Table of Contents
- Hyundai Grand i10 Nios
- Maruti Swift
- Maruti Baleno
- Hyundai i20
- Tata Altroz
- Honourable Mentions: Used Cars Worth Considering
Buying a hatchback under Rs 8 lakh in 2026 is genuinely one of the better positions to be in as an Indian car buyer. This bracket has five cars that all have a legitimate reason to exist, and none of them is a bad choice if matched to the right buyer.
The problem is that most buying guides tell you what each car has without telling you what it is like to actually live with one. With this list, we aim to fix that. The cars are arranged from the lowest starting price to the highest, and every entry carries both sides of the story.
| Car | Starting Price | Engines | Transmission | ARAI Mileage | Warranty |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hyundai Grand i10 Nios | ₹5.55 lakh | 1.2L Petrol, CNG | MT, AMT | 20.7 kmpl | 3yr/1L km |
| Maruti Swift | ₹5.79 lakh | 1.2L Petrol, CNG | MT, AMT | 24.8 kmpl | 3yr/1L km |
| Maruti Baleno | ₹5.99 lakh | 1.2L Petrol, CNG | MT, AMT | 22.35 kmpl | 3yr/1L km |
| Hyundai i20 | ₹5.99 lakh | 1.2L Petrol | MT, iVT | 20 kmpl | 3yr/1L km |
| Tata Altroz | ₹6.30 lakh | 1.2L Petrol, 1.5L Diesel | MT, AMT, DCT | 19-21 kmpl | 3yr/1L km |
All prices ex-showroom, May 2026. The i20 is petrol only in its current lineup. No diesel is offered.
1. Hyundai Grand i10 Nios

The Grand i10 Nios is the most honest car on this list, not pretending to be anything other than a compact city car, and delivering on that brief consistently.
Its 1.2-litre Kappa engine produces 83 PS and 114 Nm, which is adequate for urban use, paired to a 5-speed manual or an AMT, which is available across most variants and is one of the smoother units in this price bracket. CNG is available from the Magna trim for buyers who want to reduce running costs further.
Six airbags are standard across the range, along with ABS, ESP, and rear parking sensors.
Also Read - Hyundai Grand i10 Nios Vibe Edition Starts At ₹7.04 lakhs
Reasons to Consider
- Your driving is almost entirely urban, your budget is firm, and you are not regularly carrying more than three people.
- Multiple owners across long-term reviews confirm the Kappa engine's reliability over high mileage with minimal fuss.
- The light steering, small turning radius, and compact footprint make it genuinely easier to navigate and park in tight city conditions than anything else on this list.
Reasons to Avoid
- Take it outside the city and the i10 Nios starts showing its limits.
- Multiple owners specifically flag the highway experience: the steering goes noticeably light at speed and does not feel settled during overtakes, the engine requires planning ahead when fully loaded, and rear seat passengers feel sharp bumps over undulations at highway speeds.
- The 0-star Global NCAP rating for the India-made version is a genuine concern for anyone who regularly drives outside city limits.
2. Maruti Swift

The Maruti Swift is India's best-selling hatchback, thanks to a combination of qualities that no single competitor matches entirely.
The new Z-Series 3-cylinder 1.2-litre engine produces 81.58 PS and 111.7 Nm - numbers that may look modest on paper. In practice however, the engine delivers its torque lower in the rev range, making the car feel responsive in stop-start city traffic. The CNG option is available if running costs are a priority.
Its ARAI mileage of 24.8 kmpl is the highest in this group.
Safety suite is strong as well, with 6 airbags, ABS-EBD, ESP, and hill-hold. Its sedan sibling, the Dzire, scored 5 stars in both GNCAP and BNCAP, indicating a much improved platform than before.
Reasons to Consider
- If you enjoy driving. Simply one of the most joy to drive cars you can buy, there is a certain sportiness to Swift that words cannot explain!
- Its steering weighs up well at higher speeds without becoming nervous, and the car changes direction with a sharpness.
- The ride quality over broken urban surfaces earns consistent praise from owners who expected it to feel flimsy and were surprised.
- Maruti's wide service network means ownership is stress-free almost everywhere in India.
Reasons to Avoid
- Owners have complained about the 3-cylinder engine's vibrations at idle (especially on cold starts) and cabin noise at higher revs.
- The engine becomes noticeably louder as it climbs, occupants may find this tiring on longer journeys.
- Interior plastic quality is ordinary even by budget car standards, and the 265-litre boot is the smallest here.
- If you regularly carry four adults on highways or need a quieter, more refined environment inside the car, extending your budget slightly for the Baleno or i20 will serve you better.
3. Maruti Baleno

