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Last Updated on: 05 Jun 2026

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Hyundai Creta price in Koraput

Autocar score
9
₹12.70 - ₹23.10 Lakh
On road price, Koraput
Koraput
Starting₹18,342 /month
EMI calculator

The Creta on road price in Koraput ranges from Rs 12.70 lakh for the base model to Rs 23.10 lakh for the top variant (including all taxes, RTO fees, and insurance). In comparison, the ex-showroom prices of Creta in Koraput are between Rs 10.91 lakh and Rs 19.95 lakh.

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Hyundai Creta price & variants

VariantsOn road price
Hyundai Creta Petrol E MT
1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹12.70 Lakh
Airbags
Driver height adjustable seat
Parking sensors
Rear passenger adjustable seats
Adjustable ORVM
Hyundai Creta Petrol EX MT
1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹14.03 Lakh
Airbags
Integrated (in-dash) music system
Touch screen infotainment system
GPS navigation system
Steering mounted controls
Hyundai Creta Petrol EX(O) MT
1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹15.27 Lakh
Sunroof
Airbags
Integrated (in-dash) music system
Touch screen infotainment system
GPS navigation system
Hyundai Creta Diesel EX MT
1493 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹15.86 Lakh
Airbags
Integrated (in-dash) music system
Touch screen infotainment system
GPS navigation system
Steering mounted controls
Hyundai Creta Petrol S(O) MT
1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹16.49 Lakh
Cruise control
Sunroof
Keyless start
Airbags
Dual zone climate control
Hyundai Creta Petrol S(O) Knight MT
1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹16.71 Lakh
Cruise control
Sunroof
Keyless start
Airbags
Dual zone climate control
Hyundai Creta Petrol EX(O) CVT
1497 cc | Petrol | CVT
₹16.83 Lakh
Sunroof
Airbags
Integrated (in-dash) music system
Touch screen infotainment system
GPS navigation system
Hyundai Creta Diesel EX(O) MT
1493 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹17.10 Lakh
Sunroof
Airbags
Integrated (in-dash) music system
Touch screen infotainment system
GPS navigation system
Most bought
Hyundai Creta Petrol SX MT
1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹17.46 Lakh
Ambient interior lighting
Cruise control
Sunroof
Keyless start
Airbags
Hyundai Creta Petrol S(O) CVT
1497 cc | Petrol | CVT
₹18.16 Lakh
Electronic parking brake
Cruise control
Sunroof
Keyless start
Airbags
Hyundai Creta Diesel S(O) MT
1493 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹18.38 Lakh
Cruise control
Sunroof
Keyless start
Airbags
Dual zone climate control
Hyundai Creta Diesel S(O) Knight MT
1493 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹18.59 Lakh
Cruise control
Sunroof
Keyless start
Airbags
Dual zone climate control
Hyundai Creta Diesel EX(O) AT
1493 cc | Diesel | Torque Converter
₹18.65 Lakh
Sunroof
Airbags
Integrated (in-dash) music system
Touch screen infotainment system
GPS navigation system
Hyundai Creta Petrol SX Premium MT
1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹18.95 Lakh
Ambient interior lighting
Cruise control
Ventilated seats
Sunroof
Keyless start
Hyundai Creta Petrol King MT
1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹20.03 Lakh
Driver fatigue alert
Electronic parking brake
360 view camera
Ambient interior lighting
Cruise control
Hyundai Creta Diesel S(O) AT
1493 cc | Diesel | Torque Converter
₹20.05 Lakh
Electronic parking brake
Cruise control
Sunroof
Keyless start
Airbags
Autocar's pick
Hyundai Creta Petrol SX Premium CVT
1497 cc | Petrol | CVT
₹20.61 Lakh
Electronic parking brake
Ambient interior lighting
Cruise control
Ventilated seats
Sunroof
Hyundai Creta Diesel SX Premium MT
1493 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹20.77 Lakh
Ambient interior lighting
Cruise control
Ventilated seats
Sunroof
Keyless start
Hyundai Creta Petrol King CVT
1497 cc | Petrol | CVT
₹21.65 Lakh
Driver fatigue alert
Electronic parking brake
360 view camera
Adaptive cruise control
Ambient interior lighting
Hyundai Creta Petrol King Knight CVT
1497 cc | Petrol | CVT
₹21.81 Lakh
Driver fatigue alert
Electronic parking brake
360 view camera
Adaptive cruise control
Ambient interior lighting
Hyundai Creta N Line N10 Turbo Petrol MT
1482 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹22.04 Lakh
Electronic parking brake
360 view camera
Ambient interior lighting
Cruise control
Ventilated seats
Hyundai Creta Turbo Petrol King DCT
1482 cc | Petrol | DCT
₹23.06 Lakh
Driver fatigue alert
Electronic parking brake
360 view camera
Adaptive cruise control
Ambient interior lighting
Hyundai Creta N Line N10 Turbo Petrol DCT
1482 cc | Petrol | DCT
₹23.10 Lakh
Electronic parking brake
360 view camera
Adaptive cruise control
Ambient interior lighting
Cruise control

