model | Hyundai Santa Fe SM |
| Body style | 5-door SUV / crossover wagon |
| Model years covered | 2003–2004 |
| Engine | 2.4 MPI petrol inline-four |
| Common engine code | G4JS family |
| Drivetrain | Fulltime 4WD / AWD where fitted |
| Seating | 5 seats |
| Market note | 138 hp is a North American-rated 2.4 output; some non-US 2.4 4WD versions are listed around 145–146 PS |
| Powertrain and efficiency | Data |
|---|---|
| Layout | Inline-4, DOHC, 16 valves, 4 valves/cylinder |
| Bore × stroke | 86.5 × 100.0 mm / 3.41 × 3.94 in |
| Displacement | 2.4 L / 2,351 cc |
| Induction | Naturally aspirated |
| Fuel system | Multi-point fuel injection / MPI |
| Compression ratio | About 10.0:1 |
| Max power | 138 hp / 103 kW @ 5,500 rpm; market-dependent listings up to 143 hp / 107 kW |
| Max torque | About 199 Nm / 147 lb-ft @ 3,000 rpm; some markets list about 200–204 Nm @ 4,000 rpm |
| Timing drive | Timing belt |
| Rated fuel economy | About 9.8–11.8 L/100 km combined depending on test cycle and drivetrain / about 20–24 mpg US / 24–29 mpg UK |
| Real highway use at 120 km/h / 75 mph | Typically about 10.0–11.5 L/100 km / 20–24 mpg US / 25–28 mpg UK, depending on tyres, wind, load, and transmission |
| Transmission and driveline | Data |
|---|---|
| Manual transmission | 5-speed manual, market-dependent |
| Automatic transmission | 4-speed automatic on some 2.4 versions; availability varies |
| Drive type | Fulltime 4WD / AWD where fitted |
| Centre coupling | Viscous-coupling style full-time system on earlier SM 4WD versions |
| Torque split | Commonly described as about 60:40 front/rear under normal conditions |
| Differentials | Open front/rear; no low range or locking axle differential |
| Chassis and dimensions | Data |
|---|---|
| Front suspension | MacPherson struts, coil springs, anti-roll bar |
| Rear suspension | Independent trailing-arm / multi-link layout with coil springs |
| Steering | Hydraulic power-assisted rack and pinion |
| Brakes | Four-wheel discs; front vented, rear solid on most versions |
| Typical brake rotor size | About 277–294 mm front and 284 mm rear depending on market, engine, and ABS package |
| Common tyre size | 225/70 R16 |
| Ground clearance | About 205 mm / 8.1 in |
| Length | 4,500 mm / 177.2 in |
| Width | 1,820 mm / 71.7 in, excluding mirrors |
| Height | About 1,675–1,730 mm / 65.9–68.1 in, depending on roof rails and market |
| Wheelbase | 2,620 mm / 103.1 in |
| Turning circle | About 11.3 m / 37.1 ft |
| Kerb weight | About 1,618–1,675 kg / 3,567–3,693 lb for 2.4 4WD listings |
| GVWR | About 2,380 kg / 5,247 lb where listed |
| Fuel tank | 65 L / 17.2 US gal / 14.3 UK gal |
| Cargo volume | About 864 L / 30.5 ft³ seats up and 2,200 L / 77.7 ft³ seats folded by SAE-style listings; some VDA-style listings are lower |
| Performance and capability | Data |
|---|---|
| 0–100 km/h / 0–62 mph | About 11.4–13.5 seconds depending on output, transmission, and market |
| Top speed | About 173 km/h / 108 mph for many 2.4 4WD listings |
| 100–0 km/h braking | Not consistently factory-published; condition and tyres matter greatly on older examples |
| Braked towing | Market-dependent; often up to about 1,800 kg / 3,968 lb in some regions |
| Unbraked towing | Commonly 750 kg / 1,653 lb where legally permitted |
| Payload | Roughly 700–760 kg / 1,540–1,675 lb depending on kerb weight and GVWR |
| Fluids and service capacities | Data |
|---|---|
| Engine oil | API SG/SJ or later suitable petrol-engine oil; common viscosity 5W-30, 5W-40, 10W-30, or 10W-40 depending on climate |