The Baleno is the Swift's premium, more spacious sibling and it suits a different buyer profile entirely.
Its K-Series 4-cylinder 1.2-litre engine produces 89.7 PS and 113 Nm, paired to a 5-speed manual or an AMT. A CNG option is available from the base variant itself. It is not as engaging to drive as the Swift but it is more refined at a steady cruise.
The 318-litre boot and longer wheelbase translate into noticeably more rear legroom and a more relaxed cabin atmosphere.
Also Read - Maruti Baleno 2026 Facelift Spotted Testing For the First Time
Reasons to Consider
- You want a comfortable, uncomplicated daily car that four adults can use without anyone complaining.
- Owners who drive long distances regularly find the Baleno more relaxing to travel in than the Swift, and the Maruti service network means ownership costs stay predictable over years of use.
- Resale value is strong across the range.
- Auto climate control in the base Sigma variant is a positively surprising offering.
Reasons to Avoid
- The Baleno's K-Series BS6 engine is the most common complaint from owners who switched from earlier versions of the car or who drove both the Swift and Baleno before deciding.
- Although smooth, multiple owners describe it as feeling sluggish in the low-to-mid rev range, requiring more gear changes in city traffic.
- The AMT has a low-speed transmission whine that several owners across different forum threads flagged as consistent rather than unit-specific, and the gear changes during quick acceleration in the AMT are more abrupt than in the Swift.
- A facelift is on its way. Wait for the new one, or wait for discounts on the outgoing model.
4. Hyundai i20

The i20 is the premium choice on this list, offering the most complete package at this price.
It shares its 1.2-litre petrol engine wit the Grand i10 Nios, making 83 PS and 114 Nm. Its Magna and Sportz variants are one of the best value for money, offering a feature-loaded, and more premium-feeling interior than its similarly priced rivals.
The Sportz trim, where the 8-inch touchscreen, sunroof, and 16-inch alloys arrive, sits within reach of the Rs 8 lakh budget. The iVT (CVT) is the smoothest automatic gearbox available on any car in this group.
Reasons to Consider
- Multiple owners describe the i20's cabin as the most premium-feeling in this segment, with seats that are more supportive on longer drives and an interior layout that feels more considered than the Marutis.
- The iVT CVT is the smoothest automatic on this list, especially over all the AMTs.
- The car is also the most stable at highway speeds of anything on this list, with a planted composure that the lighter Swift and the smaller i10 Nios cannot match.
Reasons to Avoid
- IIt has been describe it as feeling underpowered in the low-to-mid rev range during everyday city driving, with a lack of accessible torque that makes it feel lazier than its specs suggests.
- The iVT is also not a conventional CVT, with multiple owners claiming it does not behave predictably in all situations, particularly in reverse and on steep ramps, catching new owners off guard.
- Hyundai's service costs are consistently cited as higher than Maruti's across ownership reviews.
5. Tata Altroz

The Tata Altroz is the most structurally capable car on this list, boasting a 5-star Global NCAP safety rating. Multiple owners describe the doors closing with a solidity and the cabin carrying a build quality that feels a category above the price point.
The 2025 facelift addressed the Altroz's most persistent criticism by adding AMT options to the petrol lineup, making it finally competitive for buyers who need a more affordable automatic as compared to the DCT.
The 1.2-litre turbo petrol and 1.5-litre diesel options, are both available within or near the Rs 8 lakh ceiling for certain variants, giving the Altroz the widest powertrain breadth of any car on this list.
Also Read - Most Affordable Cars With 360 Degree Camera Under 10 Lakhs
Reasons to Consider
- If you drive on highways regularly, cover long distances between cities, or live in an area where road quality outside the city is poor, the Altroz's combination of 5-star crash safety, settled high-speed ride, and solid build quality is a combination no other car on this list offers at any price.
- Multiple owners who considered the Swift and i20 ended up with the Altroz specifically because of the safety rating and the way it carries itself on broken national highway surfaces.
- Its diesel variant earns consistent praise for mid-range torque and highway mileage that no petrol in this segment matches.
Reasons to Avoid
- Tata's service experience is the single most repeated criticism across all Altroz ownership feedback, and it appears in enough independent accounts to be treated seriously.
- The AC mode actuator failure, where the airflow direction selector stops responding while the AC itself continues working, is mentioned across enough independent ownership threads.
- The low-speed ride over sharp urban potholes is also stiff.
Honourable Mentions: Used Cars Worth Considering

If your Rs 8 lakh is a total budget and you are open to a well-maintained used car, three options deserve a look before you commit to anything new.
The Honda Brio (2014 to 2018 examples in the Rs 3 to 4.5 lakh range) remains one of the mechanically best small cars ever sold in India. The 1.2-litre i-VTEC engine is reliable and feels eager in its lightweight body. Spare parts are still available, and the driving character is genuinely enjoyable.
Our manager Charan Narain Khandelwal has one in blue over beige and just revs the crap out of it every time to feel that VTEC kick in, yo! As per his words, “I would rather have a broken Brio than one that was never driven at all.”
The Volkswagen Polo (2019 to 2021 examples in the Rs 5.5 to 7.5 lakh range) offers German build quality and driving dynamics that nothing on the new car list above can match. The 1.0-litre TSI is an excellent engine, proven to be reliable and doing duty on current Volkswagen and Skoda cars.
The Honda Jazz (2018 to 2020 examples in the Rs 5 to 7 lakh range) is the most versatile small car ever sold in India in terms of interior flexibility. The Magic Seats system, which folds the rear seats fully flat to create floor-level loading space, allows the Jazz to carry luggage that would not fit in any of the cars on the new list above or even most compact SUVs.
The 1.2-litre i-VTEC is smooth and refined. It suits buyers who need a comfortable and spacious family hatchback.
Image Source: Hyundai India, Maruti Suzuki, Tata Motors, Volkswagen India
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