Hyundai Creta User Reviews

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Hyundai Dealers in Koraput

Planning to buy Creta? Here are a few dealers in Koraput

HSPL Hyundai - Similiguda

NH-26, Gopabandhu Nagar, Near Union Bank, Semiliguda, Koraput, Odisha 764036

10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

8144920625

crm@hspl.co.in , crm@hspl.co.in

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Hyundai Creta Official Brochure

Download the complete brochure with specs, features, and variants.

Hyundai Creta Images

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Hyundai Creta videos

Hyundai Creta FAQs

The base model of Hyundai Creta (Petrol E MT) price in Koraput is ₹10.91 lakh, ex-showroom.
 

The base-spec (Petrol E MT) Hyundai Creta on road price in Koraput is ₹12.70 lakh.
 

The Hyundai Creta (Diesel S(O) Knight MT) price in Koraput is ₹16.03 lakh ex-showroom.
 

The Creta top model (N Line N10 Turbo Petrol DCT) price in Koraput is ₹19.95 lakh ex-showroom.
 

The Hyundai Creta top model on road price in Koraput is ₹23.10 lakh.
 

The Creta price in Koraput starts from Rs 10.91 lakh to Rs 19.95 lakh ex-showroom

The on road price of Creta starts from Rs 12.70 lakh and goes upto Rs 23.10 lakh.

The Creta diesel price in Koraput starts from Rs 12.40 lakh (Hyundai Creta Diesel E MT) ex-showroom price.

The Creta automatic price in Koraput starts Rs 13.94 lakh (Hyundai Creta Petrol EX(O) CVT) ex-showroom price.

In Koraput, The price of Creta with sunroof starts from Rs 12.58 lakh (Hyundai Creta Petrol EX(O) MT) ex-showroom price.

The Creta on road price starts from Rs 12.70 lakh and goes upto Rs 23.10 lakh.

The on road price of Hyundai Creta base model is Rs 12.70 lakh depending on the city and taxes.

The Creta top model on road price is Rs 23.10 lakh depending on the city and taxes.

Need an expert opinion on your car related queries?

Questions you may find useful

AN

Arnav Nagar

21h

Hi, We want to buy a new SUV. We have selected some of the options between Siera and Creta. Our budget is between 16 and 16.50 lakhs. Firstly, we are going for the Sierra Pure Plus because it is new, but later we found out that its engine is the worst in this segment. So, we decided to go for the diesel variant of Sierra Pure, comprising the sunroof and also my dad wants a new design, actually Sierra's design. So what should we do, go for the Creta or the Sierra diesel? In Creta, we got almost all features. Our mostly drive is in highway, we take trips every four months, long trips like 1000km.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1h

Pick the Hyundai Creta diesel. For your kind of use - mostly highway and 1,000 km trips every few months - Hyundai’s diesel is relaxed, efficient and already proven, so you get long range and low-stress cruising. You also said the Creta gives you almost all the features you want within Rs. 16-16.5 lakh, which keeps the maths clean, and this is something you will enjoy each time you use your car. The Tata Sierra looks fresh, and your dad will love the design, but the diesel with a sunroof will likely sit well above your budget.Creta’s seats and ride are sorted for long runs, and Hyundai’s network makes life easier on the road. You do give up the Sierra’s stand-out look and bigger road presence, so if design is your number one goal and you can stretch the budget and accept potential first-batch rough edges, go Sierra. Otherwise, Creta diesel is the smarter highway pick.