| Engine oil capacity | About 4.3 L / 4.5 US qt with filter |
| Coolant | Ethylene-glycol coolant suitable for aluminum engines, typically 50/50 with distilled water |
| Coolant capacity | About 7.0 L / 7.4 US qt |
| Manual transmission oil | API GL-4 75W-90; about 2.1–2.2 L / 2.2–2.3 US qt |
| Automatic transmission fluid | Hyundai/Kia SP-III type where the 4-speed automatic is fitted; total capacity about 7.5–8.0 L / 7.9–8.5 US qt, with smaller drain-and-fill quantity |
| Transfer case / AWD gear oil | API GL-5 75W-90 or 80W-90 depending on market literature; roughly 0.8–1.1 L / 0.8–1.2 US qt |
| Rear differential oil | API GL-5 75W-90 or 80W-90; roughly 1.0–1.1 L / 1.1–1.2 US qt |
| Brake fluid | DOT 3 or DOT 4 |
| A/C refrigerant | R134a; about 600 g / 21.2 oz without rear evaporator, higher where rear A/C is fitted |
| A/C compressor oil | PAG 46; about 150 mL / 5.1 fl oz typical system quantity |
| Key torque examples | Wheel nuts about 90–110 Nm / 66–81 lb-ft; oil drain plug about 39 Nm / 29 lb-ft |
| Safety and assistance | Data |
|---|---|
| Airbags | Dual front airbags and front seat-mounted side airbags on many 2003–2004 markets/trims |
| ABS | Standard or optional depending on trim and market |
| Traction control | Optional or bundled with ABS on selected trims |
| Stability control | Generally not available on early SM 2.4 versions |
| ADAS | No modern AEB, ACC, lane keeping, blind-spot monitoring, or traffic-sign assist |
| IIHS | Moderate overlap front test rated Good for 2003–2004 Santa Fe |
| Euro NCAP | Older-generation result commonly listed as 4-star adult occupant and 1-star pedestrian under the period test format; verify against the exact market version |
| IIHS headlight rating | Not applicable for this model-year era |
Santa Fe SM 2.4 Trims and Safety
The Santa Fe SM trim structure differs sharply by country. In North America, the 2.4 was commonly the base four-cylinder engine, while GLS and LX trims were often associated with V6 engines. In Europe and other regions, 2.4 4WD combinations appeared under badges such as GL, GLS, or market-specific equipment names.
Common identifiers for a 2.4 MPI example include a four-cylinder engine bay layout, 2.4 or 16V badging where fitted, a 5-speed manual shifter on many 4WD versions, and 225/70 R16 tyres on alloy wheels. Fulltime 4WD examples normally have a rear differential, rear half-shafts, a prop shaft, and AWD-related driveline hardware underneath. A visual underside check is the quickest way to distinguish a true 4WD vehicle from a front-wheel-drive Santa Fe with similar exterior trim.
Equipment varied, but typical features included:
- Air conditioning, power windows, central locking, roof rails, and split-folding rear seats.
- 16-inch alloy wheels with a full-size spare on many versions.
- Optional or trim-dependent ABS and traction control.
- Cloth seating on lower trims and leather or heated front seats on higher trims.
- Upgraded audio systems on GLS/LX-type trims in some markets.
Safety equipment was respectable for its time but basic by current standards. Dual front airbags were common, and front side airbags became standard in many 2003 model-year specifications. Seat-belt pretensioners, child-seat anchors, rear child locks, and four-wheel disc brakes were important positives. However, the Santa Fe SM does not have the crash-avoidance technology expected in modern Hyundai utility vehicles. There is no automatic emergency braking, adaptive cruise control, lane centering, rear cross-traffic alert, or camera-based lane support.
