
Last Updated on: 13 May 2026
Mahindra XUV 7XO price in Sakti
The XUV 7XO price in Sakti starts at ₹13.66 lakh for the entry-level AX 2.0 Petrol MT variant. The fully-loaded AX7 Luxury 2.2 Diesel AWD AT variant price is ₹24.92 lakh (Ex-showroom). Meanwhile the XUV 7XO on road prices in Sakti starts from ₹15.32 lakh to ₹27.94 lakh. Notably, the XUV 7XO variants includes 27 choices.
XUV 7XO price list in Sakti 2026:
Engine and gearbox-wise prices:
- 2L turbo-petrol MT: ₹15.87 - ₹21.41 lakh
- 2.2L diesel MT - ₹17.73 - ₹26.67 lakh
- 2L turbo-petrol AT - ₹20.25 - ₹27.24 lakh
- 2.2 diesel AT - ₹21.24 - ₹28.38 lakh
- 2.2 diesel AT AWD - ₹27.82 - ₹29.56 lakh
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The base-spec Mahindra XUV 7XO AX 2.0 Petrol MT on road price in Sakti is ₹15.32 lakh.
The Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7 2.2 Diesel AT on road price in Sakti is ₹22.90 lakh.
The top-spec Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7 Luxury 2.2 Diesel AWD AT on road price in Sakti is ₹27.94 lakh.
The starting price of Mahindra XUV 7XO in Sakti is Rs 13.66 lakh, ex-showroom.
The top-spec Mahindra XUV 7XO in Sakti is priced at Rs 24.92 lakh, ex-showroom.
Questions you may find useful
Satya
•10hI mostly drive in the city for my daily home-to-office commute, and we occasionally go on long highway trips. I have booked the XUV 7XO AT Petrol. Will it be a good choice compared to the AT Diesel?

Autocar India
For your use case, the Mahindra XUV 7XO petrol automatic you’ve booked is the better pick than the diesel automatic. In slow traffic, the petrol feels smoother and more refined, so daily driving is calmer and easier. The petrol is also cheaper to buy and a bit cheaper to maintain over time. Know the trade-offs. On long highway drives, the diesel will be more fuel efficient and will feel stronger when the car is full of people and luggage. For your current pattern, though, stick with the XUV 7XO petrol automatic. It fits your use best.
Gaurav
•1dMy budget is around ₹20 lakh on-road, and I am specifically looking for a diesel SUV. My usage pattern would be roughly 80% highway driving, 15% city driving, and 5% mild off-road usage. My priorities are: Spacious cabin Good fuel efficiency Comfortable ride quality I can compromise slightly on outright performance if the car excels in comfort, practicality, and mileage. At the moment, I am confused between the Tata Sierra Diesel, Mahindra XUV 7XO Diesel, Renault Duster Diesel, and Kia Seltos Diesel.

Autocar India
The Mahindra XUV 7XO AX3 diesel-manual fits your brief best. It has the roomiest cabin of your list and is the only one with three-row seating. Of course, with the last row folded, its boot is generous for luggage. On the highway, it feels steady and calm, rides bumps well, and the diesel is refined and both, punchy and efficient. Ground clearance and its inherent toughness make it capable of tackling light trails and rough roads.
dipesh
•1dI need a car mainly for outstation travel under a budget of ₹25-27 lakh. I live in a tier-3 city, and my yearly running is around 15,000 km. Please advise between 7x0 petrol vs diesel and Tata Safari vs 7x0. Also, are there any other good options in the same price range?

Autocar India
Since you mostly do highway trips of 15,000 km a year and your budget is ₹25-27 lakh, the Mahindra XUV 7XO diesel automatic is the one you should consider. It suits long drives better than the petrol because the torquey 2.2-litre diesel engine pulls strongly with a full load, needs fewer fuel stops, and will likely cost less to run given your yearly use. On the highway it feels steady and sure-footed, and Mahindra’s service reach is wide, even in a tier-3 city.Between XUV 7XO petrol and diesel, pick the diesel for your use. The petrol is smooth and punchy but will use more fuel on highways and have shorter range. Between Safari and XUV 7XO, go XUV 7XO for your brief. The Safari feels tougher and has a roomier third row, but it isn't as powerful and XUV's better safety tech (ADAS) is handy on long runs.Alternatively, consider the Toyota Innova HyCross if you want the maximum space and an easy, relaxed drive feel.
Ashwanth
•2dHello, I booked the xuv 7XO AXL DIESEL AT on January 8 and am still waiting for the delivery. What concerns me is the current geopolitical tensions in the Gulf, along with rising crude oil prices and possible fuel shortages. In this situation, is it really sensible to buy a diesel car (or even a petrol car)? Or would it be better to shift to an electric car like the XEV 9e or XEV 9S? I am genuinely very confused. What will happen to all the diesel and petrol cars that are currently being sold and are already on the road? Also, the 10 and 15-year scrappage policies are making me worried that a ₹30 lakh investment could end up as scrap in the near future. Could you please advise?

