Most Kia Soul trims come with a tire mobility kit, not a spare, though some older cars and dealer-added kits differ.
If you’re trying to figure out whether your Kia Soul has a spare tire, the honest answer is: not always. Many newer Souls are packed with a sealant-and-compressor setup under the rear cargo floor, while some older cars, some used examples, and some dealer-upfitted cars may have a compact spare instead.
That’s why this question keeps tripping people up. You’ll see one owner swear there’s a spare under the floor, then another owner lifts the panel and finds a foam tray, a bottle of sealant, and a small compressor. Both can be right. The year, trim, market, and what a past owner added all shape the answer.
Kia Soul Spare Tire Setup By Model Year
For many recent U.S. Kia Soul models, the stock flat-tire setup is a tire mobility kit. Kia’s own owner-manual pages spell out flat-tire repair with that kit and note that it’s stored in the cargo area or side trim. Kia also lists a current Soul spare-tire hardware kit as a separate part, which is a strong sign that a spare is often not standard equipment.
Older Souls are where the story gets messier. Some earlier cars were sold with a compact spare, and plenty of used Souls have had one added later. So the cleanest answer is this: most newer Souls do not come with a spare tire from the factory, but some Souls on the road still have one.
Why Owners See Different Answers
There are a few plain reasons this gets muddled:
- Newer Souls often use a tire mobility kit to save cargo space and cut weight.
- Used Souls may have a spare kit added by a dealer or a past owner.
- Online listings often mix trims and years together.
- Some parts sites show spare-related hardware, even when the car was not sold with a spare as standard gear.
- Cars sold outside the U.S. may be packed a little differently.
How To Check Your Own Soul In Two Minutes
You don’t need to decode trim sheets for half an hour. A fast look in the rear cargo area usually tells the story.
- Open the liftgate and lift the cargo-floor panel.
- Look for a round wheel well in the center.
- If you see a compact wheel and tire bolted down, you have a spare.
- If you see a foam organizer with a bottle and compressor, you have a tire mobility kit.
- Check the side trim too. Some Kia manual pages note that the kit may sit there instead of under the floor.
- If the area looks half-empty, a past owner may have removed the spare or the kit.
You can also verify it by checking your exact model-year paperwork on Kia’s manuals and documents page. That matters more than a forum post, a dealer photo, or a random marketplace ad.
What You’ll Usually See Under The Floor
Most owners will find one of these three setups:
- Tire mobility kit only: sealant bottle, compressor, and storage tray.
- Compact spare setup: spare wheel and tire, jack, lug wrench, and hold-down hardware.
- Nothing complete: common on used cars where the kit was lost or removed.
| What You Find | What It Means | What To Do Next |
|---|---|---|
| Foam tray with sealant and compressor | Your Soul likely came with a tire mobility kit instead of a spare | Check the sealant date and read the flat-tire steps before you need them |
| Compact wheel under the floor | You have a spare-tire setup | Check pressure, tread, and jack tools once in a while |
| Wheel well but no tire | A spare may have been removed | Price out the missing wheel, jack, and hold-down parts |
| Compressor only, no sealant bottle | The kit is incomplete | Replace the missing bottle before a puncture leaves you stuck |
| Old sealant bottle | The kit may not work as expected | Swap it out with a fresh bottle that matches the kit |
| Aftermarket spare kit | A past owner added one | Check wheel size, tire age, and lug pattern before trusting it |
| No tools at all | The car may be missing both factory options | Choose between a real spare kit or roadside backup |
| Dealer listing says “spare tire kit available” | That often means sold apart, not included | Ask what is in the trunk right now, not what can be ordered |
What The Tire Mobility Kit Can And Can’t Do
A tire mobility kit is not useless. It can get you back on the road after a small puncture in the tread area. Kia’s flat-tire owner-manual page says the kit is a temporary fix and says the vehicle should be checked after use. That wording matters. This is a get-you-home tool, not a long-term repair.
The kit shines when you pick up a nail or screw and the tire still holds some shape. You plug it in, inject sealant, air the tire up, then drive a short distance and recheck pressure. It saves trunk space and it’s lighter than hauling a spare all year.
