
Last Updated on: 29 May 2026
Mahindra XUV 7XO
Mahindra XUV 7XO price starts from ₹13.66 lakh to ₹24.92 lakh (ex-showroom). There are 27 variants of XUV 7XO available in India. The Mahindra XUV 7XO is the facelifted version of the XUV 700 SUV.
The Mahindra XUV 7XO mileage, as per ARAI certification, ranges from 13kpl to 17kpl, depending on the fuel type and transmission option. XUV7XO engine options include a 203hp, 2-litre turbo-petrol engine and a 185hp, 2.2-litre diesel engine. Both engines are available with manual as well as automatic gearbox options. The XUV 7XO diesel-automatic option also comes with an all-wheel-drive (AWD) setup in the higher trims. Mahindra XUV 7XO rivals include Tata Safari, Hyundai Alcazar and MG Hector.
XUV 7XO Key Highlights:
- The XUV 7XO ex showroom prices starts from ₹13.66 lakh to ₹24.92 lakh.
- Mahindra XUV 7XO SUV is available in 27 variants.
- It gets a new grille with gloss black and chrome elements and new projector LED headlights.
- It also gets pixel-shaped LED fog lamps now.
- In profile, it continues with flush-type door handles and a chrome strip on windowline, but features new gloss black cladding on wheel arches.
- It also gets new 19-inch dual-tone alloy wheels.
- At the rear, it features the XEV 9S wraparound LED taillights with a gloss black section between them.
- The rear bumper and tailgate have also been reworked with significant cuts and creases.
- XUV 7XO cabin has a triple-tone beige, black and tan theme, with the seats also featuring the same theme.
- New features include a new triple-screen setup on the dashboard, an electric boss mode on the front passenger seat, and rear seat ventilation.
- It also gets a 360-degree camera with a transparent bonnet function, similar to the Harrier EV.
Which XUV 7XO variant should you buy?
- XUV 7XO AX7: Represents good value by packing in plenty of features, and offering all available powertrain options.
- XUV 7XO AX7L: Aimed at the chauffeur-driven; both 6 and 7-seater seating layout choices are available.
Mahindra XUV 7XO Latest Updates
- February 7, 2026: Waiting period for Mahindra XUV 7XO revealed; the XUV 7XO’s higher-spec AX7 Tech has the shortest waiting time.
- January 14, 2026: Mahindra XEV 9S, XUV 7XO log 93,689 bookings combined on first day; these translate into a booking value of over Rs 20,500 crore; XUV 7XO deliveries have already begun.
- January 5, 2026: Mahindra XUV 7XO launched at Rs 13.66 lakh; the new SUV is essentially the XUV700 facelift, and it packs several updates to the exterior and interior.
Mahindra XUV 7XO Features and specifications
Our Rating | 9 |
Engine | 1997 cc - 2184 cc |
Fuel Type | Petrol, Diesel |
Transmission | Manual, Torque Converter |
Seats | 6 - 7 |
Body Style | SUV |
Doors | 5 |
Max Power | 185 hp at 3500 rpm |
Max Torque | 450 Nm at 1750 - 2800 rpm |
| Engine Installation | Front |
| Fuel Type/ Propulsion | Diesel |
| Engine Type | Turbocharged |
| Engine Displacement | 2184 cc |
| Drive Mode Types | Multiple |
| Emission Standard | Bharat Stage VI |
| Fuel Tank Capacity | 60 litres |
| Fuel Supply System | Common Rail |
| Front Brakes | Ventilated Disc |
| Rear Brakes | Disc |
| 4 Wheel Steer | No |
| Type of Power Assist | Electric |
| Chassis Type | Monocoque |
| Height | 1755 mm |
| Length | 4695 mm |
| Doors | 5 |
| warranty Duration | 3 |
| warranty Distance | 100000 |
| Climate Control | 2-zone |
| Bottle Holder in Doors | |
| Bluetooth Connectivity | |
| Auto Parking |
| Rear Washer/Wiper | |
| Seat Belt Warning | |
| Rear Seatbelt Reminder | |
| Rear Defogger |
| Pop-Out Door Handle | Auto |
| Projector Headlamps | |
| ORVM turn indicators | |
| Headlight Height Adjuster |
| Average Fuel Consumption | |
| Average Speed | |
| Distance to Empty | |
| Gear Indicator |
| Second Row USB port | Type C |
| Voice Commands | Alexa |
| Video Player | |
| USB Input |
| In Car Payment | |
| Live Traffic Updates On App | |
| Live Location Sharing | |
| Phone App |
Mahindra XUV 7XO price & variants
The XUV7XO price ranges from ₹13.66 lakh to ₹24.92 lakh, ex-showroom. Whereas, the XUV 7XO on road price starts from ₹16.14 lakh and goes up to ₹30.18 lakh, varying by place of registration.
The XUV 7XO variants include 27 choices. Notably, the 3-row Mahindra SUV is available with both petrol and diesel engine options, with manual and automatic transmission choices. It comes in both 6- and 7-seater configurations.
Mahindra XUV 7XO Official Brochure
Download the complete brochure with specs, features, and variants.
Mahindra XUV 7XO expert review
We like
Punchy performance from both powertrains
Ride comfort and high-speed composure
Feature packed
We don't like
Third row is tight for adults
Confusing infotainment UI
8.0
The XUV 7XO is instantly recognisable, albeit with an edgier treatment for its front fascia. The signature DRLs are still there but aren’t as large as before, the LED headlight flanks a new slimmer grille and below is a sharper bumper with four ICE cube-shaped lighting units.
