Renault Samsung SM6 Export from Korea: Mid-Size Sedan Guide (2026)

Published: 2026-07-16 | Last Updated: 2026-07-16 | By SH GLOBAL

A used Renault Samsung SM6 export from Korea costs between $8,500 and $21,000 FOB, depending on year, engine, trim and mileage. Built at Renault's Busan plant and launched in Korea in March 2016, the SM6 is the Korean-market version of the Renault Talisman — a comfort-first mid-size (D-segment) sedan with a premium cabin, distinctive styling and a choice of 2.0 GDe petrol, 1.6 TCe turbo, and low-cost 2.0 LPe LPG engines. It is a value-led alternative to the Hyundai Sonata and Kia K5 for private buyers, fleets and taxi operators across the Middle East, Central Asia, the Caucasus, Eastern Europe and francophone Africa. The value sweet spot is a 2018–2019 SM6 2.0 GDe at $12,000–$16,000 FOB. SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. sources SM6 units directly from Korean auctions and fleet disposals, with steady order flow into Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Jordan and Egypt.

Whether you want a stylish personal sedan in Almaty, an LPG-fuelled taxi in Tbilisi, or a comfortable staff car in Amman, this complete guide to the renault samsung sm6 export from korea walks through every buying decision: the four engines, the CVT-versus-EDC transmission choice, trim levels, FOB price tables, the SM6-versus-Sonata decision, and the 6-step purchase process. Because the SM6 competes head-on with Hyundai and Kia's mid-size sedans, it is worth reading alongside our Korean mid-size sedan sibling comparison. Browse our live Renault inventory to see currently available units, or request a free SM6 quotation by engine and trim.

Why the SM6 Is Korea's Comfort-First Mid-Size Sedan

The Renault Samsung SM6 exists to offer something Hyundai and Kia's mid-size sedans do not quite match: a European-flavoured, comfort-tuned driving experience wrapped in a distinctly premium interior, at a mainstream price. As the Korean-built twin of the Renault Talisman, it brought French ride refinement, a vertical S-Link portrait touchscreen and, on upper trims, an adaptive AM Link rear suspension to a segment otherwise dominated by the Sonata and K5. For buyers who value how a car feels over badge familiarity, that is a genuine draw.

The economics make it compelling on the used market. Because the SM6 carries a smaller resale premium than the segment-leading Hyundai Sonata, a well-kept example typically sells 5–15% cheaper FOB than a same-year Sonata or Kia K5 — the same mid-size footprint and comfort, for less capital. According to the Korea Automobile Manufacturers Association (KAMA), passenger sedans remain a substantial slice of Korea's used-vehicle exports, and value-priced D-segment cars like the SM6 move steadily into fleet, taxi and private-buyer channels across Central Asia and the Middle East.

The SM6 also brings a card the Korean big two cannot: a factory 2.0 LPe LPG version with an under-boot donut tank. In markets with cheap, widely available autogas — much of Central Asia and the Caucasus — an LPG sedan can dramatically cut running costs, which is exactly why LPG cars dominate Korea's own taxi fleets. SH GLOBAL positions the SM6 as the comfort-and-value pick of the Korean mid-size class: premium feel, a distinctive look, and a low-fuel-cost LPG option, all below Sonata money.

Key takeaway: The Renault Samsung SM6's value proposition is Talisman-grade comfort and style at a below-Sonata used price, with a rare factory LPG option. For LHD buyers who want a mid-size sedan that feels a class above its price, a well-kept 2.0 GDe or 2.0 LPe SM6 is one of the best-value sedans out of Korea.

Engines & Drivetrains: GDe, TCe, LPe & dCi

Choosing the right engine is the single most important SM6 export decision, because it drives running cost, reliability risk and fuel-infrastructure fit. The SM6 was offered with four powertrains over its life, and they are not equal for export.

The 2.0 GDe naturally aspirated petrol paired with the CVT is the export default: smooth, adequately powerful for a comfort sedan, and the cheapest and most predictable combination to own. It dominates the used pool and is the safest choice for markets with limited Renault service depth.

