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.
This crossover splits the difference between a lifted Corolla and a downsized RAV4, and that compromise shows most in the powertrain: the hybrid is genuinely efficient (40+ mpg real-world) with enough electric assist to feel adequate, but the gas-only version struggles so badly on highway merges that owners call it stressful. Both suffer from intrusive road noise above 65 mph and rear legroom tight enough that tall passengers complain immediately. The interior feels cheaper than the $28-30k price suggests, though Toyota's reliability reputation and strong resale value soften that blow. Buy the hybrid if you're doing mostly city miles and value predictable ownership costs over driving engagement. Skip it entirely if you road-trip often or need real backseat space, the RAV4 or Honda HR-V are worth the stretch.