Autocar India
2h

I am planning to buy a new car under 20 lakh. My daily drive is 50 kms on highways and a 700 km highway monthly trip to my hometown but city usage would be negligible. I have finalized the Kia Seltos HTX varient. I am confused between buying a petrol or diesel varient. While petrol version has low initial and maintenance cost, daily fuel cost is more. On the other hand, diesel would give me better mileage with less fuel cost but it will have expensive maintenance and initial cost. Or should I consider some other car. I am not interested to buy an EV. Please suggest.

Verified
5m

We'd recommend the Kia Seltos Diesel Automatic. Your usage is almost ideal for a diesel. A 50km daily highway commute combined with a 700km highway trip every month means the engine will spend most of its time at operating temperature, making it well suited to a modern diesel. You also shouldn't have to worry about DPF-related issues, as regular long-distance driving allows the system to regenerate properly.

While the diesel does have a higher purchase price and slightly higher maintenance costs, you'll benefit from significantly better fuel efficiency, and with your usage, the savings at the fuel pump should more than offset the initial premium over time. The Seltos' 1.5-litre diesel paired with the torque-converter automatic is also one of the smoothest and most refined diesel-automatic combinations in this segment, making it an excellent highway cruiser.

Kia Seltos

Kia Seltos

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More questions on similar cars

1d

Hi, I have shortlisted the Kia Seltos. My usage is primarily in the city, with perhaps one highway trip a year. Does it make sense to spend extra on ADAS for Delhi roads, or will I end up switching it off as I do in my other car? I also like that the Seltos offers most variants without ADAS. My second point is more of an observation. Kia should have offered the GTX with the HTX's beige interior, or at least the GTX headlamps on the HTX. I feel I have to choose between a less appealing interior and an average-looking exterior. I prefer the cabin feel and the lower price, so I'm leaning towards the HTX IVT. Should I spend the extra money on the HTX A IVT, or will I end up keeping the ADAS switched off in the city?

Verified
6h

Stick with the Kia Seltos HTX IVT and skip the HTX A. With mostly Delhi city use, the lane-keep and distance warnings will be firing overtime in traffic and on flyovers, so you’ll end up switching them off and paying extra for little day-to-day benefit. You already prefer the HTX’s beige cabin, and you aren’t chasing the sportier look, so the version you’ve picked matches your taste and saves money. The headlamp throw and spread aren't too different between the HTX and GTX headlamps, so it's more of an aesthetic difference.Where ADAS helps in the city is with blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts while backing out of basements or squeezing out of lanes. If that exact use case has been common in your other car equipped with ADAS, then the HTX A might be worthwhile. For your one highway trip a year, adaptive cruise and lane centring are nice to have at night on wide expressways, but not must-haves. Overall, we don't think it's worth spending extra on the ADAS pack for your use case.

VehicleKia Seltos
21h

Hi all, I’m planning to upgrade my 2013 Hyundai i10 to a stronger and safer vehicle. I live in Pune and plan to take monthly long-distance trips. My initial choices were the Kia Seltos and Renault Duster, but concerns about E20 or higher petrol blends have made me reconsider buying a pure petrol car. As a result, I’m now considering EVs. The Tata Punch.ev top model seems like an excellent value proposition, but is it a sensible choice for long-distance highway trips, such as Pune to Hyderabad or Goa? I would appreciate your insights and recommendations. I usually travel with my wife and occasionally with a full load.

Verified
5m

For long drives from Pune to Goa or Hyderabad in any EV, you will be required to quickly charge once along the way, to reach your destination comfortably, without any range anxiety. The Punch EV is an excellent choice - it is compact, value-for-money, and its real-world range of over 300km is rather good. Kia will be launching the Syros EV in the coming weeks. The Syros is surprisingly spacious, interior quality is top-notch, and going by the Clavis EV's efficient and smooth powertrain, the EV version of the Syros will certainly be worth considering. Go for the EVs only if you can arrange for home charging. If not, then the Kia Seltos will be our pick. It is comfortable, spacious, feature-rich, and the petrol is smooth, refined and more efficient than the Renault Duster. The Duster's ride-handling balance is outstanding and its boot is larger than the Seltos too, however the Kia comes across as the more rounded option.

VehicleTata Punch EV
VehicleKia Seltos
VehicleRenault Duster
5d

I am looking to buy a car in the Rs 20-30 lakh budget. My driving is mostly in the city, and I cover around 50km every weekday, with occasional driving on Saturdays. I want a car with good after-sales service and decent fuel efficiency for city use. Most of my commute is along the Coastal Road from Bandra East to Fort in Mumbai. I am considering the Kia Seltos 2026 X-Line and the Tata Harrier EV, but I'm open to other suggestions if there's a better option in this price range. I have already ruled out the Honda Elevate, Toyota Hyryder, Honda City, and I don't want to buy a Maruti Suzuki.

Verified
5h

If you can charge at home, go for the Hyundai Creta Electric. Your 50km Mumbai city run suits an EV perfectly, and this one will do the coastal road crawl very smoothly and deal with stop-start traffic well, thanks to its nicely tuned one-pedal driving mode. Hyundai’s service consistency in Mumbai is better than Tata’s today, and the Creta’s size is easier to park than a Harrier. Running costs in the city drop sharply versus petrol or diesel, and your budget will comfortably get you the larger 51.4kWh battery, which, as per our testing, delivers a combined real-world range of 430km.The Kia Seltos is a fine pick only if you cannot charge at home or at the office. In that case, pick the 1.5 NA IVT combo for the most seamless drive in the city. Kia’s service is also generally hassle-free.One honest catch with the Creta Electric is that you need a reliable charging point at home or work, and the upfront cost is higher than that of a petrol Seltos. If you have a fixed parking spot with a plug, it is the easiest, cheapest way to do your daily Bandra East to Fort grind.

VehicleHyundai Creta Electric
VehicleKia Seltos
VehicleTata Harrier

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Posted on: 9 Jul 2026