Kia Cadenza Speaker Size

Speaker size, type, and location chart for Kia Cadenza models from 2014 to 2017 production years.

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Front Door Panel Speaker

YearsTypeSize (inch)
2014 - 2017Tweeter1
2014 - 2017Midbass / Full-Range6.5

Rear Door Panel Speaker

YearsTypeSize (inch)
2014 - 2017Tweeter1
2014 - 2017Midbass / Full-Range6.5

Center Dash Speaker

YearsTypeSize (inch)
2014 - 2017Midrange4

Rear Deck Center Speaker

YearsTypeSize (inch)
2014 - 2017Subwoofer8

Rear Deck Lid Speaker

YearsTypeSize (inch)
2014 - 2017Midrange4

Kia Cadenza Speaker FAQ

Which speakers should I upgrade first in my Kia Cadenza for the biggest sound improvement?

Start with the front door 6.5 inch speakers. These handle most of your music's midrange and vocals. The Kia Cadenza front doors already have separate 1 inch tweeters, so you could go with component speakers for maximum clarity or coaxial if you want simpler installation. Front speakers typically see 50-100 watts RMS and 4-8 ohm impedance. After front doors, consider the 8 inch rear deck center speaker since it likely handles bass duties. The smaller 4 inch speakers in center dash and rear deck contribute less to overall sound quality.

Can I replace the Kia Cadenza tweeters separately from the main speakers?

Yes, the 1 inch tweeters in both front and rear doors appear to be separate units. This gives you flexibility - you might upgrade just the 6.5 inch drivers first and keep factory tweeters temporarily. Most aftermarket tweeters handle 20-50 watts and cross over around 3000-5000 Hz. However, if you're installing component speakers, they usually come with their own tweeters anyway. The rear door tweeters are probably less critical unless you frequently have rear passengers who care about imaging.

What's the difference between coaxial and component options for my Kia Cadenza doors?

Component speakers separate the tweeter from the woofer - better sound staging and frequency response. The Cadenza already has separate tweeter locations, so components make sense here. Coaxial speakers combine everything in one unit, easier to install but potentially less precise imaging. For the 6.5 inch front doors, components would use the existing tweeter spots. The rear doors list coaxial, component, AND full-range options, which suggests the factory setup might vary depending on trim level. Full-range speakers try to cover all frequencies in one driver - adequate but not ideal for critical listening.

Should I replace the center dash speaker in my Kia Cadenza?

The 4 inch center dash speaker probably handles center channel duties for surround sound or vocal enhancement. Lower priority than door speakers, but it can affect dialogue clarity if you use the factory surround processing. Most 4 inch speakers handle 20-60 watts and work in small enclosures. Check if your Cadenza actually uses this speaker actively - some cars have speakers installed but not connected depending on audio package. You'll notice better vocal presence if this speaker is properly integrated, but door speakers will give you more dramatic improvement first.

What about the 8 inch speaker in the rear deck center of my Kia Cadenza?

This 8 inch driver likely handles bass frequencies below what the door speakers can manage effectively. Listed as both full-range and subwoofer, so it might depend on your specific audio system configuration. If it's acting as a subwoofer, expect it to cross over around 80-120 Hz and handle 100-200 watts. Upgrading this could improve bass response significantly, but verify its role first. Some cars use rear speakers more for fill than primary bass. The location in the deck center suggests it's meant to supplement rather than replace proper door speaker bass.