Talking about the price, the base petrol variant of Hyundai Creta starts at around ₹ 10.73 lakh ex-showroom, while the top variant goes for around ₹ 20 lakh. On the other hand, the base model (42 kWh battery) of the Creta EV starts at ₹18.02 lakh ex-showroom, while the long range (51.4 kWh) variants go for ₹20-24.5 lakh. Let us know which of these two would be a more profitable deal to buy?
Performance and driving experience
The Creta petrol comes with a 1.5 liter naturally aspirated or turbo engine, which is smooth but may seem a little sluggish in city traffic. ARAI mileage is around 17-18 kmpl, but in real world it gets 10-13 kmpl in city and 15-18 kmpl on highway. In cities like Delhi-NCR, it would be fine if we assume an average of 12 kmpl with AC, traffic and load.
The electric motor in the Creta EV delivers instant torque (255 Nm), making 0-100 km/h acceleration faster than the petrol version. Driving is silent, smooth and fun. ARAI claimed range is 420-510 km (42/51.4 kWh battery). In real world tests, we get 8.5-9.5 km/kWh in the city and 7-8 km/kWh on the highway, which means 400-450 km range is easily achieved in mixed use. Fast charging (50 kW DC) takes 10-80% in just 58 minutes, while a home 11 kW AC charger takes 4-5 hours.
5 Year Running Cost Calculation (Approximately 15,000 KM/Year)
The price of petrol in Delhi-NCR is around ₹ 95-96 per liter in April 2026. Considering the average real world mileage as 12 kmpl, the figures will be as follows-
- Cost per KM: ₹95.5/12= ₹7.96/km
- Annual running cost (15,000 km): ₹1,19,400
- Total fuel cost for 5 years: Approx ₹5,97,000
For Creta EV, let us assume an average domestic electricity rate in Delhi-NCR of ₹ 6-8 per unit (depending on the slab). If we keep real world efficiency at 8.4 km/kWh (mixed use), then the figures will be something like this-
- Cost per KM: ₹7/8.4= ₹0.83/km
- Annual charging cost: ₹12,450
- Total expenditure for 5 years: Approximately ₹62,250
Saving in running costs
EV will save around ₹5.35 lakh on petrol Creta in 5 years. The savings increase further if you drive more (20,000 km/year). If you charge ₹ 12-15/unit at office parking or public charger, the benefit of EV reduces slightly, but still remains below ₹ 3-4/KM.
EV is also ahead in maintenance. In a petrol car, the cost of service, oil change, timing chain/belt, clutch etc. is incurred every 10,000 KM. From ₹ 80 thousand to 1.2 lakh in 5 years. There are less moving parts in EV, only the cost of brake pads, tires and suspension is incurred. Battery warranty is usually up to 8 years/1.6 lakh KM. Total maintenance can be reduced by 40-60% in EV. Besides, these factors are also very important-
- Residual Value: The petrol Creta may offer better resale value after 5 years, but the EV market is still developing and there are concerns about battery degradation.
- Practicality: Creta EV also has almost the same space and features, but range will be a concern. Petrol is better in rural or remote areas.
- Environment and Tax: EV is a vehicle with zero emissions and reduces pollution. EVs get exemption in road tax and registration.
- Driving Pleasure: EV is more fun than instant torque and silence. Engine noise and vibration are more in petrol.
Total 5 Year Ownership Cost
- Creta Petrol: Purchase (on-road) ₹15 lakh + Fuel ₹6 lakh + Maintenance ₹1 lakh + Insurance = ₹22.5-23.5 lakh.
- Creta EV: Purchase ₹22-24 lakh + Charging ₹0.65 lakh + Maintenance ₹0.4 lakh + Insurance = ₹24-26 lakh.
The EV’s huge savings in running and maintenance cover the initial price gap in 4-5 years. If you are going to keep it for more than 5 years or drive 40-50 KM+ daily, then EV is cheaper. Petrol will be better for low running (10,000 km/year) or frequent long trips, as it does not worry about range.
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