Autocar India

Last Updated on: 10 Jun 2026

Toyota Innova Crysta

Toyota Innova Crysta price in Purba Bardhaman

₹22.88 - ₹31.03 Lakh
On road price in
EMI starting at ₹44,889 /month

The Toyota Innova Crysta price in Purba Bardhaman starts at ₹19.72 lakh  (ex-showroom). The Toyota Innova Crysta on road price in Purba Bardhaman for the base 2.4 Diesel GX 7 seat begins at ₹22.83 lakh, while the Crysta top model price for the 2.4 Diesel ZX 7 seat variant is ₹30.91 lakh.

 

Check the Toyota Innova Crysta on-road price in your city for all variants and find the one that best fits your budget and preferences.

Toyota Innova Crysta Pricing by Variants

2.4 Diesel GX 7 seat2393 cc | Diesel | Manual
Price Breakdown
Ex-showroom Price
₹19,72,000
RTO (Individual)
₹1,97,200
Insurance
₹98,600
Other Charges
₹20,320
Hypothecation Charges
₹0

On road price in Purba Bardhaman₹22,88,120 *
Want to take a loan?
EMI starting at ₹33,144 /month

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

Value for money
2.4 Diesel GX 8 seat2393 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹22.94 LakhOn road price, Purba Bardhaman
2.4 Diesel GX Plus 7 seat2393 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹24.65 LakhOn road price, Purba Bardhaman
2.4 Diesel GX Plus 8 seat2393 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹24.70 LakhOn road price, Purba Bardhaman
Autocar's pick
2.4 Diesel VX 7 seat2393 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹29.05 LakhOn road price, Purba Bardhaman
2.4 Diesel VX 8 seat2393 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹29.11 LakhOn road price, Purba Bardhaman
2.4 Diesel ZX 7 seat2393 cc | Diesel | Manual
₹31.03 LakhOn road price, Purba Bardhaman

Toyota Innova Crysta Booking & Test Drive - User Reviews

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Toyota Innova Crysta Official Brochure

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On Road Price of Toyota Innova Crysta Alternatives in Purba Bardhaman

Toyota Innova Crysta Images

Platinum White Pearl color Image - 36711
Attitude Black Mica color Image - 36709
Avant-garde Bronze Metal color Image - 36710
Silver Metallic color Image - 36712
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Front Row Seats Image - 5475
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Steering Wheel Image - 5482
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Airbags Image - 5473
Second Row Seats Image - 5476
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Ac Vents Front Image - 5489
Color Black Image - 5496
Alloy Wheels Image - 5498
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Alloy Wheels True Image - 5507
Door Controls Image - 5490
Door Controls Image - 5479
Front Logo Image - 5484
Gear Box Image - 5472
Interior Colours White Image - 5478
Open Bonnet Engine Shot Image - 5485
Open Bonnet Engine Shot Image - 5486
Color Silver Metallic Image - 3242
Color Avant Garde Bronze Metal Image - 3243
Color Platinum White Pearl Image - 3244
Color Attitude Black Mica Image - 3245
Color Super White Image - 3246

Toyota Innova Crysta videos

Toyota Innova Crysta FAQs

The Innova Crysta base model price in Purba Bardhaman for the GX trim starts from Rs 22.83 lakh.

Innova Crysta top model (2.4 Diesel ZX 7 seat), is the most premium, priced at Rs 26.63 lakh (ex-showroom).

The Innova Crysta base model price in Purba Bardhaman for the GX trim starts from Rs 19.72 lakh (ex-showroom).

 

The Toyota Innova Crysta 7 seater on road price in Purba Bardhaman starts from Rs 22.83 lakh. 

In Purba Bardhaman, The Innova Crysta top model on road price is Rs 30.91 lakh.

The price of Innova Crysta in Purba Bardhaman starts from Rs 19.72 lakh to Rs 26.63 lakh (ex-showroom).

The Innova Crysta on road price in Purba Bardhaman starts from Rs 22.83 lakh to Rs 30.91 lakh.

Need an expert opinion on your car related queries?

Questions you may find useful

KS

krishna singhal

3d

​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
2d

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
MV

Mihir Vora

1w

I am looking to replace my Toyota Innova Crysta GX and am considering either the Toyota Innova HyCross ZX Hybrid or the Mahindra XEV 9S or 9e, but I am unsure which would be the better choice. My usage includes a daily city commute of around 60 km and a highway trip of approximately 500 km once every month. I need a 5-seater car. Based on these requirements, which option would you recommend?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1w

For your usage, we would suggest the Innova HyCross Hybrid rather than the XEV 9e or XEV 9s. The reason is that you are replacing a Crysta, and once you have lived with an Innova, you tend to appreciate things like space, practicality and long distance comfort more than headline technology. The HyCross feels like a natural evolution of what you already have. It is significantly more fuel efficient than the Crysta, the hybrid system is exceptionally well suited to a 60 km daily city commute, and for your monthly 500 km highway trips, it remains one of the most effortless cars you can buy.The XEV 9e and 9s are impressive EVs with strong performance, big batteries and low running costs. If your driving was almost entirely city based, they would be easier to recommend. However, for a family that regularly does longer highway trips, the HyCross still offers a level of convenience that is hard to beat.Between the two Mahindra cars, the 9e is the better choice. It has a more balanced ride and handling setup, feels more premium inside and out, and is the more complete product overall. The 9s feels noticeably softer, which can make it feel slightly bouncy over undulating roads.