The 1.6 TCe turbo petrol is the enthusiast's SM6 — roughly 190 PS through a 7-speed EDC dual-clutch, noticeably quicker and more engaging. The trade-off is the dual-clutch: it needs correct fluid service and can be expensive to repair if neglected, so buy one with clean maintenance history and budget for its care. The 2.0 LPe LPG shares the smooth CVT and is the running-cost champion in autogas markets, at the cost of a little power and some boot space to the donut tank. The dCi diesel was offered only early in the run and is uncommon; because Renault diesel parts are less widely stocked than Hyundai or Kia parts in many regions, it is a niche pick best avoided unless you have local Renault support. For how these fuel choices trend across export destinations, see our Korean used car export fuel type guide.

Transmission warning: The 2.0 GDe and 2.0 LPe use a robust CVT, while the 1.6 TCe and dCi use a 7-speed EDC dual-clutch. For hot, dusty, stop-start or high-load duty cycles, the CVT petrol/LPG cars are the lower-risk buy. If you want the 1.6 TCe, insist on documented EDC servicing and a smooth test-shift before payment. SH GLOBAL verifies transmission condition during pre-shipment inspection.

SM6 Trim Levels & Key Features

The SM6 was sold in a rising ladder of trims — commonly SE, LE, RE and PE/Prime — with equipment climbing at each step. Because export buyers care about which features actually survive years of use and matter in-region, here is what to prioritise rather than a full spec dump.

  • Air conditioning & climate: Non-negotiable for GCC, Iraq and African buyers. Confirm strong, cold A/C and, on higher trims, dual-zone climate — expensive to fix abroad if faulty.
  • S-Link portrait touchscreen: The 8.7-inch vertical display is the SM6's signature. Confirm it powers up and responds; infotainment faults are common wear items on used units.
  • AM Link rear suspension: Fitted to higher-power trims, this multi-link setup sharpens ride and handling. Lower trims use a simpler torsion-beam rear — still comfortable, cheaper to service.
  • Lighting & safety: The 2020 facelift added full-LED lighting and updated driver-assist. Later, higher trims carry more airbags and active-safety features that some markets increasingly require.
  • Seats & comfort: Heated/ventilated front seats and leather appear on RE/PE trims — genuine value in extreme climates and for premium private buyers.

The mid-2020 facelift is a meaningful dividing line: pre-facelift (2016–2019) cars are the value end, while facelift (2020–2022) cars bring the freshest look, full-LED lights and the latest equipment at a higher FOB. Match the trim to your buyer profile — a fleet or taxi operator can run a lean SE/LE 2.0 LPe, while a private premium buyer will want an RE/PE petrol. If you are weighing the SM6 against a crossover instead of a sedan, compare it with our Renault QM6 / Koleos buyer's guide, which covers the same Busan-built family in five-seat SUV form.

Renault Samsung SM6 FOB Prices from Korea (2026)

The following ranges reflect SH GLOBAL's July 2026 sourcing benchmarks from Korean auction and fleet-disposal data. Pricing assumes typical mileage for age and sound mechanical condition. Because trim and engine swing SM6 values significantly, treat these as guide ranges and request a unit-specific quote.

Year / Version Engine Typical FOB (USD)
2016 SM62.0 GDe petrol$8,500–$11,500
2017 SM62.0 GDe petrol$10,000–$13,000
2017 SM62.0 LPe (LPG)$9,500–$12,500
2018 SM61.6 TCe turbo$12,000–$15,500
2019 SM62.0 GDe petrol$12,500–$16,000
2020 SM6 (facelift)2.0 GDe petrol$15,000–$18,500
2021 SM61.6 TCe Prime$17,000–$20,000
2022 SM6 (low km)2.0 GDe / LPe$18,500–$21,000

For a full breakdown of FOB-to-landed cost (CIF, customs duty, VAT, port handling, registration), see our import cost breakdown guide. Because SM6 pricing is trim- and condition-driven, use our price negotiation guide to benchmark any quote against fair market value before you commit.

