Toyota refreshed the Innova Crysta and quietly raised prices by up to Rs 83,000. Here's the part nobody's saying out loud: this is probably the last one you'll buy new.
The 2026 Toyota Innova Crysta starts at Rs 19.72 lakh and tops out at Rs 26.63 lakh, both ex-showroom. For that you get a bolder grille, tan leather seats, copper-finish trim, and two features buyers kept asking for: a wireless charger and a tyre pressure monitor. That's the full update.
What the 2026 Innova Crysta Costs You to Run
Under the bonnet, nothing moved. The same 2.4-litre diesel makes 148 bhp and 343 Nm, mated to a five-speed manual. Only a manual. The automatic is gone.
Crawl through city traffic every day and your left leg will feel that clutch. But point it at a 500 km highway run with seven people and a full boot, and third gear does the job. Toyota claims up to 15 kmpl. Owners report closer to 9 to 11 in real mixed driving, still cheaper than petrol if you rack up the miles.
Why the 2026 Innova Crysta Could Be the Last Diesel One
Here's the number that rewrites the math. 2027. That's when stricter CAFE3 fuel-economy rules are expected to make this diesel hard to keep on sale, and most reports point to the Crysta retiring around then. So this isn't a mid-life refresh. It's a farewell.
Innova Crysta vs : Which One Fits You?
Stand in any airport pickup line and count the white Crystas. It's quietly become India's default taxi, while private families drift toward the petrol-hybrid Hycross. Toyota Innova Hycross hands you an automatic, a smoother ride, and over 20 kmpl.
The Crysta hands you that torquey diesel, rear-wheel-drive toughness, and resale value that barely blinks. Want an automatic and newer tech? Hycross. Want a workhorse that'll clear 2 lakh km without fuss? Crysta.
Which 2026 Innova Crysta Variant Should You Buy?
For a private buyer, the VX trim is the sweet spot. You get the leather, the wireless charger, the TPMS, and seven airbags without paying the ZX tax. Skip the base GX unless you run a fleet. And before you sign, ask your dealer for the exact on-road figure, because metro taxes add 10 to 15 percent over ex-showroom.
Toyota's warranty still covers three years or one lakh km, stretchable to five. That matters more than usual, because if this really is the final Crysta, you'll want every kilometre protected. The real question isn't the new grille. It's whether the Innova badge returns after 2027 as the electric MPV Toyota has teased abroad, or disappears as a diesel for good. The clock's running.