The silhouette hasn’t changed, but wheel size has gone up from 18 to 19-inchers and trim around the wheel arches is gloss black. At the rear, the LED taillamps are taken from the XEV 9S and it gets a more squared-off bumper. Overall, the design isn’t quite as cohesive as the original design, but it is well executed nonetheless.
8.0
Comfort up front is excellent, with the wide seats offering good support and a decent range of adjustment. Both front seats are ventilated and powered, with the driver getting a memory function, while the passenger seat has powered boss mode. The steering wheel now also adjusts for reach as well as rake. The two-spoke steering is also lifted from the 9S, but this time gets physical buttons instead of the haptic ones. The middle row is similarly comfortable, with a wide bench or optional captain’s chairs – both options are ventilated. The seat reclines, but it doesn’t slide like the one in the XEV 9S. While there is plenty of legroom in the middle row without it, a sliding function would have helped the third row. As it stands, the third row is cramped for adults. With it stowed away the luggage area is substantial.
9.0
The trio of 12.3-inch displays – standard across the range – are sharp and bright, and the infotainment and passenger display are responsive to touch, though the user interface does take some getting used to. The absence of physical buttons means adjusting the HVAC is now, at minimum, a two-step process. The passenger screen gets a privacy filter here unlike on the BEVS, so it no longer draws your eye when checking the far-side mirror. Also featured is a 1,400W 16-speaker Harman Kardon music system, a bring-your-own-device provision to mount tablets on the front seatbacks, with an integrated 65W Type-C charger. The all-important panoramic sunroof is available from the mid AX5 trim onwards, but for rear window sunblinds you’ll need to splurge for the top AX7 L trim. Safety kit is equally comprehensive, with six airbags, four-wheel disc brakes, ABS, ESC, hill-hold and hill-descent control standard. The AX7 T trim adds a knee airbag and an upgraded Level 2 ADAS suite.
9.0
The 2.0-litre turbo-petrol makes 203hp and 380Nm, channelled to the front wheels via a six-speed manual or torque-converter automatic. It feels grunty, almost diesel-like at the lower end, but is happy to extend to the 5,800rpm redline. It’s refined and smooth too, with no vibrations creeping into the cabin. The six-speed automatic is also well suited to the engine, but paddle shifters are still missing. The 2.2-litre diesel motor puts out 185hp and 450Nm (420Nm with the manual), and while it’s not as effortless as the petrol, it’s no slouch either. Refinement is good; the engine gets vocal when pushed hard, but in day-to-day driving it’s nicely muffled. Here too, the automatic is a good match for the engine, but the manual feels shorter geared than you’d expect. It’s happy to chug along in third around town and rarely requires a downshift to make an overtake, but a taller sixth would help it settle into a cruise and eke out better efficiency still.
7.0
Mahindra hasn’t quoted fuel-efficiency figures, but we don’t expect them to differ much from the XUV700. The ARAI figures for the petrol XUV700 are 13kpl with the automatic and 15kpl with the manual – in the real world, these often drop into the single digits. The diesel XUV700 is more frugal, with ARAI figures of 17kpl and 16.57kpl for the manual and automatic respectively, and it’s possible to get close to these numbers on a steady highway cruise.
9.0
Despite the wheel size going up an inch, the low-speed ride is even better than before thanks to the new DaVinci dampers. There’s a newfound plushness to the way it soaks up rough patches without letting anything through to the cabin. It also gets hydraulic bump stops that greatly soften that thud you get when the suspension bottoms or tops out. As before, high-speed manners are superb with an uncanny ability to mask speed as the dampers do a great job of keeping the body flat and composed. Confidence is high through the bends as the XUV 7XO unflinchingly sticks to the chosen line. Even unsettling mid-corner bumps and dips are dealt with in a fluid, one-and-done motion. The electric steering is light enough to be twirled with one finger at a standstill but weights up and provides good feedback as speeds rise. Braking performance is strong too, with disc brakes on all four corners – now standard across the range.
9.0
The starting price of Rs 13.66 lakh – exactly the same as the outgoing MX trim of the XUV700 – is incredible bang for your buck. These prices are introductory and set to rise after the first 40,000 bookings, but it is still tremendous value for what you get. The strong engines continue to deliver the punchy performance we’ve come to love, and the ride and handling balance is even better than before. If that isn’t enough, there is enough tech to shame some from segments above. Sure there’s still bits that need improving like a less confusing UI and more physical controls and those who regularly seat seven will find more comfort in the back of some of the competition, but given the XUV7XO’s tremendous abilities in all other areas, this is something many will ignore.
Reviewed by: Lenny D'sa
Mahindra XUV 7XO reviews

