Autocar India
RK

RK

1d

I am planning to buy the Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7T variant. However, I am confused between the manual and automatic. I recently learned how to drive, and this is my first car. I have taken test drives of both, and I am comfortable with both. I just need advice on which one I should buy.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
10m
First car, newly learned driver, and you are comfortable with both after test drives, in this situation, pick the Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7T automatic. It will make life much easier in the long run. In traffic, you do not have to juggle the clutch and gear lever, so you stay calmer and make fewer mistakes. On slopes and in tight parking spots, not having to balance the clutch helps a lot, and you can focus more on steering and judging gaps, especially important in a large car like the XUV 7XO. It is also smoother for family rides and less tiring on longer drives.
A couple of trade-offs to keep in mind: the automatic costs more upfront and can use slightly more fuel, but the difference is not significant enough to outweigh the convenience of the auto.
Pick the manual only if you genuinely enjoy shifting gears yourself, drive mostly on open roads, or want to save on the initial cost. Otherwise, for a first car, the AX7T automatic fits your requirements best.
Mahindra XUV 7XO

Mahindra XUV 7XO

Explore cars mentioned

More questions on similar cars

SA

Saurabh

2d

I am planning to buy a new car. I am confused between XUV 7XO AX5 petrol and diesel. My monthly run is about 1,200 to 1,300 km, mostly on smooth roads (Dwarka Expressway/KMP, etc.). I have a few questions: Is it advisable to have a diesel variant in terms of total cost of ownership and a 10-year timeline, being in NCR? I do not expect DPF issues since I drive at 100-120kph for a few hundred kilometres every month. Is this assumption fine? As per current applicable rules, will I be able to sell the diesel variant to other states after 10 years with proper NOC, fitness, etc., from Gurgaon RTO?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1d

At 1,200 to 1,300 km a month with regular expressway use, this is not the kind of usage pattern that typically makes a diesel a bad idea from a DPF perspective. Your assumption there is broadly fair because the car will regularly get the sustained runs and exhaust temperatures needed for regeneration, unlike a pure short trip city diesel.The bigger issue is 10-year ownership in NCR. Even with the policy debates and legal back-and-forth, the reality is that diesel ownership in Delhi NCR carries uncertainty that petrol simply does not. If your plan is genuinely to keep the car long term, that matters.On resale after 10 years, under current rules, yes, selling the Mahindra XUV 7XO outside NCR with the proper NOC, transfer process and compliance in the destination state should be possible, assuming that state permits the vehicle and its emissions category. But policy environments can change over a decade, so we would not make a purchase today purely assuming that the exit route remains friction-free.So if you are buying with a 5 to 7-year ownership mindset, the diesel makes strong sense. If you are genuinely buying for 10 years plus in NCR, the petrol is the lower-stress choice even if the diesel suits your usage better.

VehicleMahindra XUV 7XO

Popular discussions right now

Posted on: 26 May 2026