Autocar India
If your primary worry is whether buying a Rs. 30 lakh diesel today is a bad decision because of fuel prices, geopolitics or scrappage rules, the short answer is no, do not panic. Petrol and diesel cars are not going to suddenly become unusable or worthless because of short term crude price spikes or geopolitical tensions. Fuel prices may fluctuate, yes, but that affects both petrol and diesel ownership economics rather than making the vehicles obsolete overnight. India’s scrappage framework is also not a blanket “scrap your 10 or 15 year old private car no matter what” rule nationally. Private vehicles are tied to fitness and registration rules, while Delhi NCR has its own stricter age based restrictions.Now to your actual car choice. Since you have already booked the Mahindra XUV 7XO diesel automatic, the bigger question is whether your usage genuinely suits diesel. If you do regular highway runs or meaningful monthly mileage, the diesel still makes complete sense because the 7XO’s diesel is effortless, efficient and a great fit for a large SUV. If your use is mostly city and low running, then yes, an EV like the XEV 9e becomes more compelling, especially if you can charge at home.But do not switch to an EV purely out of fear. Buy an EV because your usage suits it. The XEV 9e is a fundamentally different ownership proposition, not just a “future proof” version of the 7XO. If you need frequent long distance flexibility without charging planning, the diesel remains easier to live with. If your use is mostly urban and predictable, the EV makes stronger sense.
Saurabh
•2dIs the Sorento Hybrid coming to India in 2026?

Autocar India
Yes, the Kia Sorento Hybrid is slated for an India launch in August-September 2026, and Kia is clearly positioning it as a premium three-row SUV.This Kia car comes with a 1.6‑litre turbo-petrol engine paired with an electric motor, with the system developing around 227 hp and over 350 Nm, driving through a 6‑speed automatic gearbox. Globally, it’s offered in both front-wheel-drive and all-wheel-drive configurations, and that mix is likely to be mirrored for India as well.It’s a properly spacious seven-seat SUV, roughly 4.8 m long and 1.9 m wide, so think bigger than a Kia Carens and right in the zone of the Skoda Kodiaq and Toyota Fortuner in terms of footprint and cabin room. Expect a flexible three-row layout, generous boot space with the third row down, and the usual load of Kia kit - panoramic sunroof, ADAS, large screens, and connected-car features.Price-wise, the Sorento Hybrid is expected to sit in the Rs 35-40 lakh (ex-showroom) band, and it will naturally tug buyers both up from something like a Mahindra XUV 7XO and away from the Skoda Kodiaq–Fortuner crowd.
karan tikyani
•4dI am currently living outside India and will be visiting India for about a month during August–September. I am planning to buy a new car within a budget of ₹15-20 lakh. At the moment, my top choice is the Mahindra XUV 7XO Petrol Automatic. Currently, only my sister and father are at home, and neither of them knows how to drive yet. However, they keep saying that once the car comes home, they will learn driving. Considering this situation, would the XUV 7XO Petrol Automatic still be the right choice, or should I look at something easier to drive and manage for first-time drivers? Please give your expert advice.

Autocar India
If your Rs 15 to 20 lakh budget is ex-showroom, then the Mahindra XUV 7XO petrol automatic is a very good choice. If you mean on road, then even the more affordable automatic petrol variants will stretch beyond that budget in most cities, so that is the first thing to clarify. As a product, though, the XUV 7XO makes a strong case with its powerful and refined turbo petrol engine, smooth 6-speed torque converter automatic, comfortable ride and a genuinely spacious middle row, which will be great for family use. Just remember that the third row is best treated as occasional use space rather than something adults will enjoy regularly on long trips.The bigger practical question is your family situation. If your sister and dad are only now planning to learn to drive once the car arrives, the XUV 7XO may not be the easiest first car to learn in because it is a large SUV with a wider footprint, which can feel intimidating in Indian city conditions for new drivers. In that case, unless they are specifically committed to learning quickly and confidently, a smaller and easier five-seater may actually make more sense.If you are open to that, the Kia Seltos petrol automatic is a very strong alternative. It still feels premium and well-equipped, but is far easier to manage, easier for first-time drivers to get comfortable with and will comfortably fit within budget in the right variants. Overall, if the car is mainly for you and the budget works, the XUV 7XO is a great choice.
Amit Agarwal
•5dHello Sir, Need some advice, I already have a Jeep Compass diesel automatic driven 40,000 km in 5 years. Now facing an issue with service cost, its maintenance is a little higher than usual, so shall I sell the car? Is this the best time, or stick with the car? Secondly, I was thinking of upgrading to XUV 7XO, and comparing which is better in every aspect, performance, comfort, and long drive. Plz give your valuable suggestion.