The IIHS moderate-overlap frontal result was a strength, with a Good overall rating. Side-impact performance depends on test version, side-airbag fitment, and market specification, so a buyer should not assume all early SM examples are identical. Euro NCAP-style ratings from the period also used older protocols, which are not directly comparable with modern star ratings.
After collision repair, alignment of basic mechanical components is more important than ADAS calibration because the vehicle lacks camera and radar systems. Still, any repaired Santa Fe should be checked for airbag warning lights, seat-belt pretensioner faults, ABS sensor faults, and evidence of poor structural repair around the front rails, rear suspension mounts, and sills.
Reliability Issues and Recalls
A healthy 2.4 MPI Santa Fe can be dependable, but age is now the dominant risk. The engine itself is fairly straightforward: port injection reduces carbon build-up concerns, and the naturally aspirated layout avoids turbocharger issues. The main weakness is that the engine is not neglect-tolerant. Timing-belt, coolant, oil, and overheating history matter.
Common or important issues include:
| Issue | Prevalence | Severity | Symptoms | Likely remedy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Timing belt neglect | Common on poorly documented cars | High | No proof of service, belt noise, rough running, no-start after failure | Replace belt, tensioner, idlers, water pump, and accessory belts as a set |
| Oil leaks | Common with age | Low to medium | Burning-oil smell, wet valve cover, oil on timing cover | Replace valve-cover gasket, cam/crank seals if leaking |
| Cooling-system wear | Common | Medium to high | Overheating, coolant smell, rusty coolant, weak heater | Replace radiator, thermostat, hoses, cap, and coolant as needed |
| Crank/cam sensor faults | Occasional | Medium | Random stall, hot no-start, fault codes | Diagnose properly and fit quality sensors |
| Automatic transmission shift issues | Occasional | Medium to high | Harsh shifts, flare, delayed engagement, dark ATF | Fluid service, solenoid/valve-body diagnosis, rebuild if worn |
| 4WD driveline noise | Occasional | Medium | Whine, vibration, binding on turns | Check tyres, propshaft, couplings, rear differential, fluid condition |
| Rear suspension and subframe corrosion | Common in salt climates | High | Creaking, rear steer feel, alignment change, visible rust | Inspect urgently; repair, replace, or avoid severely corroded cars |
| Front coil spring corrosion | Common enough for recall coverage in salt regions | High | Broken spring, tyre contact, clunking | Verify recall status; replace springs if corroded or broken |
Recalls and service actions should always be checked by VIN, not by model year alone. Important Santa Fe SM-related campaigns include rear trailing-arm corrosion on certain 2001–2003 vehicles in salt-belt regions, front coil spring corrosion on certain 2001–2006 vehicles, and ABS-related campaigns affecting some V6 4WD versions. The ABS campaign is especially important to interpret carefully because it may appear in general Santa Fe recall lists but does not necessarily apply to the 2.4 version.
For software and calibration, this generation is comparatively simple. There are no battery-management, ADAS, or advanced infotainment systems to update. Dealer-level PCM or TCM updates may exist for specific drivability, idle, emissions, or shift complaints, but most faults on surviving vehicles are mechanical, electrical, or corrosion-related rather than software-related.
A pre-purchase inspection should request:
- Timing-belt and water-pump invoices, not just verbal claims.
- Evidence of coolant and transmission-fluid service.
- VIN recall-completion history from a Hyundai dealer or official recall database.
- Underside inspection on a lift, especially rear trailing arms, subframes, spring seats, brake lines, fuel lines, sills, and rear suspension mounts.
- Cold start, hot restart, highway drive, slow full-lock turns, and scan-tool check for stored codes.
A Santa Fe SM with clean structure and complete maintenance is usually preferable to a lower-mileage one with rust, unknown belt history, or mismatched tyres on a 4WD system.