VehicleToyota Innova HyCross
VehicleMahindra XEV 9e
VehicleMahindra XEV 9S
VehicleToyota Innova Crysta
DE

Deepak

2w

Hi, I am a doctor and regularly organise medical camps for underprivileged patients in remote villages where healthcare facilities are limited or unavailable. For this purpose, I am looking to buy a practical and reliable 7-seater SUV that can comfortably carry staff and volunteers, while also offering enough boot space for medicines, medical equipment, foldable tables, and chairs. Since many of these villages have uneven roads and poor infrastructure, the vehicle should have: Good ground clearance and strong suspension Comfortable seating for long journeys Large and practical boot space Decent fuel efficiency Low maintenance and reliable after-sales support Good safety features for highway and rural travel My budget is between ₹15 lakh and ₹20 lakh, though I can stretch it up to ₹25 lakh through EMI if the vehicle genuinely justifies the extra cost. Could you please suggest the best 7-seater SUV options suitable for my requirements?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
2w

Regular trips to remote villages on rough roads with seven people and lots of medical gear call for something tough first, then roomy. In that brief, the Mahindra Scorpio N diesel manual, 7-seat, is the better fit for you. It sits high off the ground and feels strong on broken roads, so you can reach camp sites that softer city SUVs may avoid. The diesel will use less fuel on long days, and Mahindra has service in most small towns, which helps when you are far from the city. For your boxes, tables and chairs, the third row folds in parts, so you can keep five or six on board and still open up a large, useful space.Two things to note: with all seven seats up, the boot is small, so plan to fold part of the third row or add a carrier. Also, the third row is best for short stints for adults.If you must keep all seven seats up and still need real boot space, consider the Toyota Innova Crysta. While not an SUV, its tough construction makes it feel hardy and well-suited to rough road use.

VehicleMahindra Scorpio N
VehicleToyota Innova Crysta
OB

Obiwan

6w

Hi Autocar Team, I would love your opinion on my use case. My situation: I am relocating to our farm, which is about 200 km from Bangalore. The car will be used occasionally for drives between my village and Bangalore (likely at least once a month), and otherwise as the primary vehicle for local travel, including trips to nearby towns, temples, and the Western Ghats. Requirements: Good boot space, as we will often carry a lot of haul (for example, kitchen supplies). Comfortable for a family of four, including elderly parents. Captain seats in the middle row would be preferred. The last 2-3 km to the farm is on unpaved/uneven roads, and nearby roads may also be inconsistent. I am unsure whether a body-on-frame vehicle is necessary or overkill for this usage. Currently using a 2006 Swift, which struggles on such terrain. Budget: Initially ₹20 lakh, now stretching to the mid-₹20 lakh range. Cars I have test-driven: Mahindra Scorpio N - Did not like the body roll Mahindra XUV700 - Too plush/soft for my needs Mahindra XUV300 - Felt underpowered Mahindra Thar Roxx - Loved it, but not practical for family EVs are not feasible due to an unreliable power supply Current bias: Toyota Innova Crysta - After driving it, it felt like the most suitable, reliable option for my use case Concerns: Automatic vs manual (Crysta is manual only) Diesel longevity given future regulations Long-term ownership (10-15 years) Am I making the right choice with the Innova Crysta, or are there better alternatives I should consider?

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
6w

You've done a lot of research, and for the most part, you're right about the Toyota Innova Crysta. The ladder frame chassis means it can take a beating, it's almost flawlessly reliable and will run for decades on end, and even when it's time for maintenance, it should be relatively reasonable, too. We would have recommended the Toyota Hycross hybrid, which is a more sophisticated version of the Crysta in every aspect, but as you said, it's out of your budget. Do note, higher Crysta variants push Rs 30 lakh on the road themselves. That said, we don't feel a ladder frame chassis is strictly necessary given your usage. While tough, it does make the ride incredibly busy on rough patches, it feels quite heavy to drive, and it places the cabin higher, which could make ingress and egress cumbersome for your parents down the line. An automatic would have been ideal, but given your usage is infrequent, a manual should be easy enough to live with. While the future of diesel is uncertain in the Delhi NCR, the rest of the country hasn't seen a change in policy for some time, and if you're keen on a diesel car, you should go for it. While the Innova Crysta does seem like your best bet, you should also check out an often overlooked three-row SUV, the Hyundai Alcazar. It's not as powerful as the Innova, but it is far more sophisticated, easy to drive and cheaper to buy. Plus, you get the option of a diesel automatic, and Hyundai's service network is widespread and of good quality. Though a monocoque, it'll handle rural rough patches just fine, too, so as an alternative, we think it's worth consideration as well.

VehicleToyota Innova Crysta
VehicleToyota Innova HyCross
VehicleHyundai Alcazar
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