SM6 vs Sonata, K5 & Malibu

The SM6's real competition is the rest of the Korean mid-size sedan class — the Hyundai Sonata, the Kia K5, and the GM Korea Chevrolet Malibu. All are LHD, Korean-built D-segment sedans, and the right pick depends on your priorities around resale, parts, comfort and price.

Choose the Hyundai Sonata for the strongest resale, the widest parts network and the safest all-round ownership. Choose the Kia K5 for the sportiest look and drive. Choose the Chevrolet Malibu for maximum interior space at a keen price — see our GM Korea Malibu sedan guide. Choose the Renault Samsung SM6 when comfort, distinctive style and value matter most, and your market has some Renault service presence. A comparable-year SM6 typically undercuts the Sonata and K5 by 5–15% FOB while feeling a segment above its price — a strong deal for private buyers and comfort-focused fleets. For the direct Hyundai-vs-Kia head-to-head in this class, read our Sonata vs K5 export guide, and see the Sonata export review for the segment benchmark.

Best SM6 Configuration by Export Region

Region-specific recommendations based on SH GLOBAL's shipment patterns for Korean mid-size sedans:

The SM6 is an especially strong fit for Central Asia and the Caucasus, where cheap autogas makes the 2.0 LPe a running-cost winner and Renault has meaningful service presence. For duty structures, EAEU rules and routing into these markets, see our Central Asia export guide, our Central Asia export market data, and our Kazakhstan import guide. Francophone African buyers benefit from Renault's brand familiarity, though Hyundai and Kia still lead on parts depth in most of the continent.

Renault Samsung SM6 export from Korea — live SH GLOBAL Renault inventory of SM6 mid-size sedans, QM6 crossovers and other Renault Korea models
View SH GLOBAL's live Renault inventory — SM6, QM6 and more →

How to Buy a Renault Samsung SM6 from Korea

The SM6 purchase follows SH GLOBAL's standard 6-step Korea-to-port flow. Because the SM6 is a mainstream sedan with healthy auction supply, sourcing a specific engine and trim is usually quick, and total elapsed time from order to FOB-on-vessel is typically 10–18 days.

  1. Quotation: Tell SH GLOBAL the year range, engine (2.0 GDe, 1.6 TCe, 2.0 LPe), trim, equipment and budget. We return a quotation within 24–48 hours with matching candidate units, photos and mileage.
  2. Sourcing: Once you select a target unit, we lock it — from commercial auctions or from direct private and fleet disposals, which are a good source of well-kept, single-owner SM6s.
  3. Inspection: SH GLOBAL performs a pre-shipment inspection covering engine and VIN verification, transmission health (CVT or EDC), A/C, infotainment, body/accident check and — on LPG cars — the tank and conversion condition.
  4. Payment: 30% deposit via SWIFT upon unit confirmation, 70% balance before B/L release. For details, follow our step-by-step buying process.
  5. De-registration: SH GLOBAL handles 수출말소 (export de-registration) at the local vehicle registration office.
  6. RoRo or container loading & B/L: The SM6 ships by Ro-Ro or in a shared/sole container from Pyeongtaek, Masan, Incheon or Busan. Bill of Lading issuance and telex release follow final payment.

Shipping & Total Landed Cost Estimates

As a standard mid-size sedan, the SM6 ships easily by Roll-on/Roll-off (RoRo) or shares a container with other vehicles. Indicative all-in landed cost for a 2019 SM6 2.0 GDe (FOB $14,000) by destination, before destination-country customs duty and VAT:

Destination Shipping Mode Approx. Landed Cost (USD)
Jebel Ali, UAERoRo 18–24 days$15,900
Umm Qasr, IraqRoRo 25–30 days$16,300
Aqaba, JordanRoRo 26–32 days$16,500
Alexandria, EgyptRoRo 30–38 days$16,900
Poti, GeorgiaRoRo 30–40 days$17,200
Baku, Azerbaijan (via Poti/rail)RoRo + transit 32–42 days$17,600
Almaty, Kazakhstan (Vladivostok + rail)RoRo + rail 28–36 days$17,900
Tashkent, UzbekistanRoRo + rail 30–38 days$18,200

Customs duty, VAT, excise and registration are destination-specific and not included above; many Central Asian and Caucasus markets levy engine-displacement-based charges, so factor those in. Use SH GLOBAL's import cost calculator and your country's customs schedule to build a full landed-cost estimate before ordering.