Autocar India
If your Jeep Compass has otherwise been reliable, and the only real concern is rising service costs. Also, there is no urgent reason to sell it purely at 40,000 km, as that is not particularly high for a well-maintained diesel. However, if the ownership costs are starting to bother you and you are already mentally ready for a change, this is a reasonable time to exit before bigger age-related expenses start showing up and depreciation goes further.If you are upgrading to the Mahindra XUV 7XO, you will gain a much bigger cabin, stronger performance, better refinement, far more features and better overall value for money. The diesel will feel more powerful, and the SUV itself is a better long-distance family machine with stronger road presence and more space. But the Compass still has its own strengths. It feels more solid, more premium in certain touch points and has that mature European feel in the way it drives, but overall, the Mahindra XUV 7XO will still feel like a proper step up from the Jeep Compass.
RAJA M S
•1wI would like to buy a bigger SUV and have shortlisted a few petrol models. My budget is a constraint, but performance is my top priority. The options I am considering are the MG Hector, Tata Harrier, Tata Safari, Hyundai Alcazar and Mahindra XUV 7XO and Mahindra Scorpio N. Which one would suit me better?

Autocar India
If performance is your biggest priority and you still want a large family SUV without stretching the budget too far, the Mahindra XUV 7XO petrol automatic is the one we would pick. Its 2.0 turbo petrol feels the strongest and most effortless in this group, whether you are overtaking on the highway or driving with a full load of passengers. The automatic gearbox also suits the engine well and makes daily driving much easier, while the cabin itself feels spacious, comfortable and well-equipped. Even in lower or mid variants, you still get the same strong engine, which helps keep costs under control.The Hyundai Alcazar 1.5 turbo petrol DCT is the more polished and city-friendly alternative. It feels lighter to drive, and refinement is excellent, but the DCT gearbox is not always the smoothest at crawling city speeds and can feel slightly jerky in stop-and-go traffic. It also does not have the same effortless punch or road presence as the Mahindra when fully loaded. The MG Hector petrol is spacious and comfortable, but performance is nowhere close to the Mahindra, and despite having a smaller engine, fuel efficiency is not one of its strengths either.The Tata Harrier and Tata Safari are now available with Tata’s newer 1.5 turbo petrol engine, but performance is adequate. It still does not feel as effortless or as strong as the Mahindra’s larger 2.0 turbo petrol, especially in a full-size SUV application. The Mahindra Scorpio-N petrol is also very powerful and rugged, but compared to the XUV 7XO, it feels less polished and more old school in everyday driving.
Tauseef siddique
•1wI am planning to buy the Kia Seltos diesel HTK model, but I am worried about DPF issues. I have also heard about some mechanical issues in the car. Please suggest if I should go ahead or consider the XUV 7XO instead. My usage is 70% highway.

Autocar India
Your usage is the key here. With 70% highway driving, you are actually in the ideal scenario for a modern diesel. DPF issues are not brand-specific; they are usage-specific. The filter needs regular high-speed runs to regenerate, and that typically happens when you drive for 20-30 minutes at steady speeds above 60kph. Since most of your driving is on highways, the car will naturally regenerate the DPF, and you are very unlikely to face issues.The fear around Kia Seltos diesel DPF problems is often overstated. Yes, some owners have reported issues, but these are largely seen in cars used mainly for short, stop-and-go city drives without proper regeneration cycles. In regular highway use, these engines generally run without problems.Coming to the car itself, the Seltos diesel is a refined, efficient and well-sorted package. It is smooth, easy to drive and very comfortable on highways, which suits your usage perfectly. It also offers better refinement and overall polish compared to the Mahindra XUV 7XO.The XUV 7XO, on the other hand, offers a stronger engine and more space, but it is less efficient. Being a larger car, it is also harder to drive and park in everyday conditions, and it comes at a higher price compared to the Seltos.
Kathiravan Anandan
•1wI’m Kathir from Chennai. I have been following Autocar for many years, and it has always been interesting and useful, with clear explanations. I often recommend Autocar to others for reliable information, so thanks to the entire team! I currently drive a 2008 i10 1.2 Magna, and my wife drives a 2016 Grand i10 Asta automatic, which has now covered 92,000 km. We are planning to sell this car and buy a new automatic petrol car within a ₹20 lakh on-road budget. Earlier, choosing a car was easier, but now it feels more confusing. We like Hyundai cars but now, we are open to trying other brands. We have test-driven the Ertiga AT, Victoris AT, Creta AT, and Carens AT, and are also planning to test Volkswagen and Skoda models. I like the Sierra, Duster, and XUV 7XO, but I am not fully confident about buying them. I am also unsure whether to buy a new car or consider a used one. Please suggest both a new car option and advice on buying a used car.

Autocar India
You are upgrading from a Grand i10 automatic and want something that is easy to drive, comfortable for family use and reliable for long-term ownership. The Creta ticks all those boxes. The IVT automatic is smooth and effortless in city driving, the ride is soft and comfortable which your family will appreciate, and Hyundai’s aftersales experience is something you are already familiar with. It also feels like a proper step up in space, comfort and overall refinement without being intimidating to drive.The Grand Vitara automatic is a good alternative if fuel efficiency is a priority. It is smooth and easy to drive, but the engine feels less responsive and overall it does not feel as premium or as refined as the Creta. The Ertiga and Carens Clavis are practical, but they are more MPV-focused and since you do not specifically need a third row, they are not the best fit.Cars like the Sierra, Duster and XUV 7XO are interesting, but your hesitation is valid. They are either new or evolving products, and compared to the Creta, they do not offer the same level of proven reliability and ownership peace of mind yet.
Mahindra XUV 7XO price in India
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