Junkyard Find: 2009 Kia Borrego LX

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

I had a run of eight of the last 12 Junkyard Find articles being GM products, and we're finally going to take a break from The General… for now. Instead of a Trans Sport Montana or first-gen Cavalier, we're going to follow up one gloom-inducing Great Recession vehicle with another: an ultra-rare example of the single-model-year Kia Borrego, found in a Denver car graveyard last week.

The folks at the Kia design center in Irvine, California (where I lowered the property values in decisive fashion with my hooptie Impala in 1990) came up with the Kia Mohave as their first project, introducing it to the world as the Kia Mesa concept car at the 2005 NAIAS.

The Mohave was named after the Native American tribe of the areas adjacent to the Colorado River in present-day California, Arizona and New Mexico (if you're writing about the desert whose name uses the same pronunciation, you spell it Spanish-style, with a J). Kia decided to change the name to Borrego, after the desert region by that name in Southern California, for the North American version of the Mohave.

By the middle of the 2000s, the rule in the car industry was simple: sell trucks or die. After the humiliation of selling rebadged Isuzus from the middle 1990s through the early 2000s, Honda had managed to create the Acura MDX as a 2001 model. If economy-car-centric Honda could pull that off, so could the Hyundai Motor Company.

Hyundai plus its Kia subsidiary (bought in 1998 in the aftermath of Kia's bankruptcy the year before) had no big SUVs to sell in North America during the middle 2000s. The Mohave/Borrego, a hefty body-on-frame truck that scaled in at well over two tons, would solve everything!

The only problem with that plan was something the suits in Seoul couldn't anticipate: the collapse of the global economy in late 2007. Suddenly, thirsty full-frame SUVs were out and economical SUVs on unibody car chassis were in.

The MSRP started at just $26,245 for a Borrego LX 2WD with 3.8-liter V6 (that's about $39,958 in 2025 dollars), which made it a couple grand cheaper than a new Ford Explorer. You could even get it with a 4.6-liter V8.

But it drank gas, not qualifying for Cash For Clunkers rebates for that reason.

The Borrego was sold for just a single model year in the United States, though Canadian sales continued through 2011. Elsewhere in the world, the first-generation Mohave was sold all the way through 2024 (with a couple of facelifts along the way).

The '24 Mohave was just the thing for a lengthy road trip in South America.

The smaller Sorento, for which I have some affection due to my experience outrunning Hurricane Sandy across eight states in a rented one, remained the biggest SUV available in North America from Hyundai/Kia until the Palisade/ Telluride appeared as a 2020 model.

This one arrived here in pretty good shape for age 16.

The owner's manual was still in the glovebox.

This seems to be a reminder of the slow data speeds that plagued the early smartphones, circa 2009.

At a full minute in length, this high-production-value Borrego commercial must have cost ₩₩₩₩₩.

In South Korea, the new Mohave offered masculine yet sophisticated men "absolute driving" (through waterfalls).

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

2009 Kia Borrego in Denver junkyard.

[Images: The Author]

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Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Hagerty and The Truth About Cars.

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  • MRF 95 T-Bird MRF 95 T-Bird on Jun 30, 2025

    I occasionally see a Borrego in my neighborhood driven by a working class family. I take it they were as reliable as other Kia/Hyundai products of the era.

    The facade on the Borrego bears an uncanny resemblance to the post vaginal nose refresh off the Subaru Tribeca.

  • William Piper William Piper on Jun 30, 2025

    Crazy that 2009 was already 16 years ago. Have only ever seen maybe two of these driving around locally. Sort of blend in.

  • Andarris Here in the Toronto area I haven't seen a 2006-2012 with intact rocker pannels for over two years now. I presume everywhere around the Great Lakes is the same ? They were super cheap dhring the first two years of the pandemic - could get one with less than 85K for around $6500 certified or a little higher mileage for $5000. Glad I skipped it, even in 2021 some of the 10's &11's were displaying corosion like you'd see on a 7 year older Impala, Camry or Accord. Also the mid-model switch to EPS made me balk at the few clean ones I found.
  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh I do not ever have delays. I only fly out of PDX or EUG to LAS or OAK and OGG then back .. have never been delayed in the last ?30-ish? trips to vegas/disneyland/maui/cruise ship vacations.... EUG has contract tsa so we never have any TSA delays. unsure which airports have PRIVATE contract TSA that is UNAFFECTED by the deadlock that i HOPE NEVER EVER END.
  • Big Al from Oz gidday mites how are yall feelin today? Want to have a barbie? We are right here gettin dee fire ready
  • Michael S6 The 3 Amigos better hope that the oil spike is short lived as 4-5 dollar a gallon gas would put a damper on their cash cows especially "Ford's strategic shift" of killing off the escape/Lincoln cousin. Most other automakers have a full line of vehicles with much better full economy. GM is sucking air and its Cadillac devision is mostly EV and geriatric line up of ICE cars and SUV's that were supposed to be phased out this year. The expensive gas may push shoppers toward EV but GM's horrible EV reliability is a barrier.
  • Tane94 I read the GM press release about first quarter sales 2026 vs 2025 and Buick is getting its butt kicked:Buick Total* 41,654 61,822 -32.6 The future is bleak for Buick.
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