autocar-logo
Mumbai
PS

PRATEEK SHARMA

16w

I have a budget of around ₹10 lakh and drive about 700 km per month, plus two return trips a year of about 1,200 km each. I currently own a 2012 Honda Brio and have test-driven the Mahindra 3XO, Kia Sonet, Maruti Baleno, Maruti Fronx, and Toyota Taisor. I’m inclined toward the Taisor — which of these would you recommend for mileage, comfort, and safety?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
16w

If you like the Toyota Urban Cruiser Taisor then you should definitely go for it as it's a well-sorted car. 

The Taisor has a spacious and comfy cabin, and it comes with 6 airbags as standard. The 1.2-litre naturally aspirated petrol engine is frugal too. Toyota Taisor mileage with the manual gearbox is 21.71kpl and a higher 22.79kpl with the AMT automatic (claimed).

Toyota Urban Cruiser Taisor

Toyota Urban Cruiser Taisor

Got a suggestion for PRATEEK?

Add a Comment

Related questions you may find helpful

NP

nithin pm

3d

My budget is around ₹10.5 lakh (± ₹50,000). My monthly running is approximately 400 km, and I prefer a petrol car with a city mileage of around 11-14 km/l. I have analysed the Mahindra XUV 3XO, Hyundai Venue, Maruti Suzuki Fronx, and Toyota Taisor. I am also expecting good resale value. Please suggest the best option.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1d

Of your shortlisted cars, the Maruti Suzuki Fronx (or its equivalent, the Toyota Taisor) makes the most sense. In your budget of Rs 10-11 lakh, you get a choice of a 1.2-litre petrol engine or a 1.0-litre turbo-petrol engine. While the 1.2 is more than sufficient, we would recommend the Turbo for its additional pep, with little penalty to mileage and running costs. Unless driven with an overly heavy foot, it should easily meet your target of 11-14kpl. Maruti vehicles are also great when it comes to resale value, with some of the best long-term residual values on the market. The next best bet is the Hyundai Venue, which is more spacious and comfortable, but it won't be as good as the Maruti when it comes to mileage or resale value.

VehicleMaruti Suzuki Fronx
VehicleToyota Urban Cruiser Taisor
VehicleHyundai Venue
HG

Harshvardhan Gupta

2d

My daily running is 170km on busy highways and around 4000km per month. Right now, I have an Elite i20 petrol with an aftermarket CNG kit, and I spend ₹600 daily. Now I want to upgrade my car to something over 4 metres. Kindly suggest a car with high mileage, good safety, and features. I have looked at the CNG variants of Grand Vitara, Hyryder, Victoris, and Brezza.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1h

The Maruti Suzuki Victoris CNG is a solid choice for your needs. It is economical and suitable for longer trips, has underbody-mounted CNG tanks that do not hamper boot space, and the higher variants are very well equipped.While the Grand Vitara, Hyryder, Brezza and Victoris all use the same 1.5-litre naturally aspirated engine with factory-fitted CNG, the Victoris is the only one with dual underbody-mounted tanks, which means it offers better boot space than the others. One drawback is that it does not come with a spare wheel as standard, which is instead offered as an accessory. The Victoris is also more feature-rich than other Maruti models. Compared to the Grand Vitara, it gets a larger touchscreen, a fully digital instrument cluster and Level 2 ADAS. It has also scored five stars in the Bharat NCAP crash tests.If you are on a budget, then consider the Tata Punch CNG, which uses dual tanks and has a more usable boot than the Brezza.On the test drive, drive at steady highway speeds and attempt an overtake to see if you are satisfied with the performance.

VehicleMaruti Suzuki Victoris
VehicleMaruti Suzuki Grand Vitara
VehicleToyota Urban Cruiser Hyryder
VehicleTata Punch
NI

Nipen

1w

Please share your views on the best car for city driving between the Kia Seltos HTK(O) CVT and the new Kushaq facelift automatic. My average daily drive is around 40km in the city.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
16h

Go for the Kia Seltos HTK(O) IVT (CVT) for city duty. With 40 km of daily driving, it’s the smoother choice that keeps stop‑go fatigue low.Given 40 km a day (about 1,200 km/month) in traffic, the IVT’s step‑less delivery feels calmer at 10-25kph, avoiding the small 1–2-3 shifts the new 8-speed AT makes. That means fewer throttle corrections, fewer head nods, and easier gaps. The naturally aspirated engine’s linear response makes speed‑breakers and U‑turns smoother.The one thing you give up is mid‑range punch. The Kushaq’s turbo feels stronger for quick gaps above 40kph and feels livelier if you enjoy brisk 60-100kph bursts.If you prioritise a smaller footprint and a stronger mid‑range for quick overtakes, consider the Skoda Kushaq 1.0 TSI Ambition AT.On test drives, do a 0-20 kph crawl and a basement-ramp start. Compare creep, throttle-tip-in, hill‑hold smoothness, and steering effort at parking speeds in both cars.

VehicleKia Seltos
VehicleSkoda Kushaq

Posted on: 7 Dec 2025