Autocar India

Last Updated on: 10 Jun 2026

Hyundai Verna

Hyundai Verna price in Darjeeling

₹12.76 - ₹21.19 Lakh
On road price in
EMI starting at ₹30,730 /month

The Hyundai Verna on road price in Longleng ranges from ₹12.25 lakh for the base model to ₹20.24 lakh for the top variant (including all taxes, RTO fees, and insurance). In comparison, the Verna price range in Longleng is between ₹10.99 lakh and ₹18.26 lakh. 

Check out the Hyundai Verna on road price for all variants in Longleng below.

Hyundai Verna Pricing by Variants

HX2 Petrol MT1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
Price Breakdown
Ex-showroom Price
₹10,99,200
RTO (Individual)
₹1,09,920
Insurance
₹54,960
Other Charges
₹11,592
Hypothecation Charges
₹0

On road price in Longleng₹12,75,672 *
Want to take a loan?
EMI starting at ₹18,502 /month

* Estimated on-road price. Final amount may vary.

HX4 Petrol MT1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹14.23 LakhOn road price, Longleng
HX6 Petrol MT1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹15.32 LakhOn road price, Longleng
HX6+ Petrol MT1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹16.04 LakhOn road price, Longleng
HX6 Petrol CVT1497 cc | Petrol | CVT
₹16.72 LakhOn road price, Longleng
HX8 Petrol MT1497 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹17.28 LakhOn road price, Longleng
HX6+ Petrol CVT1497 cc | Petrol | CVT
₹17.44 LakhOn road price, Longleng
HX8 Petrol CVT1497 cc | Petrol | CVT
₹18.68 LakhOn road price, Longleng
HX8 Turbo Petrol MT1482 cc | Petrol | Manual
₹18.90 LakhOn road price, Longleng
HX10 Petrol CVT1497 cc | Petrol | CVT
₹19.91 LakhOn road price, Longleng

Hyundai Verna Booking & Test Drive - User Reviews

Tell us about your experience

Hyundai Verna Official Brochure

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

Hyundai Verna Images

Front Right Three Quarter Image - 33413
Front Bumper Image - 33411
Touch Screen Infotainment System Image - 33406
Power Steering Image - 33412
Front Row Seat Image - 33409
Rear Bumper Image - 33414
Alloy Wheels Image - 33407
Atlas White color Image - 33429
Atlas White Dual Tone color Image - 33430
Classy Blue color Image - 33431
Starry Night color Image - 33432
Titan Grey color Image - 33433
Titan Grey Matte color Image - 33434
Titanium Black color Image - 33435
Airbags Image - 33408
Crash Sensor Image - 33410

Hyundai Verna videos

Hyundai Verna FAQs

The Verna base model price (HX2 Petrol MT) in Longleng is ₹10.99 lakh, ex-showroom.
 

The Hyundai Verna base model on road price in Longleng is ₹12.25 lakh.
 

The Verna top model price (HX10 Turbo Petrol DCT) in Longleng is ₹18.26 lakh, ex-showroom.
 

The top-spec (HX10 Turbo Petrol DCT) Hyundai Verna on road price in Longleng is ₹20.24 lakh.
 

The Verna price in Longleng starts from Rs 10.99 lakh to Rs 18.26 lakh ex-showroom price.

In Longleng, The Verna on road price starts from Rs 12.25 lakh to Rs 20.24 lakh.

The Verna automatic price in Longleng starts from Rs 14.40 lakh for (Hyundai Verna HX6 Petrol CVT) variant to Rs 18.26 lakh for (Hyundai Verna HX10 Turbo Petrol DCT) variant (ex-showroom price).

Need an expert opinion on your car related queries?

Questions you may find useful

KS

krishna singhal

2d

​Hey everyone, I would like your advice on restructuring my three-car garage in anticipation of a significant increase in my monthly running. I am based in Bangalore, and my current line-up is as follows: ​Audi A6 (2020) | 35,000 km driven that is used primarily for highways and family outings. It’s a brilliant machine but honestly feels highly underutilized. ​Innova Crysta GX (2019) | 1.5L km driven: The ultimate workhorse. Runs 1,500 km monthly. Split between office commutes, airport runs, and big family trips. ​Hyundai Verna (2023) | 25k km driven: Primarily used as the daily home or city runabout. ​My confusion is that from next month, my personal running will jump significantly to 2,500 km per month. Doing this in Bangalore traffic (plus routine family weekend trips) means fuel costs and driving fatigue are going to skyrocket. I want to bring an EV or a solid Plug-in Hybrid (PHEV) , but I’m considering following: ​Option 1: Replace the Audi A6 with a Premium Luxury EV. Since the A6 is not being used much, I am planning to sell it and get a high-end luxury EV (like a BMW iX1, iX3, or BYD Seal/Sealion 7) to absorb the entire 2,500 km monthly grind and family outings. ​Option 2: Retire the workhorse Innova. It has done 1.5 lakh km and I could replace it and the Audi to go for a two-EV garage, or grab a premium electric 7-seater to take over its duties. ​Option 3: Hold onto the current garage and just add one. Keep all three and buy a new mid-to-premium electric SUV like Tata Harrier EV, Mahindra XEV 9e / XEV 9S, or wait for the upcoming BYD DM-i Plug-in Hybrids. ​With 2,500 km of monthly driving entirely in Bangalore and surrounding highways, what is the smartest financial and experiential move here? Sell the underutilized luxury sedan, upgrade the high-mileage workhorse, or just expand the garage? ​Would love to hear your thoughts, especially on real-world reliability, battery degradation at high mileage, and how the current crop of premium EVs handle Bangalore's notorious infrastructure