SH GLOBAL price guarantee: Our 2019 SM6 2.0 GDe FOB benchmark of $14,000 includes our standard pre-shipment inspection, 수출말소 de-registration, port handling at Pyeongtaek or Masan, and B/L issuance. If you find a like-for-like SM6 quote (same year, engine, trim and condition band) more than 5% cheaper from another KITA-member exporter, we'll match the price.

Ownership & What to Inspect Before You Buy

Because the SM6 blends mainstream running gear with some Renault-specific hardware, buying on condition matters even more than usual. A cheap SM6 with a neglected dual-clutch, a tired LPG system or hidden accident repair can cost far more in its first year than a slightly dearer, well-documented car. According to the Korea International Trade Association (KITA), Korean passenger sedans remain a resilient export category — but value is preserved only when you buy on verified condition, not headline price.

Here is the pre-purchase checklist SH GLOBAL applies to every SM6 before it clears inspection:

  • Transmission: On 1.6 TCe / dCi cars, confirm smooth EDC dual-clutch shifting with no shudder and documented fluid service. On 2.0 GDe / LPe cars, confirm smooth CVT operation with no whine or slip.
  • LPG system (LPe): Verify the donut tank certification/date, regulator and injectors, and confirm the car runs cleanly on gas — LPG neglect is a hidden cost and a registration issue in some markets.
  • Accident & body: Check panel gaps, paint depth and the engine bay for repair evidence. SH GLOBAL cross-checks the Korean accident and history record to catch structural repairs.
  • Infotainment & electronics: Power up the S-Link portrait screen and test climate, cameras and driver-assist — infotainment and sensor faults are the most common SM6 niggles.
  • Suspension & ride: On AM Link cars, confirm no knocks over bumps; on all cars, check for even tyre wear and sound bushings — comfort is the SM6's whole point.
  • Odometer & VIN: Cross-check mileage against service and inspection records; SH GLOBAL verifies the VIN so a clocked or re-badged car is caught before payment.

