Autocar India

Last Updated on: 02 Jul 2026

JSW Motors Jetour T2

JSW Motors Jetour T2 price in Mumbai

₹45.42 Lakh
On road price in
EMI starting at ₹65,804 /month
JSW Motors Jetour T2 Launch Date
2026

JSW Motors Jetour T2 On Road Price by Variants

PHEV1499 cc | Petrol-Electric Hybrid | Auto
₹45.42 LakhExpected Price
₹65,804 /month

JSW Motors Jetour T2 Booking & Test Drive - User Reviews

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JSW Motors Jetour T2 Images

Front View Image - 32029
Front Right Three Quarter Image - 32031
Rear View Image - 32026
Front Right Three Quarter Image - 32035
Alloy Wheels Image - 32028
Front View Image - 32027
Front Left Three Quarter Image - 32033
Rear View Image - 32030
Dashboard Image - 32034
Sunroof Image - 32032

Questions you may find useful

2w

Dear Autocar experts, I have tentatively decided to buy the Mahindra XUV 7X0 petrol AX7L AT as my next ride. To be frank, it is out of a lack of choice and options that I have made this decision in my head. In terms of capability, it is a downgrade, as I'm moving on from my beautiful Ford Endeavour 3.2 Titanium AT. Of course, it has a long list of bells and whistles that will be all new (and strange) to me. Being based in Delhi NCR, I am reluctant to go for a diesel again at this time. My driving in the city is quite minimal, say about 15kms max per day on average, but always in the clutches of peak Delhi traffic. I am terrified of BSVI diesel DPF horror stories. I am hoping that the 7X0 will be able to negotiate hills, mountain terrains and roads satisfactorily, as I make these trips quite frequently. I plan to keep this car for the next 4-5 years till India sorts out its fuel preferences and diktats, and fresh options are introduced that combine clean energy and performance along with the infrastructure to support them. Is my thought process sound? If not, please poke as many holes in it as you can.

Verified
2w

Your plan seems sound for Delhi-NCR, because petrol dodges the 10-year diesel cap and DPF hassles, and your 15 km daily crawl will not punish petrol the way it would a BS6 diesel. The XUV 7XO petrol AT has strong performance and will certainly keep you satisfied while negotiating hill climbs. Sure, coming from an Endeavour 3.2, this will feel like a step down in terms of road presence and off-road ability. However, despite being a front-wheel drive monocoque, it still exudes an underlying toughness, which gives you ample confidence while dealing with rough terrain. Additionally, the tech and safety are up-to-date, and the three-row flexibility will come in handy, too, although boot space with all three rows in place is low. On the flipside, this petrol-AT is thirsty, so expect single-digit city fuel economy figures.If you aren't in a hurry, consider waiting for the Jetour T2 plug-in hybrid SUV that JSW is expected to launch in the latter half of this year. Sure, it'll be more expensive than the Mahindra, and it might not have the off-road capability of your outgoing Endeavour, but since you aren't fully convinced of the Mahindra, this could be worthy of your consideration.

VehicleMahindra XUV 7XO
VehicleJSW Motors Jetour T2
8w

Hello Autocar India. I am planning to purchase a car under Rs 40 lakh. Right now, I own a Creta diesel manual Knight Edition. I’m considering entering the full-size SUV segment, but there are no major options under Rs 40 lakh. I want a proper SUV with 7 seats, plush interiors that feel worth the money, strong brand value and genuine toughness. I considered the Fortuner, but the on-road price in Chennai is around Rs 44 lakh, and I do not want to go beyond Rs 40 lakh. I want something that is tough, something that could go anywhere it wanted to. I also looked at the Hilux, but it feels too long for Chennai roads. Right now, I have shortlisted the Jeep Meridian Longitude Plus manual. It seems to hit the sweet spot, but I am worried about reliability and resale value. What should I do? Are there any other options? I am open to other segments too, as long as it feels like a proper upgrade from my current car.

