Autocar India
6w

I am planning to buy a sedan, despite most people today preferring SUVs. I am considering the Hyundai Verna HX10 IVT and the Volkswagen Virtus 1.5 DSG. Since I would be spending around Rs 20 lakh on either of these cars, I wanted to know whether sedans still make sense given Indian road conditions. Are roads improving enough to justify buying a sedan again, or should one still stick to SUVs? I also noticed that a similarly equipped SUV as the Creta costs around Rs 3-4 lakh more. Is this premium justified, or is it better to save the money and buy a sedan instead?

Verified
5w
Sedans absolutely make sense. Road quality in most cities has improved enough that a modern sedan’s clearance handles regular bumps and broken patches fine. You'd buy an SUV mainly for the road presence and higher seating position, and these days, very few offer AWD or specialised off-road hardware. If your daily commute has absolutely broken roads, steep speed breakers or is prone to flooding, that extra 10-20mm of ground clearance will help. Or if you have elderly passengers for whom getting into and out of a sedan is difficult. If not, you are paying Rs 3-4 lakh more for the feel-good factor rather than any tangible benefit.
Pick the Hyundai Verna IVT. For your mostly urban Indian driving and on a Rs 20 lakh budget, it is smoother to drive, easier to live with, and cheaper to run. The automatic is smooth in traffic, the ride is comfortable, and there is no long-term worry around heat-and-traffic wear that the Volkswagen Virtus 1.5 with its quick but complex gearbox can throw up. The Virtus is the driver’s car here - stronger on highways and more fun in corners - but it can stretch past your budget on-road, and repairs aren’t cheap if things go wrong.
Hyundai Verna

Hyundai Verna

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5w

Should I go for the HX10 IVT or HX8 is also fine ?

5w

You should test drive in both city and highway before buying as verna's engine is lackluster in highway and suspension is on softer side so primarily city and some highway(80 - 20 ) is fine but more highways you should think about others like basalt it is coupe but works excellent in both highways and city

More questions on similar cars

2d

I currently own a Ford Endeavour, which I use for my daily office commute, and a Hyundai Venue, which my wife and kids use. My third car is a 2018 Honda City, which I now plan to replace. I'm considering the Hyundai Verna 2026, Volkswagen Virtus 2025, and Skoda Slavia. I'll be using the new car frequently. Which one should I choose?

Verified
13h

Pick the Hyundai Verna. Coming from a City, you’ll appreciate the airy cabin, big rear seat and boot, and the way it smooths out rough patches. You said you’ll use it frequently, and the Verna feels secure and relaxed at highway speeds while still being easy in tight city gaps, so it won’t feel like a step down from your Honda on the daily grind. It's also well equipped, and you get a choice of two distinct petrol engines, a 1.5-litre naturally aspirated unit and a 1.5-litre turbo-petrol. The former is the better all-rounder, smoother and lighter on the pocket, with the better auto gearbox - a CVT. The latter is punchier but drinks noticeably more fuel and gets a clunkier DCT gearbox. If your usage is mostly on the highway, the turbo petrol might make sense, but in most cases, the regular 1.5 petrol is better.The Skoda and Volkswagen are also excellent choices, especially if you enjoy driving. Their turbo engines are punchy, though they are also heavy drinkers if you are not careful, and Skoda/VW service is not quite as bulletproof as Hyundai's. Moreover, both sedans are due for a facelift very soon, so we would recommend waiting to see what's in store before taking the plunge. If you're in a hurry, though, the Verna is the safer bet.

VehicleHyundai Verna

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Posted on: 1 Jun 2026