Ownership cost is reasonable when you pick well: a 2.0 GDe or LPe SM6 with clean history is cheap to run, and general service items are affordable. The two cost risks to manage are the 1.6 TCe's dual-clutch and Renault-specific parts in regions with thin dealer support — both avoidable by buying the right engine for your market. Budget for routine wear — brakes, tyres, filters, A/C and (on LPG cars) periodic gas-system service — and a well-chosen SM6 will deliver Talisman-grade comfort for years. Lean on SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. to match the exact SM6 engine, trim and fuel type to your route, climate and import rules.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a used Renault Samsung SM6 cost to export from Korea?
Used Renault Samsung SM6 FOB prices from Korea range from about $8,500 for a 2016 2.0 GDe with high mileage to roughly $21,000 for a 2022 low-kilometre 1.6 TCe Prime. The export value sweet spot is a 2018–2019 SM6 2.0 GDe at $12,000–$16,000 FOB — a premium-feeling Korean mid-size sedan for less than a comparable Hyundai Sonata or Kia K5. SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. sources SM6 units directly from Korean auctions and fleet disposals, typically pricing 10–15% below standard exporter markups.
What is the Renault Samsung SM6 and is it the same as the Renault Talisman?
Yes — the Renault Samsung SM6 is the Korean-market version of the Renault Talisman, built at Renault's Busan plant and launched in Korea in March 2016. It is a mid-size (D-segment) sedan sold as the SM6 domestically and as the Talisman in Europe and parts of the Middle East. After Renault Samsung Motors was renamed Renault Korea Motors in 2022, later cars dropped the "Samsung" name, but the vehicle is mechanically the same SM6 throughout. Almost every used unit sourced from Korea is a Korean-market SM6.
What engines does the Renault Samsung SM6 offer?
The SM6 offers four main powertrains: a 2.0 GDe naturally aspirated petrol (~150 PS) with a CVT, a 1.6 TCe turbo petrol (~190 PS) with a 7-speed EDC dual-clutch, a 2.0 LPe LPG engine (~140 PS) with a CVT and an under-boot donut tank, and — on early cars only — a 1.5/1.6 dCi Renault diesel with the EDC. The 2.0 GDe is the most common and most robust used choice; the LPe LPG is prized for very low fuel cost; the 1.6 TCe is the performance pick.
Is the SM6 LPG (LPe) worth buying for export?
For markets with cheap, widely available autogas — much of Central Asia, the Caucasus, and parts of the Middle East — a 2.0 LPe SM6 can slash running costs, which is why LPG sedans dominate Korean taxi and fleet use. The trade-offs are slightly lower power, a donut LPG tank that reduces boot space, and the need for local LPG refuelling infrastructure and conversion-legal registration. In markets without LPG networks, choose the 2.0 GDe petrol instead. SH GLOBAL advises on LPG viability by destination before you order.
Is the Renault Samsung SM6 left-hand drive or right-hand drive?
Every Renault Samsung SM6 built for the Korean domestic market is left-hand drive (LHD). This matches the GCC, Iraq, most of continental and francophone Africa, Central Asia, Russia/CIS, the Caucasus and Eastern Europe. Because Korean-market SM6s were never produced in right-hand drive, the sedan cannot be registered in RHD-only countries such as Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda or Zambia. Buyers in those markets should look at an LHD-permitted neighbouring country or a different model.
Renault Samsung SM6 vs Hyundai Sonata — which is better for export?
Both are Korean-built LHD mid-size sedans. The Hyundai Sonata has the stronger global brand, the widest parts network and the best resale, making it the safer all-round pick. The SM6 counters with a more premium-feeling cabin, a distinctive design, a comfort-tuned ride and a lower used price — often 5–15% cheaper FOB than a same-year Sonata — plus an LPG option. Choose the Sonata for maximum resale and parts security; choose the SM6 for comfort, style and value in LHD markets where Renault service exists.
Is the SM6 reliable and cheap to maintain in export markets?
The 2.0 GDe petrol with the CVT is the most trouble-free and cheapest-to-run SM6 combination, and general service items are affordable. The main cautions are the 1.6 TCe's 7-speed EDC dual-clutch, which needs proper maintenance and can be costly to repair, and Renault-specific diesel parts, which are less widely stocked than Hyundai or Kia parts in some regions. For lowest ownership risk in markets with limited Renault support, SH GLOBAL steers buyers toward a well-kept 2.0 GDe or LPe.
Which Renault Samsung SM6 configuration is best for my market?
For GCC and hot-climate private buyers, a 2.0 GDe or 1.6 TCe petrol SM6 with strong air conditioning and a higher trim is ideal. For Central Asia and the Caucasus, the 2.0 LPe LPG SM6 is a standout for its low fuel cost where autogas is common. For general fleet and family use in francophone Africa and Eastern Europe, the 2.0 GDe petrol is the safe, easy-to-run default. SH GLOBAL matches engine, trim and equipment to each buyer's fuel infrastructure, climate and import rules before recommending a unit.

Get a Free Renault Samsung SM6 Export Quote

SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. — direct auction and fleet sourcing of Renault Samsung SM6 mid-size sedans, FOB pricing 10–15% below market, RoRo & container shipping to the Middle East, Central Asia, the Caucasus & Africa.

Request SM6 Quotation →
💬 WhatsApp 📞 +82-10-5804-8504