
Last Updated on: 20 May 2026
Skoda Kodiaq price in Sivasagar
The Skoda Kodiaq ex showroom prices in Sivasagar are between ₹36.99 lakh and ₹46.99 lakh. It is available in variants.
The Skoda Kodiaq on road price in Sivasagar ranges from ₹41.77 lakh for the base variant to ₹53.02 lakh for the top variant (including all taxes, RTO fees, and insurance).
Skoda Kodiaq price in Sivasagar
The Skoda Kodiaq ex showroom prices in Sivasagar are between ₹36.99 lakh and ₹46.99 lakh. It is available in variants.
The Skoda Kodiaq on road price in Sivasagar ranges from ₹41.77 lakh for the base variant to ₹53.02 lakh for the top variant (including all taxes, RTO fees, and insurance).
Skoda Kodiaq Pricing by Variants
* Estimated on-road price. Final amount may vary.
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Skoda Kodiaq FAQs
The price of the Skoda Kodiaq in Sivasagar ranges from ₹36.99 lakh to ₹46.99 lakh.
The most affordable variant of the Skoda Kodiaq in Sivasagar is the Lounge 2.0 Turbo Petrol.
The on-road price of the Skoda Kodiaq's base variant in Sivasagar is ₹41.77 lakh.
The Selection L&K 2.0 Turbo Petrol is the most expensive variant of the Skoda Kodiaq in Sivasagar.
The on-road price of the Skoda Kodiaq's top variant is ₹53.02 lakh in Sivasagar.
Questions you may find useful
Sanjit Tiwari
•4dI own a 2025 Skoda Kodiaq L&K. Skoda has now activated ADAS in the newer models. Kindly confirm whether the same feature will also be activated in the earlier 2025 models, considering that Skoda had indicated that all the necessary hardware for ADAS is already present and that it could be enabled through a software update.

Autocar India
Unfortunately, no. The ADAS suite cannot simply be activated on the older 2025 Skoda Kodiaq via a software update alone, because it does not have all the required hardware for the system to function.While modern cars are increasingly software-defined, ADAS is not just a case of unlocking dormant code. It relies on a combination of sensors, cameras, radar modules, control units and the correct electronic architecture working together. If the full hardware stack is not present from the factory, a software update cannot magically add those capabilities.So if your understanding was that all 2025 Kodiaqs were physically ADAS-ready and only awaiting activation, that is unfortunately not the case.
Drakshya Mohanty
•6dI currently own an Audi A4 Premium Plus Petrol and have been using it for the last three years. The car has now crossed the 50,000 km mark. I am now confused about whether I should continue using the same car for a few more years or upgrade to a newer German luxury SUV within a budget of around ₹60-65 lakh.

Autocar India
With 50,000km covered in 3 years, the smarter move is to keep your Audi A4 for another couple of years unless you clearly need a taller car for rough roads or easier entry. At this age and mileage, a well-serviced and carefully driven A4 still has plenty of life. It is quiet and smooth on highways, and you avoid another big hit in value right now.The other issue is that, on a budget of Rs 60-65 lakh, your only available SUV options from the German luxury brands are compact SUVs like the BMW X1, Audi Q3 and Mercedes-Benz GLA, which will feel like a downgrade from your A4 in terms of size and space. You will have to up your budget by at least Rs 10 lakh to move into the next segment of luxury SUVs. Better alternatives, if you don't mind a non-luxury badge, are the Skoda Kodiaq and Volkswagen Tayron. They offer similar quality levels to their more luxurious counterparts, as well as equitable levels of comfort and refinement. They even use the same EA888 2.0-litre petrol engine as your A4. What's more, for much less money, you get far more space and an even longer list of features. You sacrifice some snob value, but you get a more rounded product.
Sandeep Subbaiah
•1wHi, I am currently driving a Tiguan 2.0 diesel and a Ford EcoSport Automatic. The Tiguan is almost 10 years old now, so I am looking to buy a new car in the ₹45 lakh range. My monthly running is around 500 km, along with two highway trips every year. I have shortlisted the Skoda Kodiaq and the Mahindra XEV 9e. We are a family of three. Should I stick with a petrol car or move to an electric vehicle? Kindly advise.