Maintenance and Used-Buyer Checks
The 2.4 MPI Santa Fe rewards preventive maintenance. Because most examples are now old, time-based servicing is just as important as mileage-based servicing. A vehicle that has covered only a few thousand miles per year may still need belts, hoses, coolant, brake fluid, tyres, and suspension rubber because materials age.
| Item | Practical interval |
|---|---|
| Engine oil and filter | Every 8,000–12,000 km / 5,000–7,500 miles or 6–12 months; shorten for short trips, towing, dust, or cold starts |
| Engine air filter | Inspect yearly; replace about every 24,000–48,000 km / 15,000–30,000 miles |
| Cabin air filter | Every 12 months or about 15,000–20,000 km / 9,000–12,000 miles |
| Spark plugs | About every 48,000 km / 30,000 miles for conventional plugs unless upgraded plugs are specified |
| Timing belt system | About every 96,000 km / 60,000 miles or 6 years; replace water pump and idlers at the same time |
| Coolant | Every 2–3 years on older vehicles unless extended-life coolant and documentation support longer |
| Brake fluid | Every 2 years |
| Manual gearbox oil | Every 60,000–80,000 km / 37,000–50,000 miles, or sooner for towing/off-road/water exposure |
| Automatic transmission fluid | Drain-and-fill every 48,000–60,000 km / 30,000–37,000 miles for severe use |
| Transfer case and rear differential oil | Every 48,000–80,000 km / 30,000–50,000 miles; immediately after water immersion |
| Tyre rotation | Every 8,000–10,000 km / 5,000–6,000 miles |
| Alignment check | Annually or after suspension/tyre wear symptoms |
| 12 V battery | Test annually after 4 years; many last 4–6 years |
| Belts and hoses | Inspect at every oil service once the vehicle is older than 10 years |
For fluids, use the specifications in the owner’s manual for the exact market. The 2.4 typically uses about 4.3 L of engine oil with filter, about 7.0 L of coolant, GL-4 75W-90 in the manual gearbox, SP-III fluid in older Hyundai/Kia automatic transaxles, and GL-5 gear oil in AWD final-drive components. Do not substitute universal ATF unless it clearly states compatibility with the required Hyundai/Kia SP-III specification.
Buyer checks should be practical and strict. Look for uneven panel gaps, damp carpets, airbag lights, non-working ABS lights, noisy wheel bearings, seized parking-brake hardware, rear differential seepage, and mismatched tyres. On a full-time 4WD vehicle, all four tyres should be the same size, similar model, and similar tread depth. Large tyre circumference differences can stress driveline components.
The best examples are usually late, unmodified, rust-free cars with documented belt service, clean coolant, smooth gearbox operation, and no warning lights. Avoid vehicles with severe underside rust, overheating history, slipping automatic transmissions, unexplained driveline binding, or sellers who cannot prove major maintenance.
Long-term durability is decent when the basics are handled. The Santa Fe SM is not a modern low-maintenance crossover; it is an older mechanical SUV that needs regular fluid service, corrosion control, and age-related reconditioning.
Driving Feel and Economy
The Santa Fe SM 2.4 4WD has a relaxed, slightly old-school driving character. The seating position is high, visibility is good, and the ride is generally comfortable on standard 16-inch tyres. It feels stable in a straight line, but it is not sporty. The body leans in corners, steering feedback is modest, and the chassis is tuned more for comfort and predictable grip than quick responses.
The 2.4 MPI engine is smooth enough when maintained, but it has to work hard in a 4WD Santa Fe. Low-rpm torque is adequate for town use, yet acceleration becomes modest with passengers, luggage, hills, or a trailer. The 5-speed manual helps the driver keep the engine in its useful range. The 4-speed automatic, where fitted, is easier in traffic but can blunt performance and increase fuel consumption.
Cabin noise is acceptable for the era but not modern. Expect engine noise during hard acceleration, tyre noise from all-terrain or budget tyres, and wind noise at highway speeds. Worn suspension bushings, old engine mounts, and tired door seals can make an average example feel much older than a well-sorted one.