Mahindra XUV 7XO comparison
Mahindra XUV 7XO news
Mahindra XUV 7XO Images
Check out 123 Mahindra XUV 7XO images, where we have detailed its bold exterior design, feature-loaded cabin and its robust safety features.
The Mahindra XUV 7XO combines a bold exterior design with a lot of modern-day elements, a loaded cabin and a strong safety suite.
Mahindra XUV 7XO videos
In our detailed Mahindra XUV 7XO videos, we give a detailed walkaround of the SUV, where we talk about its exterior and interior design, and also detail its features.


Mahindra XUV 7XO Colours
The Mahindra XUV 7XO colour options include 11 choices. These include Desert Myst, Desert Myst Dual Tone, Everest White, Everest White Dual Tone, Galaxy Grey, Galaxy Grey Dual Tone, Midnight Black, Midnight Black Dual Tone, Nebula Blue, Ruby Velvet, Stealth Black.
The Mahindra XUV 7XO cabin colour theme is a mix of black, beige and tan hues, which is also the case with the SUV’s seats, which get a leatherette upholstery.
Mahindra XUV 7XO FAQs
The Mahindra XUV 7XO prices range between ₹13.66 lakh and ₹24.92 lakh (ex showroom price).
Yes, the Mahindra XUV 7XO is offered with an AWD choice in the higher-spec variants.
The Mahindra XUV 7XO measures 4,695mm in length, 1,890mm in width, 1,755mm in height. It has a wheelbase of 2,750mm.
Over the XUV 700, the 7XO gets a triple-screen setup, a 6-way powered co-driver's seat with boss mode, a 16-speaker Harman Kardon sound system and ventilated second-row seats.
The XUV7XO gets a new grille, dual-barrel LED headlights, new LED taillights, 19-inch alloy wheels, and gloss black cladding on wheel arches and the lower edge of the SUV.
With ARAI-certified figures between 13 and 17 kmpl, the XUV 7XO offers fuel efficiency that varies by fuel type and transmission.
The Mahindra XUV 7XO gets 6 airbags as standard. The top-spec AX7 Tech trim gets 7 airbags.
Questions you may find useful
NK
•1dI am planning to buy the Mahindra XUV 7XO diesel automatic and am confused between the AX7 and AX7T variants. Could you please suggest which variant would be the better choice?

Autocar India
If you will be using the vehicle frequently on the highway, go for the Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7T diesel automatic - it gets you the safety net of ADAS and the convenience of adaptive cruise control. It also offers ventilated front seats, which are very useful in our conditions, along with several other premium features. However, if you are on a tight budget and don't frequently travel on the highway, the AX7 trim will suit you fine. The price jump is about Rs 2.5 lakh, which can be hard to justify if you aren't going to use the features much. If you are strictly on a budget and drive mostly in the city, the AX7 diesel automatic saves money without losing the core engine, space and basics.
Dk
•3dI am looking for a 6-seater car with good fuel efficiency for Hyderabad roads. My monthly usage is around 1,200 km. Please recommend a suitable car, preferably from Tata, Maruti Suzuki, or Mahindra.