VehicleHyundai Creta
VehicleTata Sierra
SA

Sabya

4d

We're a family of three. I'm looking for a reliable petrol automatic with high safety, good fuel efficiency, E20 compliance, ADAS features, and all the modern equipment expected in a B- or C-segment car. A strong hybrid would be preferred, although options are limited. My budget is ideally under Rs 20 lakh on-road, with a maximum stretch to Rs 25 lakh. Running will be 30% city and 70% highway. Future-proofing is important, and while E20 compliance is essential, I am also interested in vehicles that may be compatible with future E30 fuel blends. Please suggest at least three models.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1d

Our first recommendation would be the Kia Seltos 1.5 petrol automatic. With 70% highway driving, you will appreciate its comprehensive ADAS suite with adaptive cruise control and lane-keeping assistance. It also has a 5-star Bharat NCAP safety rating, a wide service network, and you’ll get the full spread of modern features inside your budget. The honest catch is that the automatic is tuned for calm progress, not thrills. The honest catch is that the automatic is tuned for calm progress, not thrills.The Hyundai Creta 1.5 petrol automatic lands very close. It matches the features and ADAS you want, rides a touch softer for family comfort, and Hyundai’s service reach is the strongest. Highway economy is similar to the Seltos, and it is E20-ready.The Honda Elevate is a strong choice, too, giving you ADAS and a very easy drive. It also offers slightly quicker performance than the above two. It stays within your price range and is proven on long runs.All three are E20-compliant. No mainstream brand here officially guarantees E30 yet, so that is the one future-proofing gap today.

VehicleKia Seltos
VehicleHyundai Creta
VehicleHonda Elevate
NI

Nitish

1w

Hello Team, I am looking forward to buying a car, probably a mid-sized SUV. I am presently driving a WagonR and occasionally a Tata Punch and i20. The cars in my mind are Creta, Seltos, Kushaq, Taigun and Elevate. I mostly drive within the city (Hyderabad and Mumbai) and 1-2 long drives per month. I am looking for an all-rounder vehicle which gives me a good driving experience, efficiency and accommodates a family of 4-5. I have gone through all vehicles, but couldn't decide on one( planning to test drive all vehicles soon). I also heard that Creta and Elevate are getting an upgrade/facelift by the end of this year. Should I wait for them to decide or go ahead with these? Looking forward for expert opinion.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
5d

Buy the Kia Seltos; it hits your mix of big-city commuting in Hyderabad/Mumbai, and 1-2 highway runs a month better than the others. The 1.5 petrol with the automatic is easy in traffic, returns sensible mileage, and the light controls make it a painless jump from the Maruti Suzuki Wagon R. Cabin space and boot are genuinely family-friendly for 4-5 with luggage, and higher trims add city-friendly kit like the 360 camera and ventilated seats that you will actually use in summer. The only real trade-off is a slightly firm low-speed ride, and that top trims can stretch the budget.The Hyundai Creta is a close second if you prefer a softer, comfier feel. The Skoda Kushaq and Volkswagen Taigun are the most fun to drive, but the rear seat and boot are tighter for five. The Honda Elevate is simple and efficient, but it feels a step behind on features.About waiting: the next-gen Hyundai Creta is expected early next year. Test mules have been spotted in India, which usually means it is in the final testing stages. It will move to the current Seltos K3 platform, which should mean a roomier cabin. It will also feature a new design language and a significantly improved interior. It's worth remembering that new launches are frequently delayed, and it's hard to be certain until an official confirmation from Hyundai. If you need a car soon, then get the Seltos now.

VehicleKia Seltos
VehicleMaruti Suzuki Wagon R
VehicleHyundai Creta
VehicleSkoda Kushaq
VehicleVolkswagen Taigun
BV

Bharath VS

1w

I am looking to buy an SUV with a budget of Rs 17 lakh and have shortlisted the Hyundai Creta S(O) Summer Edition with the 1.5 NA petrol manual. However, I am worried that the mileage will be too low. Should I increase my budget and go for the diesel instead? Also, what precautions should I take if I choose the diesel considering DPF-related issues? My colleagues say the Creta has an AdBlue tank, so there will not be any DPF issues and that these problems are mainly for cars without AdBlue. Is that correct? Please guide me.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1w

Stick with the Hyundai Creta 1.5 petrol S(O) manual unless you regularly do long highway runs and rack up 1,500-2,000 km a month. In typical city-heavy use, the petrol will do about 10-12 kpl in traffic and 14-16 kpl on open roads, which is fine for your budget and avoids diesel complexity. The diesel costs more to buy and only pays back if you cover roughly 60,000 km or more; its real-world is about 13-15 kpl in city and 18-21 kpl on highways.Your colleagues are mixing things up. AdBlue and DPF are different. AdBlue (SCR) cuts NOx. The DPF traps soot. The Creta diesel has a DPF either way, and AdBlue does not prevent DPF clogging. DPF trouble pops up with short, stop-start city use.If you truly need the diesel, it’s manageable with a few habits: do a 15-20 minute steady-speed drive every week or two, don’t shut the engine mid active-regen, use good fuel, and avoid chronic short hops and idling. You will also need to top up AdBlue occasionally.