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1d

Since the Audi A6 is the most under utilised, it makes sense to sell it and get an EV instead. Among your choices, the BYD Sealion 7 2WD gets you the biggest battery, which should deliver a real-world range of around 450km. Your fuel spend and fatigue will drop sharply thanks to smooth one-pedal driving and strong regeneration in stop-go traffic. The Sealion 7’s SUV stance and ride, cope better with Bengaluru’s roads than a low-slung sedan, and fast chargers in the city are now easy to find, while a home wallbox will be your primary charger.Keep the Innova Crysta. At 1.5 lakh km, it is still the most stress-free way to haul six people and luggage. With the EV becoming your new primary, it wont rack up the kms as quickly, but its worth keeping around as an alternative for trips where you don't want to plan ahead for charging. The Verna can stay as the spare city tool.On reliability and batteries, BYD’s Blade LFP battery pack has a good record. BYD also offers a pretty long warranty and the option to extend to 8 years/250k kms. The only real trade-off with the BYD is its smaller dealer network and slightly higher road and wind noise at highway speeds. A BMW iX1 is nicer inside and carries the badge, but it's cabin is tighter, has a smaller boot, and you will pay more for less usable range. Alternatively, you can also consider the Hyundai Ioniq 5 - its 84kWh is the largest in the segment, its cabin is premium and it is very nice to drive. Hyundai's network is also larger than BYD's which helps.

VehicleBMW iX1 LWB
VehicleAudi A6
VehicleToyota Innova Crysta
VehicleHyundai Verna
KD

KD

5d

I currently own a Honda Jazz and am looking for an upgrade. My confusion is between the Hyundai Verna 1.5 NA MT HX6 Plus and the Kia Seltos HTK, the latter being my wife's choice. My running will be around 5,000-6,000 km per year. I did a test drive of both cars. I was sceptical about the Verna's ground clearance, but I drove it over bad patches and large speed breakers, and it did not scrape at all. The overall ride also felt smoother in the Verna than in the Seltos. My only concern is whether ground clearance will become an issue when travelling with luggage on longer trips. While the Seltos interior looks more modern, the Verna variant lacks some features found in the Seltos HTK Plus.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
4d

Pick the Verna 1.5 manual. You already prefer its smoother ride, and with just 5-6k km a year, the extra height of the Seltos will not make much difference.Your ground-clearance worry is fair, but it should not be a deal-breaker. The Hyundai Verna clears most big speed breakers if you go slow, and its boot is larger than the Seltos, so you can take more luggage. Even when loaded, it will be fine on regular highways and town roads. It only becomes tricky with five adults, a fully stuffed boot, and broken village tracks. Slow down and take tall breakers a bit diagonally, and it won’t scrape.The Verna HX6 Plus also gives you more of the useful kit you noticed missing on the Seltos HTK, and the sedan will feel more engaging to drive. It will also be more fuel-efficient.Do note that if you or your parents value easy step-in height and an elevated driving position, the Kia Seltos suits that better. But for comfort, features and your actual use, the Verna is the smarter upgrade from a Jazz.

VehicleHyundai Verna
VehicleKia Seltos
MD

Max D

2w

I am planning to buy a sedan, despite most people today preferring SUVs. I am considering the Hyundai Verna HX10 IVT and the Volkswagen Virtus 1.5 DSG. Since I would be spending around Rs 20 lakh on either of these cars, I wanted to know whether sedans still make sense given Indian road conditions. Are roads improving enough to justify buying a sedan again, or should one still stick to SUVs? I also noticed that a similarly equipped SUV as the Creta costs around Rs 3-4 lakh more. Is this premium justified, or is it better to save the money and buy a sedan instead?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1w

Sedans absolutely make sense. Road quality in most cities has improved enough that a modern sedan’s clearance handles regular bumps and broken patches fine. You'd buy an SUV mainly for the road presence and higher seating position, and these days, very few offer AWD or specialised off-road hardware. If your daily commute has absolutely broken roads, steep speed breakers or is prone to flooding, that extra 10-20mm of ground clearance will help. Or if you have elderly passengers for whom getting into and out of a sedan is difficult. If not, you are paying Rs 3-4 lakh more for the feel-good factor rather than any tangible benefit.Pick the Hyundai Verna IVT. For your mostly urban Indian driving and on a Rs 20 lakh budget, it is smoother to drive, easier to live with, and cheaper to run. The automatic is smooth in traffic, the ride is comfortable, and there is no long-term worry around heat-and-traffic wear that the Volkswagen Virtus 1.5 with its quick but complex gearbox can throw up. The Virtus is the driver’s car here - stronger on highways and more fun in corners - but it can stretch past your budget on-road, and repairs aren’t cheap if things go wrong.

VehicleHyundai Verna
VehicleVolkswagen Virtus
Can't decide which car to buy?
Ask our experts and get answers to all your car related queries.