The Seltos nails the fundamentals, plush interior materials that shame pricier rivals, a ride quality tuned for real-world Indian roads, and enough features to justify the price tag. The IVT petrol is the no-drama choice: smooth, refined, and reliable in city traffic without the premium fuel demands or overheating quirks of the turbo DCT. But if you're considering the diesel for fuel economy, know this: the BS6.2 emission system demands highway runs every 1000-1500km to burn off soot, turning what used to be a city-friendly workhorse into a high-maintenance companion unless you regularly log open-road miles. Match the powertrain to your actual commute and you'll love it; ignore that and you'll be managing DPF warnings instead of enjoying the drive.
Here's what you're actually buying: a truck that refuses to quit. Owners routinely push 250k-400k miles on original drivetrains, and the only thing that kills the old ones is frame rust, not mechanical failure. But the 5th gen (2010-2024) makes you pay for that immortality with 16 mpg, a ride like a lumber wagon, and an interior that feels frozen in 2005. You're spending $50k-$60k on something bulletproof but outdated, and unless you're actually using the body-on-frame toughness off-road, a Highlander does the daily-driver job better for less. The brand-new 6th gen modernizes with a turbo-4 and hybrid, but it's too green to trust, dealers are tacking $10k markups onto polarizing styling, and they killed the fold-flat rear seats. If you off-road seriously or want a vehicle that outlives your mortgage, grab a clean 4th gen V8 or late 5th gen and accept the compromises. If you're pavement-only, this is an expensive way to burn gas.