A sensible, comfortable six-seater MPV with Maruti's running costs and a much-improved 6-speed AT, though enthusiasts and feature-hunters should look elsewhere.
The Maruti XL6 is a premium six-seater MPV sold via Nexa, offering captain-chair comfort, a refined 1.5L petrol and Maruti's frugal ownership story. The 2025 update brings a 6-speed torque converter, 16-inch alloys, ventilated front seats, a 360-degree camera and six airbags. It is a comfort-and-cruise machine, not a driver's car.
The XL6 wears a pseudo-SUV face with a raised bonnet, bolder grille, full-LED headlamps, faux skid plates and generous black cladding to distance itself from the Ertiga. The 2025 update adds more chrome up front, a body-coloured 16-inch alloy (up from 15), a shark-fin antenna, a roof spoiler and subtle black accents at the rear. Arun Panwar notes that to the untrained eye the side and rear profile still read as Ertiga, and a sunroof is conspicuously absent at this price. The 4.4-metre length, 1.7-metre height and 5.2-metre turning radius keep it city-friendly. It is handsome in a sensible, upright way rather than striking, very much in line with how the Maruti Brezza approaches design.
The cabin gets an all-black theme, faux black ash wood trim, leatherette upholstery and a knitted roof lining that genuinely lift the ambience over the Ertiga. Front seats are now ventilated, the steering is tilt and telescopic, and the 7-inch SmartPlay Pro touchscreen supports wireless Android Auto and Apple CarPlay plus Suzuki Connect. The middle-row captain chairs slide and recline, though the fixed armrest position annoys, and rear sunblinds are missed. V3Cars confirms a 5'8" adult finds adequate knee, leg and headroom in the third row once the middle row is adjusted. Boot space is 209 litres with all seats up, expanding to 550 litres and 692 litres with rows folded. The audio system and dated switchgear remain weak spots.
Fit and finish is typical recent Maruti: tight panel gaps, durable plastics and a layout that prioritises function over flair. The 2025 update bumps the safety kit meaningfully, with six airbags (dual front plus two side, plus seat-mounted units on top trims), ESP with hill-hold across the range, TPMS, a 360-degree camera with reasonable resolution, and IR-cut plus UV-cut glass. Pedestrian protection compliance is baked in. The cabin uses high-tensile steel for the body structure. That said, some switchgear is shared with much cheaper Maruti models, the IRVM is manual day/night rather than auto-dimming, and the absence of a sunroof at this price point feels stingy. Suzuki Connect telematics adds remote AC, location sharing and driving alerts.
The 1.5-litre K15C dual-jet petrol with mild-hybrid assist makes 103 bhp and 137 Nm, paired with a 5-speed manual or the new 6-speed torque converter. Refinement is excellent at low rpm with minimal vibration. The new AT is the headline upgrade: shifts are quick, paddle responses are crisp and MotorBeam calls it a clear leap over the old 4-speed unit. The trade-off is character. Low-end response is merely adequate, and with six occupants plus luggage overtakes need planning. There is no S mode, and manual mode holds revs to redline without auto-upshifting. Claimed efficiency is 20.27 kmpl (AT) and 20.97 kmpl (MT); expect 12-14 kmpl in city and 18-19 kmpl on highways in the real world. No diesel option remains a sore point.
Ride quality is the XL6's strongest dynamic trait. The soft suspension and plush seats absorb broken Indian roads without transmitting sharp shocks into the cabin, and the move to 16-inch wheels has not hurt low-speed pliancy. High-speed stability is acceptable for the segment. Handling, however, is firmly secondary: body roll is pronounced through quick direction changes at 80-90 km/h, the steering is light and short on feedback, and the kerb weight nudges 1,200 kg. The turning radius of 5.2 metres keeps it manageable in tight Indian lanes. Braking is decent below 100 km/h but inspires less confidence at highway speeds, and the rear drum brakes feel like a cost-cut at this price. Treat the XL6 as a comfort cruiser, not a corner-carver, and it delivers.
Pricing runs from roughly Rs 12.9 lakh to Rs 14.9 lakh ex-showroom for the top Alpha Plus, with the Alpha Plus AT approaching Rs 17.25 lakh on-road in Mumbai. That is a real jump over the pre-facelift car and puts it uncomfortably close to the Kia Carens Prestige Plus 1.4 turbo DCT, which offers more power, more features and a more premium cabin for similar money. Against the Innova, however, the XL6 remains a compelling value six-seater with lower running costs and Nexa servicing. Within Maruti's own range, it sits well above the Ertiga and is justified by features and the AT upgrade. Buyers prioritising fuel economy, dependable after-sales and proper six-seat comfort will find the maths still works.
"The 6-speed AT transforms the XL6; pick automatic for city use, manual only for low-traffic small towns."
"A well-equipped premium Ertiga with genuine six-seat comfort, but the missing sunroof at this price stings."
"Cabin and middle row feel genuinely upmarket, though side and rear styling still struggles to escape the Ertiga shadow."
"Third row is usable for adults on long trips if the middle row is adjusted; boot handles weekend luggage for five."
"Sorted family MPV with a refined engine and superb ride, but Carens turbo offers more car for similar money."