VehicleHyundai Creta
HA

Harshit

1w

Hi, I am planning to buy either the Hyundai Creta or the Hyundai Alcazar. My monthly running is around 1,200-1,500 km. This includes around 5–7 trips per month between Noida and Gurgaon, along with two highway trips every month of approximately 500 km each. Could you please suggest which fuel type would be the better option for my usage pattern - petrol or diesel?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1w

Since your usage isn’t particularly high, and considering the 10-year diesel vehicle restriction in the Delhi-NCR region, we’d recommend opting for a petrol-powered model.The Hyundai Creta’s 1.5-litre naturally aspirated petrol engine is smooth, refined and feels adequate for city driving, but it lacks the effortless performance of the turbo-petrol on highways. In fact, out on the open road, the turbo-petrol is also likely to be more fuel efficient.Hyundai has limited the Creta turbo-DCT to a single variant priced at Rs 20.05 lakh, or you have to opt for the Creta N Line, which is priced between Rs 17.83 lakh and Rs 21.21 lakh. Interestingly, the Hyundai Alcazar turbo-petrol engine with either a 6-speed manual or 7-speed dual-clutch automatic is available across a broad price range of Rs 14.50 lakh-21.20 lakh (ex-showroom). Overall, the Hyundai Alcazar scores over the Creta not just because of its three-row seating, but also due to its added practicality. When not in use, the third row can be folded down to free up a large luggage area, giving the Alcazar a clear versatility advantage. As a family car, it is therefore the more sensible choice.

VehicleHyundai Creta
VehicleHyundai Alcazar
VK

Vihaan Kumar

1w

​Dear Auto Experts, ​I need a merciless, data-backed verdict to complete my garage. Around 3 months ago, I sold my Toyota Fortuner Legender 4x2 (which was just 2 years and 9 months old) because I grew highly frustrated with its hard steering and lack of modern tech features, specifically ADAS. ​To replace it, I purchased a Mahindra Thar Roxx AX7L Diesel Automatic 4x2 a month ago. However, I only plan to drive it 2 days a week. Additionally, my wife purchased a Mahindra Thar Roxx MX1 Manual last year in November. ​I am now looking to finance another vehicle via an auto loan, with a budget of Rs. 18 Lakh to Rs. 28 Lakh. This new vehicle will be used for rough-and-tough regular city driving 3 to 4 days a week in heavy traffic. It will also serve as the primary vehicle for occasional long highway trips with my family. ​My Strict Requirements include: ​Status & Road Presence: This is non-negotiable. Even though it is my 3-to-4-day city vehicle, it must command road respect and serve as a status symbol, while offering the light steering and ADAS tech my Fortuner lacked. ​Fuel & Transmission: Diesel Automatic is preferred, but I am very open to considering Strong Hybrids (especially the upcoming generation of high-efficiency models). I can manage DPF requirements without issue if going with diesel. ​Ownership Cycle: I do not hold onto cars for long; my replacement cycle is strictly 3 to 4 years. ​End Goal: Exceptionally high resale value. I need a vehicle that second-hand dealers can easily flip to out-of-state buyers for a premium when I am ready to sell, clear the loan, and upgrade. ​Dealbreakers: Absolutely no to Toyota HyCross (my family finds it bulky, dated, and associated with the taxi segment). No Toyota Urban Cruiser Hyryder (I strictly avoid the Maruti-shared build quality). No grey or silver exterior colors. ​My Shortlist (That I can buy now): ​Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7L Diesel AT: It solves the steering and ADAS issues perfectly and commands massive road respect. However, considering I just bought a Thar Roxx AX7L and my wife owns a Thar Roxx MX1, do you think that buying a third Mahindra vehicle for the family will be a logical and financially sound move? ​Kia Seltos GTX / X-Line Diesel AT (New 2026 K3 Platform): It offers the modern platform and tech that I need, but does a mid-size SUV command elite resale value and "status symbol" respect? (Note: I am highly hesitant about this option, as I have seen a lot of cons and complaints regarding it on YouTube ownership reviews). ​Hyundai Venue HX10 Diesel AT (2026): Fits easily at the bottom of the budget, but it likely lacks the sheer road presence, status factor, and highway dominance I need compared to larger SUVs. ​Or Should I Wait For Upcoming Hybrids/Updates (2026-2027): ​Toyota RAV4 Hybrid (Rumored to arrive in India in late 2026. Is it worth waiting for and potentially stretching my budget, or will it be overpriced?) ​Upcoming K3 Platform Hyundai Creta Strong Hybrid. ​Next-Gen Toyota Fortuner (ADAS / Mild Hybrid) or Toyota Land Cruiser FJ. ​Mahindra Vision S. ​Given my strict 3-4 year ownership cycle, the demand for top-tier resale value and road respect, the fact that I will be financing this purchase, and the specific dual-use case (rough regular city driving + occasional family highway cruiser), which exact car and variant should I finalize today? Or does waiting make actual financial sense for my cycle? ​Thank you for your definitive and merciless verdict. Vihaan Kumar