Autocar India
Since you want a 6 seater for your city-heavy use and you have a budget of up to Rs 30 lakh, the Mahindra XUV 7XO diesel automatic is what you should consider. Given that your running is fairly high, about 15,000km a year, a diesel would make sense, and it will be more efficient than the petrol. Mahindra's 2.2-litre diesel is refined and punchy, and the 6-speed torque converter automatic is smooth, making city drives stress-free. The 7XO has a comfy, premium cabin and can be had in either 6-seat (with captain's chairs in the middle) or 7-seat seating configurations. It also rides over speed breakers and broken roads with ease and comes absolutely loaded with features. Know this before you buy: the third row is best for kids or short adults on longer trips, and with all seats up, the boot is small, so airport runs and road trips will require planning.
Nick
•3dHi, I have booked the Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7L diesel variant, which is expected to be delivered either at the end of July or early August. Looking at the current fuel situation, 10 years clause and growing EV, should I reconsider my decision and look for XEV 9S or any other option? I am currently owning a Hyundai Elite i20 diesel, and I love the power and handling. My run is 10000 kms yearly and limited hill trips. While on a regular trip to the hometown, around 500 km every 2 months. Please suggest if I should consider any EV option.

Autocar India
Given your limited use of 10,000 km a year and a 500 km highway run every two months, the Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7L diesel is still a solid choice. However, since you live in NCR, the 10-year diesel ban will affect resale value in the long term.If you have dedicated parking at home where you can install a charger, and do not mind the additional planning required with an EV on road trips, then the Mahindra XEV 9S is a good alternative. In our testing, we recorded 477 km on a single charge, but with a full load and in the hills, this will drop sharply. If your highway route has enough chargers, then your 500 km hometown trips should not be an issue, with just one or two stops to top up along the way.However, if you cannot install a home charger and the planning required around EV road trips seems like too much work, you are better off sticking with the XUV 7XO you have booked.
Vihaan Kumar
•3dDear 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
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.
RK
•4dI am planning to buy the Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7T variant. However, I am confused between the manual and automatic. I recently learned how to drive, and this is my first car. I have taken test drives of both, and I am comfortable with both. I just need advice on which one I should buy.

Autocar India
First car, newly learned driver, and you are comfortable with both after test drives, in this situation, pick the Mahindra XUV 7XO AX7T automatic. It will make life much easier in the long run. In traffic, you do not have to juggle the clutch and gear lever, so you stay calmer and make fewer mistakes. On slopes and in tight parking spots, not having to balance the clutch helps a lot, and you can focus more on steering and judging gaps, especially important in a large car like the XUV 7XO. It is also smoother for family rides and less tiring on longer drives.A couple of trade-offs to keep in mind: the automatic costs more upfront and can use slightly more fuel, but the difference is not significant enough to outweigh the convenience of the auto.Pick the manual only if you genuinely enjoy shifting gears yourself, drive mostly on open roads, or want to save on the initial cost. Otherwise, for a first car, the AX7T automatic fits your requirements best.
Basaveshwar Talur
•5dPlease suggest a good value-for-money car under Rs. 20-25 lakh that is suitable for a family of 7 with good reliability and service. I am looking for a family-oriented car, 80% for city and 20% for highway. I am confused between EV and diesel. Should I consider the Mahindra Scorpio N or the XUV 7XO?

Autocar India
With 80% city use, a family of seven and a Rs 20-25 lakh budget, the Mahindra XUV 7XO is a good choice. If you can install a charger at home, though, the Mahindra XEV 9S could be a great alternative since your usage is primarily in the city. The base Pack One Above with the larger 79kWh battery pack fits within your budget and comes with all the essential comfort and tech features. In our real-world tests, we managed a combined 477.5km on a single charge, though that figure will drop sharply on the highway with a full load of passengers and luggage. Your highway trips will therefore need some planning around charging stops.If that seems like too much effort, then the XUV 7XO diesel automatic makes the most sense. It feels easier to drive in town than the Mahindra Scorpio N, with lighter controls and a smoother driving experience. Ride comfort and cabin noise levels are better, too, which your family will appreciate.A couple of things to note: with all three rows up, boot space is limited. The third row is also a bit tight for taller passengers, so check if it works for your family.Alternatively, consider the Kia Carens Clavis/Carens Clavis EV. Their smaller footprint makes them easier to drive and park in the city, and the third row is more spacious than in the XUV 7XO/XEV 9S.
Shreyas Habbu
•5dI own an XL6 2021 currently, and I'm looking to upgrade to a better car overall. I'm looking at Tata Safari, Carens Clavis, 7XO and petrol manuals only. Budget is 20-25 lakhs. My everyday driving in the city and occasional highway rides. What car is the best for this requirement?

