Picture this. A wedding in the family. Seven of you. One car. Someone's saree is crumpled. A kid is on someone's lap. The AC is fighting a losing battle. And nobody says anything because this is just... how it goes.
That is the moment when most Indian families start seriously considering an 8-seater.
Not before. After.
And once you start looking, you quickly find the market is messier than expected. Some cars have eight seats, but the last row is basically decorative. Some are priced like a second home. Some are brilliant on the highway but genuinely painful to park near your building every evening.
This guide cuts through all of that.
Read This Before You Look at a Single Car
Most people start comparing cars before figuring out what they actually need. Then they buy the wrong one and spend the next five years adjusting to it.
Answer these four things first.
Are all eight seats going to be used regularly?
Most families honestly need five good seats and some extra room a few times a year. That is a very different brief from needing a fully usable eight-seater every day. If third row comfort is not something you need on an average Tuesday, do not let it drive your entire decision.
Who is driving this day-to-day?
A large MPV managed by a driver in Bengaluru traffic is a completely different ownership experience from one you are personally squeezing into a tight basement spot every night after work. Be honest about this. It changes everything on the shortlist.
Run the actual monthly fuel cost.
Not the ARAI figure. Your kilometres, your real city to highway ratio, today's fuel price per litre. Do this before the test drive. Not after you have already fallen for the car.
How long are you keeping it?
Holding it for ten years or more, focus on comfort and reliability. Upgrading in four to five years, the resale value is a serious number. Toyota holds value in this segment better than most. That gap at resale time is not small.
The Cars Worth Considering
Toyota Innova Hycross
Nobody really expected a full-sized family MPV to crack the mileage problem the way the Hycross did.
For years, if you wanted a big, comfortable family car in India, you accepted whatever fuel bills came with it. That was just the trade-off. The Hycross changed the math. The hybrid system is not marketed here. In actual city stop-and-go driving, the efficiency difference versus a conventional diesel MPV of this size is something you feel every month on your fuel bill.
The cabin is well built. Second row captain seats are properly comfortable for adults on long drives, not just tolerable. Overall refinement is a clear step up from what this price range used to offer.
Two things to know before you visit the showroom. Popular variants have had long waiting periods. And the price, once you add on road costs to the Rs 21 to 25 lakh ex-showroom figure, is a proper financial commitment. Go in knowing that.
For families covering serious kilometres every month who want a car running without drama into the next decade, this is the most logical answer in the segment right now.
Price: Rs 21 to 25 lakh ex-showroom
See Innova Hycross on CarBazzar India
Toyota Innova Crysta
People sometimes dismiss it because it has been around a while. That is usually a mistake.
Indian roads punish suspension setups in ways that European test tracks never would. A car that feels great in a quick showroom spin starts showing its problems after a few months on our actual roads. The Crysta does not do this. It was built with Indian surfaces as the reference point, and that is still visible in how it rides today.
Long drives in it are comfortable. Not just passable. The diesel pulls well even with a full load on a highway. The third row AC actually works. Getting in and out is easy for older passengers, which is something many newer vehicles quietly fail at.
Where it falls short: the interior feels dated compared to newer alternatives. Features and technology are behind where competitors have gone. Fuel numbers do not touch the Hycross hybrid.
But if your family is regularly on outstation routes, if your parents or in-laws are frequent passengers, or if you want a car that simply works without surprises for the next eight years, the Crysta still makes a genuinely strong case.
Price: Rs 19 to 26 lakh ex-showroom
Browse the Toyota lineup on CarBazzar India
Kia Carnival
The Carnival is not trying to be an Innova. Not even close.
Rs 59.42 lakh ex-showroom. One variant, fully loaded, called the Limousine Plus. On the road in most cities, you are looking at Rs 70 to 76 lakh, depending on registration. That is a completely separate conversation from the Innova range, and you need to go in knowing that.
For that money, you get second row powered ottoman captain seats. Ventilated, heated, and with leg rests that extend fully. If your parents are in the back on a six-hour drive to the mountains, they are not just comfortable. They are genuinely looked after in a way that most cars at twice this price cannot match.