Real-world fuel economy depends heavily on use:
- City driving: about 12.5–15.0 L/100 km / 16–19 mpg US / 19–23 mpg UK.
- Mixed use: about 10.5–12.5 L/100 km / 19–22 mpg US / 23–27 mpg UK.
- Highway at 100 km/h / 62 mph: about 9.0–10.5 L/100 km / 22–26 mpg US / 27–31 mpg UK.
- Highway at 120 km/h / 75 mph: about 10.0–11.5 L/100 km / 20–24 mpg US / 25–28 mpg UK.
Cold weather, roof bars, underinflated tyres, heavy cargo, poor alignment, and sticky brakes can worsen consumption noticeably. Towing or mountain driving can raise fuel use by 20–40 percent depending on load and speed.
The 4WD system’s main advantage is confidence, not off-road toughness. In snow, rain, gravel, and muddy tracks, it helps the Santa Fe pull away and maintain traction more easily than a front-drive version. It has no low range, so clutch control, tyre choice, and mechanical sympathy matter on steep or slippery surfaces.
Braking performance depends strongly on tyre condition, brake-fluid age, rotor quality, and rear brake function. Many old Santa Fes suffer from seized sliders, uneven pad wear, or corroded brake lines. A firm pedal, straight stops, and clean ABS operation are more important than any published braking figure.
Santa Fe Rivals Compared
The Santa Fe SM 2.4 4WD sits among early-2000s family SUVs such as the Toyota RAV4, Honda CR-V, Subaru Forester, Suzuki Grand Vitara, Kia Sportage, Ford Escape, Mazda Tribute, and Nissan X-Trail. Its strengths are value, space, simple mechanical design, and standard-feeling SUV practicality. Its weaknesses are fuel economy, age-related rust risk, and less polished handling than some rivals.
Against the Toyota RAV4, the Santa Fe feels larger and more substantial, with more cargo space and a softer ride. The RAV4 usually has stronger resale value and better fuel economy, but equivalent-condition examples often cost more.
Against the Honda CR-V, the Santa Fe offers a more SUV-like driving position and available full-time 4WD character. The CR-V is usually more economical and easier to own long-term because parts supply, reliability reputation, and cabin packaging are strong. A rusty CR-V is still a bad buy, but rust can be even more decisive on the Santa Fe because of known suspension corrosion concerns.
Against the Subaru Forester, the Santa Fe is roomier and more relaxed, while the Forester feels lighter, lower, and better balanced on-road. Subaru’s AWD reputation is strong, but older Foresters bring their own issues, including head-gasket and oil-leak concerns on some engines.
Against the Suzuki Grand Vitara, the Santa Fe is more comfortable and crossover-like. The Suzuki is more truck-like and can be better suited to rough tracks depending on version, but it is less refined as a family vehicle.
The Santa Fe SM 2.4 Fulltime 4WD is worth considering when the price is low, the body is solid, and maintenance history is unusually good. It is not the best choice for maximum economy, modern safety technology, or high-speed performance. Its best role is as a practical, simple, all-weather used SUV for buyers who inspect carefully and budget realistically for age-related repairs.
References
- 2003 HYUNDAI SANTA FE 2002 (Manufacturer Publication)
- 2004 HYUNDAI SANTA FE 2003 (Manufacturer Publication)
- 2003 Hyundai Santa Fe 2003 (Safety Rating)
- Vehicle Detail Search – 2003 Hyundai Santa Fe | NHTSA 2026 (Recall Database)
- Part 573 Safety Recall Report 14V-435 2015 (Recall Report)
Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional diagnosis, repair, inspection, or official service documentation. Specifications, torque values, service intervals, fluids, procedures, safety equipment, and recall applicability can vary by VIN, market, production date, trim, and equipment. Always verify details against the official owner’s manual, service manual, under-hood labels, dealer records, and a qualified technician.
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