Verified
8w

You are right that there are very few genuine options in this price band if you want a proper full-size SUV experience, which is why the Jeep Meridian ends up making a lot of sense within your stated budget. The Longitude Plus manual offers a premium enough cabin, strong road presence and a far more sophisticated driving experience than most ladder frame SUVs. But there are a few things to keep in mind. Jeep ownership will mean higher service costs as compared to the Hyundai Creta that you own, resale will not be as strong as Toyota, and while the Meridian is capable on rough roads, it is still a monocoque SUV rather than a true, rugged body-on-frame machine.Which is why, for your exact brief, the Toyota Fortuner is still the best answer. That extra stretch over budget hurts today, but it pays you back over time with excellent resale, stronger service support, lower ownership anxiety and genuine go-anywhere toughness. Coming from a Creta, it will feel like the full-blown SUV upgrade you are actually looking for.If you are open to waiting, the Jetour T2 is worth keeping an eye on as well. It is expected to come in as a plug-in hybrid with potentially AWD, rugged styling and a more premium positioning, which could make it an interesting alternative in this space. The catch, of course, is that it is an all new brand for India, so ownership confidence, service support and resale remain complete unknowns.

VehicleToyota Fortuner
VehicleJeep Meridian
VehicleJSW Motors Jetour T2
VehicleHyundai Creta
14w

I am looking for a 7-seater car with a lower running cost. I think Mahindra XEV 9S is satisfying the need. Can I purchase it, or should I wait so that Plugin Hybrid EVs or Safari EV might be launched? Need your advice. Thanks.

Verified
14w

The Mahindra XEV 9S is currently one of the most complete 7‑seater EVs you can actually buy, and if it fits your budget and usage, you don’t need to overthink it. It’s built on Mahindra’s new INGLO EV architecture (shared with the XEV 9E), offers multiple battery options, genuinely low running costs, proper three‑row space and a decent boot with the third row down. The sliding second row gives you useful flexibility to balance legroom between the second and third rows. The suspension is tuned on the softer side, which makes it very comfortable in the city, even if it can feel a bit floaty at higher highway speeds.If you have reliable home charging and your running is mostly city with the occasional highway trip, the XEV 9S is already a very sensible future‑proof pick. Real-world ranges of over 420km on the larger batteries mean that you are not going to be range‑anxious on typical family runs.JSW Motors’ first plug‑in hybrid SUV and the Tata Safari EV are both interesting, but they are still some distance away. JSW’s PHEV, based on the Jetour T2, is only expected towards the end of 2026, and will likely be priced much higher and positioned more upmarket. The Safari EV is also targeting a late‑2026 launch window, and real‑world pricing, range and third‑row comfort are still unknowns.So, unless you specifically want to wait for 6-8 months for more options and are okay with higher likely prices, the XEV 9S is a safe and sensible choice today, especially if low running cost is your top priority.

VehicleJSW Motors Jetour T2
VehicleMahindra XEV 9S
16w

I am considering buying an SUV car, and my critical criteria are: 1) Performance, 2) Safety and 3) Boot space. A few options I was considering are: Tata Safari and Mahindra 7XO, but then I came across the upcoming SUV from JSW, the Jetour T2. I need advice on whether it is worth waiting for the Jetour by the end of this year.

Verified
16w

Go for the Tata Safari Accomplished+ diesel automatic. It best matches your performance, safety and boot-space needs today, with a strong 170 PS/350 Nm motor and a 5-star crash rating.For performance, the 170 PS/350 Nm diesel pulls cleanly from low revs, so highway overtakes feel easy even with 5–7 people on board. For safety, the new-gen Safari has a 5-star Global NCAP rating (2023), which gives more confidence than an untested newcomer. For boot space, with the third row folded, you get over 400 litres, enough for 4 medium bags. The wide opening also makes loading simpler. On waiting for the Jetour T2, there’s 0 India crash-test ratings published, no confirmed service footprint, and the launch/price by year-end isn’t firm, so you’d be betting on unknowns.The one thing you give up is a petrol option; the Safari is diesel-only, so if you want a high-rev turbo-petrol feel, this won’t suit.If outright acceleration becomes your top priority or you prefer petrol, consider the Mahindra XUV 7X0 AX7 petrol AT instead. Its 200 PS motor does 0-100 kph in under ~10 seconds.When you test drive, do a brisk 80-0 kph stop to judge brake bite and stability, and ask the dealer to fold the third row and load two 28-inch suitcases to verify real boot depth and loading height.

VehicleTata Safari
VehicleJSW Motors Jetour T2
VehicleMahindra XUV 7XO