Autocar India
Considering your requirements and budget, the Skoda Kodiaq fits your brief better. Coming from a Tiguan, it will feel familiar and a clear step up: smooth petrol engine, strong highway stability, and a more premium, feature-rich cabin. Your running of 500 km a month is low, so a petrol car makes sense: it is simple to live with, refuels in minutes on road trips, and you do not need to plan charging. For a family of three, you get loads of space, plus a large boot for your highway trips.Pick the Mahindra XEV 9e only if you have a private parking spot where you can install a charger and most of your driving is in town. It will feel very smooth and quiet and will cost less to run, but highway trips will need planning in order to charge the EV.
B M SAHU
•1wI have a T-Roc manufactured in 2020, which I purchased in January 2021. I primarily do long highway trips, with almost no city driving. The T-Roc has been solid for the last five years, but during very long 8 to 10-hour drives, it does not feel very comfortable because of the seating position, and my legs start to hurt a bit. My height is 6 feet. Which SUV would be best for long drives with great driving dynamics? What about the Jeep Compass? Should I make the change? Are there any chances that Jeep will launch a new Compass in India? And what about Jeep’s quality issues in India?

Autocar India
Given your usage, we would not change the T-Roc unless the seating comfort issue is genuinely becoming a deal breaker, because the T-Roc is still a very solid long-distance machine with excellent driving manners. However, at 6 feet tall, if the seating position is causing leg fatigue after 8 to 10-hour drives, that is a legitimate reason to upgrade, and in that case, you need something with a more relaxed seating position, better thigh support and a roomier cabin.The Jeep Compass is a strong candidate if driving dynamics matter. It still has one of the best ride and handling balances in this segment. It feels planted at highway speeds and genuinely tackles poor roads brilliantly. It also offers a more upright SUV seating position than the T-Roc, which could suit you better for long hours. Build quality and overall solidity are still strong points.On the new Compass, there are no immediate plans for an all-new generation in India. Jeep is expected to keep the current line-up fresh with special editions and updates, with a genuinely new product likely only around 2027. So, waiting specifically for a brand new India-bound Compass does not make much sense right now.If your brief is purely long-distance comfort plus great driving dynamics, we would actually look beyond the Compass as well. The Skoda Kodiaq or the Volkswagen Tayron, as they feel like a more natural upgrade from a T-Roc, with much better long-distance comfort, stronger ergonomics for taller drivers and excellent highway manners.If you want something more SUV like, the Jeep Meridian deserves a closer look than the Compass because it offers similar Jeep dynamics along with more space and a more relaxed long-distance experience.
Saurabh
•2wIs 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.
Akshay
•3wI am planning to buy the Skoda Kodiaq Lounge. Is it a value-for-money option?

Autocar India
Yes, priced at Rs 39.99 lakh, ex-showroom India, the Skoda Kodiaq Lounge represents great value for money. It's a full Rs 4 lakh cheaper than the Kodiaq Sportline and Rs 6.5 lakh cheaper than the L&K variant, and you don't miss out on that much. The main difference, of course, is the lack of a third row, though these seats were quite small to begin with. It misses some features too, but none of them is essential. For instance, the boot is still powered but loses its hands-free-opening function, the touchscreen is slightly smaller, the front passenger seat is not powered, there's just a rear-view camera instead of a 360deg camera, and the 13-speaker Canton audio system is replaced by a simpler one with 9 speakers. What remains unchanged is the powertrain - a 204hp, 2.0-litre turbo-petrol engine with AWD and a 7-speed DSG gearbox. Also unchanged is the well-sorted chassis, high interior quality and solid build, which is really what you're getting a Kodiaq for in the first place.
Ishaan
•5wHi Autocar Team, I am planning to buy a 7-seater car for my family, with regular travel between Kolhapur–Mumbai and Kolhapur–Belgaum. I have shortlisted the Skoda Kodiaq Sportline, Toyota Innova Hycross, and Toyota Innova Crysta. Could you please help me decide which would be the best option for my usage and requirements?