Autocar India
If comfortable seven-seat usability matters, we would recommend the Kia Carens Clavis turbo petrol manual. The third row is better than what you are used to in the Maruti XL6, and overall it will feel like a meaningful upgrade in interior fit and finish, features, comfort and overall premiumness. The turbo petrol manual also gives you a proper step up in performance, so it will not just feel like a nicer XL6, but a genuinely more capable family car.If the third row is more of an occasional backup and you are effectively happy with a spacious five-seater most of the time, then the Mahindra XUV 7XO petrol is the stronger pick. It has a powerful petrol engine, feels more premium, is genuinely comfortable, drives very well and overall feels like the more substantial SUV upgrade. The only caveat is that its third row is nowhere near as practical as the Carens if you actually plan to use all seven seats regularly.
Saurabh
•5dI am planning to buy a new car. I am confused between XUV 7XO AX5 petrol and diesel. My monthly run is about 1,200 to 1,300 km, mostly on smooth roads (Dwarka Expressway/KMP, etc.). I have a few questions: Is it advisable to have a diesel variant in terms of total cost of ownership and a 10-year timeline, being in NCR? I do not expect DPF issues since I drive at 100-120kph for a few hundred kilometres every month. Is this assumption fine? As per current applicable rules, will I be able to sell the diesel variant to other states after 10 years with proper NOC, fitness, etc., from Gurgaon RTO?

Autocar India
At 1,200 to 1,300 km a month with regular expressway use, this is not the kind of usage pattern that typically makes a diesel a bad idea from a DPF perspective. Your assumption there is broadly fair because the car will regularly get the sustained runs and exhaust temperatures needed for regeneration, unlike a pure short trip city diesel.The bigger issue is 10-year ownership in NCR. Even with the policy debates and legal back-and-forth, the reality is that diesel ownership in Delhi NCR carries uncertainty that petrol simply does not. If your plan is genuinely to keep the car long term, that matters.On resale after 10 years, under current rules, yes, selling the Mahindra XUV 7XO outside NCR with the proper NOC, transfer process and compliance in the destination state should be possible, assuming that state permits the vehicle and its emissions category. But policy environments can change over a decade, so we would not make a purchase today purely assuming that the exit route remains friction-free.So if you are buying with a 5 to 7-year ownership mindset, the diesel makes strong sense. If you are genuinely buying for 10 years plus in NCR, the petrol is the lower-stress choice even if the diesel suits your usage better.
Rakesh
•6dMay be used or new, buying between Innova HyCross/Crysta/XUV 7XO. Both city and highway driving, long journeys, and living in a small town.

Autocar India
If you want the safest long-term ownership bet, the Toyota Innova HyCross is the easiest recommendation. It is spacious, genuinely comfortable for long journeys, easy to recommend as a family car, and Toyota’s reliability and service reputation matter even more when you live in a smaller town. If your running is high, the hybrid makes even more sense because fuel efficiency is excellent.The Innova Crysta still makes sense if you specifically want a diesel and absolute rugged dependability. For highway touring and rough use, it remains excellent. But it is an older product now, feels less modern, and if most of your use includes city driving, the heavier steering and more old-school nature can start to show.The Mahindra XUV 7XO is the value pick and the most feature-rich by far. It feels more premium inside, has stronger performance and is the more exciting product overall. However, if you live in a small town and are considering long-term ownership, Toyota’s service consistency and peace of mind are simply harder to beat. Also, the third row in the Mahindra is nowhere near as usable as either the Innova if you actually need seven-seat comfort.
Dr Venkatesh C K
•1wI am planning for a new car, the choice is between the Mahindra 7XO and the Toyota Hycross Hybrid. Which one is better?

Autocar India
These two serve very different needs, so the right answer depends on what matters more to you. If fuel efficiency, long-term practicality and genuine seven-seat comfort are your priorities, the Toyota Innova Hycross Hybrid is the clear winner. It is vastly more efficient, the third row is actually usable for adults, and overall family comfort is on another level compared to the 7XO.However, the Mahindra XUV 7XO is the more value-packed and emotionally appealing choice. It is significantly more affordable for what it offers, feels more premium inside, and is much better equipped. If you want SUV presence, it delivers that in a way the Hycross simply does not. The petrol and diesel engines are both strong performers too.Where the Mahindra falls short is in practicality. The third row is cramped and really only works for very short journeys, and unlike the Hycross, you cannot slide the middle row to improve space at the back. Fuel efficiency, whether you choose the petrol or even the diesel, is also nowhere near the Hycross too.
Mahindra XUV 7XO price in India
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