When The Kit Will Not Help
There are flat tires the kit just can’t handle:
- Sidewall cuts
- Blowouts
- Two flat tires at once
- Bent wheel damage
- Tires shredded after driving on them while flat
If that’s your worry, the sealant kit can feel thin. It’s fine for a mild puncture. It’s poor company for a torn sidewall on a dark shoulder.
Best Fix If You Want A Real Spare
If you hate the thought of trusting sealant, the cleanest fix is adding a compact spare setup that fits your Soul. Kia’s parts catalog lists a current Soul spare-tire hardware kit, and the listing says the tire and mounting pieces are sold apart. That tells you what to expect: the kit may not be one box with every last piece in it.
Before buying, check three things: your model year, wheel size, and the cargo-floor layout. A spare that fits one Soul setup may not be the clean answer for another. If you buy used parts, check tire age stamped on the sidewall. A never-used spare can still age out.
For many owners, the sweet spot is simple: keep the factory kit in place for small punctures, then add a compact spare if you do long highway trips, night driving, or rural miles where a tow could take a while.
| Flat-Tire Plan | What You Carry | Best Fit |
|---|---|---|
| Factory kit only | Sealant and compressor | City driving, short trips, and owners who want to keep cargo space |
| Compact spare added | Spare, jack, wrench, and hold-down gear | Road trips, back roads, and drivers who want a wheel-ready backup |
| Kit plus roadside backup | Factory kit and a towing plan | Drivers okay with calling for help when the puncture is too big for sealant |
What To Ask Before Buying A Used Soul
A used Kia Soul can fool you here. Dealer photos may never show the cargo floor lifted, and a seller may say “yes, it has one” while talking about the mobility kit, not a spare tire. So ask a direct question: “When you lift the rear floor, is there a compact wheel and tire, or just a compressor and sealant?”
Then ask for one photo of the storage area with the panel open. That single photo can save you money and a lot of guesswork.
- Ask whether the spare is factory or added later.
- Ask whether the jack and wrench are present.
- Ask whether the sealant bottle is still in date if the car uses the kit.
- Ask whether the spare has ever been used.
- Ask whether the cargo floor still sits flat after any kit was added.
When Roadside Help Makes More Sense
Some drivers never want to mess with sealant or swapping a wheel at the roadside. That’s fair. If that sounds like you, pair whatever your Soul has with a towing plan. Kia’s warranty page lists roadside assistance coverage for eligible vehicles, so it’s worth checking what still applies to your car.
That setup makes a lot of sense if you mostly drive in town, don’t have room for a spare, or just want a clean fallback when a tire is too far gone for the factory kit. Still, don’t leave the cargo area empty. Even if you rely on towing, a working compressor can buy you enough air to reach a safer stopping spot.
So, do Kia Souls have a spare tire? Some do, many don’t, and the only answer that counts for your car is what sits under the cargo floor today. Check that area once, make a plan that fits how you drive, and you won’t have to guess when the tire-pressure warning light shows up.
References & Sources
- Kia Owners Portal.“Manuals and Documents.”Direct source for checking Kia model-year manuals and factory documents for your exact Soul.
- Kia Owner’s Manual.“If you have a flat tire (with tire mobility kit).”States that the tire mobility kit is a temporary repair and notes where the kit may be stored.
- Kia Parts.“Spare Tire Hardware Kit, Tire Sold Separately.”Shows that Kia lists a Soul spare-tire hardware kit as a separate part rather than built-in standard gear.
- Kia Owners Portal.“Warranty.”Lists Kia warranty details, including roadside assistance coverage for eligible vehicles.

Certification: BSc in Mechanical Engineering
Education: Mechanical engineer
Lives In: 539 W Commerce St, Dallas, TX 75208, USA
Md Amir is an auto mechanic student and writer with over half a decade of experience in the automotive field. He has worked with top automotive brands such as Lexus, Quantum, and also owns two automotive blogs autocarneed.com and taxiwiz.com.