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1w

The XUV 7XO AX7L Diesel AT is the cleanest fit for your requirement today, and frankly, none of the other current options line up as well with the exact brief you have laid out.The fact that you already own two Mahindra cars is not necessarily a negative from a financial point of view either, because right now Mahindra SUVs have some of the strongest demand and resale momentum in the market. In fact, from a resale perspective over a 3 to 4 year ownership cycle, the 7XO is probably the safest bet in your shortlist. It also solves the exact frustrations you had with the Fortuner by offering much lighter controls, modern ADAS tech and a far more feature rich experience while still maintaining proper SUV presence.The new Seltos diesel AT is a very polished product and will likely feel more premium inside, but you have already identified the key issue yourself. It still feels like a size smaller in terms of sheer road presence and overall “status factor” compared to something like the 7XO.The Venue diesel AT should not even be in this discussion. It may be sensible, but it does not deliver the sense of occasion, size or highway authority you are clearly looking for.As for waiting, the upcoming Creta and Seltos strong hybrids expected next year will make sense from an efficiency perspective, but they will still fundamentally remain mid size SUVs. The RAV4 Hybrid is not even a confirmed India launch yet, and even if Toyota does bring it here, expect it to be priced aggressively high because it will almost certainly come in as a CKD or CBU initially. By the time it lands on road, it could sit far beyond the sweet spot you are targeting today.So the verdict is simple: buy the XUV 7XO AX7L Diesel AT now. It is the one that best balances presence, tech, ease of use and resale value over your intended ownership cycle.

VehicleMahindra XUV 7XO
VehicleToyota Fortuner
VehicleKia Seltos
VehicleHyundai Venue
VehicleHyundai Creta
TH

Tharan

1w

I currently own a Maruti Suzuki Swift that has done around 130,000 km, and I’ve loved driving it. I’m now planning to upgrade to a petrol manual SUV with a budget of around Rs. 25 lakh. We are a family of 4, and my usage is roughly 70% city and 30% highway. I have an opportunity to buy a Volkswagen Taigun GT Plus Sport 1.5 TSI MT for around ₹28 lakh from a dealer. Automatic is a strict no because my son is learning to drive, and a manual would be good for that Should I go ahead with it? Is it a good upgrade considering my usage and preferences?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1w

With 70 percent city use, some highway trips, a family of four, and a strict manual requirement, the Volkswagen Taigun GT Plus Sport 1.5 TSI manual is a good upgrade from your Maruti Suzuki Swift. However, the manual transmission on the 1.5 TSI was discontinued earlier this year and has not returned with the recent facelift. This means the car you are considering is a pre-facelift version that may have been sitting at the dealer for a while. Moreover, Rs 28 lakh also seems very steep, as the last recorded on-road price of the 1.5 GT Plus Sport MT in Chennai, as per our records, was around Rs 22-23 lakh. Haggle hard if you proceed, do a very thorough pre-delivery inspection, and push for an extended warranty.As for the vehicle itself, the 1.5 petrol with the manual is an excellent choice. It feels quick and smooth, pulls cleanly from low speeds so you do not have to shift constantly in traffic, and has strong performance for safe highway overtakes. It is not too big for city lanes, the higher seating position improves visibility, and it feels stable at speed. Cabin quality and the overall safety focus are clear steps up from your Swift.Two things to note for your usage: the clutch is heavier than your Swift’s, and fuel consumption and upkeep costs will be noticeably higher.Alternatively, you could consider the Hyundai Creta N Line manual or the Renault Duster 1.3 manual, both of which are great options for keen drivers.

VehicleVolkswagen Taigun
VehicleMaruti Suzuki Swift
VehicleHyundai Creta
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