Autocar India
VE

VENUGOPAL

1d

I want a car/SUV with similar strength, road grip, and overall feel as the Ford Figo Diesel 1.5 Titanium TDCi, with an on-road budget of Rs 12-14 lakh in Kochi.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
16m
You should consider the Skoda Kylaq Prestige MT for your needs.
Like your Ford Figo diesel, the Kylaq has impressive ride and handling balance, and it feels sure-footed on the move. The suspension handles bad patches well, and it stays steady at high speeds. The 115hp, 1.0-litre turbo petrol engine is also punchy, much like the Figo diesel's, and it comes paired with a slick 6-speed manual gearbox. The Kylaq has even received a full, 5-star crash safety rating from Bharat NCAP.
Do note, though, the Kylaq won't have the same low-end grunt like the Figo diesel, and it won't be as efficient either. If you still wish for a torquey diesel engine in a hatchback, go for the Tata Altroz Accomplished S.
Skoda Kylaq

Skoda Kylaq

More questions on similar cars

HF

HK Falguni

3d

We are planning to buy the Skoda Kylaq as we love the handling and drive, but is the engine compliant with E25-E28? Are the petrol pumps and injectors good enough to support them? What should a car buyer like us decide right now, especially when looking to buy a vehicle in the Rs 10-15 lakh range? Considering we have been using a VW Polo prior to this, should we delay the buying?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
2d

If you are coming from a VW Polo and are considering the Skoda Kylaq largely because of how it drives, we completely understand the appeal. It is one of the few compact SUVs in this price bracket that still carries that solid, European driving feel that Polo owners tend to appreciate.The ethanol question is valid, though, especially with the recent discussion around E25 fuel compatibility. As things stand, the Kylaq’s 1.0 TSI is E20 compliant, which means it is fully compatible with the current fuel ecosystem. The recent move to study how E25 affects existing E10 and E20 compliant cars simply tells us that the next phase is still being evaluated rather than finalised.The practical reality is that if India eventually moves meaningfully beyond E20, it is unlikely to be a sudden switch where current petrol owners are left stranded. Beyond a certain ethanol blend, manufacturers would need proper flex-fuel compatible engines, and the transition would almost certainly involve continued availability of lower-blend fuels for existing vehicles. Governments cannot realistically force an overnight incompatibility for millions of current petrol cars.So should a buyer delay a purchase today because of this? We would say no. If you keep waiting for complete certainty, there will always be another policy shift, EV push or emissions update around the corner.

VehicleSkoda Kylaq

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Posted on: 27 May 2026