Autocar India
Go for the Toyota Innova Hycross Hybrid ZX(O) 7-seater, as it best fits your requirements. It is very smooth and refined to drive for long hours, the hybrid automatic powertrain is efficient, and it stays steady and planted at highway speeds. Space is generous across all rows; the middle-row captain seats feature ottomans (leg rests), and Toyota’s wide service network gives peace of mind. On the highway, the hybrid still uses less fuel than a turbo petrol like in the Skoda Kodiaq, so you will stop less often for fuel, and the top trim comes loaded with all the convenience, comfort and safety features you'd want.One thing to be aware of: with all three rows up, the boot is small, so carrying seven people plus bags will require some planning. Also, the cabin feels solid but not as rich as the Skoda. Pick the Skoda Kodiaq only if you want a more premium feel and stronger performance, and you are okay with higher fuel use and a smaller service network.
NAVNATH AWARI
•7wI have a budget of ₹50 lakh and am considering options like the Toyota Fortuner, Mahindra XEV 9E, and XUV7XO. While I appreciate the Fortuner’s reliability, it feels outdated compared to newer competitors. I am also inclined towards the newer Mahindra models, but my past service experience with Mahindra and Tata makes me hesitant.

Autocar India
Go for the Toyota Innova Hycross ZX(O) strong-hybrid automatic - it gives you Toyota-level reliability without feeling old, and it fits your 50 lakh budget well. Compared to the Fortuner, the Hycross feels much more up to date inside, rides far more comfortably over broken roads, and is easier to drive in traffic thanks to the smooth hybrid automatic (it blends an electric motor with the petrol engine, so starts and low-speed moves are very quiet and smooth). Toyota’s service reach and consistency across India are still the safest bet, and resale will be strong. If you mostly drive with family, you’ll also like the roomy second row, the high seating, and the safety tech that helps on highways.One thing to be aware of: this isn't a tough off-road SUV like the Fortuner, so if you truly need 4x4 or plan to tackle rough trails, it won’t suit you. Also, the boot with all three rows up is limited, so check if that works for your trips.If you want a more premium feel and sharper drive and are okay with petrol-only, look at the Skoda Kodiaq L&K - it feels very modern and is great on highways, but service quality depends on your city. If you want a big, plush SUV with 4x4 and lots of features, the MG Gloster Savvy is worth a look, though it is huge to park, and resale won’t match Toyota.Given your past Mahindra/Tata service worries, the Hycross is the stress-free choice.
Ankit Mehra
•7wI currently drive a Jeep Compass Model S Petrol, and my annual driving includes 5,000km in the mountains, 5,000km on highways, and 5,000km in Delhi NCR. I am looking for a bigger 7-8 seater SUV with more premium features that can accommodate a baby seat along with six additional passengers.

Autocar India
Check out the Volkswagen Tayron and Skoda Kodiaq, which are both new-generation models that have recently been launched. They represent a significant upgrade in terms of not just size but performance and refinement as well, compared to your Jeep Compass. They're essentially the same car underneath, with the same powertrain and mechanical makeup, though they have some features and design differences.Crucially, the Skoda Kodiaq is offered in a few different variants, while the Tayron comes in just one fully-loaded version - though we hear lower trim levels will be introduced in time. The 204hp 2.0-litre petrol is incredibly strong and smooth, and there's AWD as standard, which should serve you well on your mountain drives. Space in the third row is not great, but it will suffice with some adjustment. Both SUVs can, however, accommodate child seats.If you want a more spacious 7-seater and you don't mind a diesel engine, check out the upcoming MG Majestor, which is an even larger vehicle.
Sirish Raju
•7wCan you suggest a good Petrol automatic SUV within a 40 lakh to 50 lakh budget? Primarily for city driving, around 8000 km per year. The car should have good interiors and good resale after 4 years.

Autocar India
For a good petrol SUV in the Rs 40-50 lakh range, check out the Skoda Kodiaq. It comes in 5 and 7-seat guises and features a premium, high-quality and practical interior. Quality has taken a step up in this new-gen model compared to the outgoing Kodiaq, and fit and finish are now on par with luxury cars. It may look large on the outside, but it's actually quite easy to manoeuvre, and moreover, its 2.0-litre TSI petrol engine is smooth and refined.Alternatively, you can check out the Audi Q3. It's not as large as the Skoda, but since you plan to use it primarily in the city, and if you don't have a need for the added space, it could be beneficial. It has better badge value too, which should help resale value compared to the Skoda, and though it uses the same 2.0-litre turbo-petrol engine, its smaller size means fuel efficiency should be a bit better, as well as performance.
Skoda Kodiaq price in India
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