The tech list is serious. Dual 12.3-inch displays, 11-inch head-up display, BOSE 12 speaker audio, Level 2 ADAS covering 23 functions, 360 camera, tri-zone climate control. Nothing is missing.
The engine is a 2.2-litre diesel. 190 bhp, 441 Nm, 8-speed automatic. ARAI claims 14.85 kmpl. Real highway use sits around 12 to 13. City drops to 7 or 8 in heavy traffic. That is just the reality of running a large heavy MPV in urban conditions.
The genuine limitation is size. 5155 mm long, 1995 mm wide. If your building entry is tight or your daily parking spot is small, this creates friction every single day. It is not a city car that happens to be large. It needs space and, ideally, someone else managing the parking.
At its best when someone else is driving. Long family trips, elderly passengers, business travel. For the rear seat passenger, there is nothing else like it in India at this price.
Price: Rs 59.42 lakh ex-showroom, Rs 70 to 76 lakh on road
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Maruti Suzuki Invicto
Shares its platform and hybrid powertrain with the Innova Hycross. Same efficiency story, Maruti badge.
For a specific kind of buyer, this makes real sense. Outside the big metros, Maruti's service network is genuinely reassuring. Not everyone wants to drive forty minutes to a Toyota dealership every time the car needs attention.
Pricing lands slightly lower than equivalent Hycross variants. That helps when the budget has less room.
The trade-off is resale. The Toyota badge holds value better in most markets, and that gap is real money when you sell. If long-term ownership is the plan and convenient servicing matters more than badge value, the Invicto is a smart decision.
Price: Rs 26 to 32 lakh ex-showroom
Compare Invicto on CarBazzar India
Land Rover Defender
Not a typical family MPV. But it offers three-row seating in certain versions, and some buyers in this bracket want exactly what it provides. Off-road capability, a design that makes a statement, and a price range where fuel economy is genuinely not the first question.
If that fits, it delivers. For pure family practicality, every other car on this list is a better answer.
Browse premium cars on CarBazzar India
Quick Comparison
| Model | Price Ex Showroom | Real World Mileage | Best Suited For |
|
Toyota Innova Hycross |
Rs 21 to 25 lakh | Best in segment via hybrid | Daily use, high-mileage families |
|
Toyota Innova Crysta |
Rs 19 to 26 lakh | Decent Diesel | Long trips, rough roads, and older passengers |
|
Kia Carnival |
Rs 59.42 lakh | 12 to 13 kmpl highway | Premium rear seat, chauffeur-driven |
|
Maruti Suzuki Invicto |
Rs 26 to 32 lakh | Same as Hycross | Maruti Loyalists, hybrid efficiency |
|
Land Rover Defender |
Rs 1 crore plus | Not the priority | Lifestyle, off-road, premium |
Add Rs 3 to 5 lakh to everything for on-road costs. It always ends up more than the sticker.
Compare two models directly on CarBazzar India
Toyota or Kia — The Right Way to Think About It
People keep framing this as one versus the other. It is the wrong question.
The Innova range is built for families who drive themselves, use the car every day, and want reliable, economical ownership over the years of real use. Practical, trusted, low drama.
The Carnival is built around the rear seat passengers. It is an experience, not just transport. Costs more, takes more space, and when rear seat comfort is genuinely the priority, it gives more in return.
Two different answers to two different questions. The right one depends entirely on which question is actually yours.
What Separates Good 8 Seaters From Ones That Just Have Eight Seats
Third row legroom for adults.
Many cars technically seat eight. In practice, the last row fits kids and nobody else. Check the actual measurements in person before you trust the brochure number. Better yet, sit in it.
Suspension on rough surfaces.
Not a test track is smooth. Real road rough. The Crysta is still the benchmark here because it was specifically calibrated for mixed Indian surfaces. Newer alternatives have mostly not matched it on this.
AC is reaching the third row.
On a hot day in Delhi or Nagpur, the back row needs its own cold air, not warmth drifting from the front. Check the vent placement before shortlisting.
Boot space with all rows up.
This catches people on the first proper family trip. Some MPVs have almost nothing usable back there when the third row is raised. Go to the showroom and physically open the boot with all seats in place.
Sliding doors.
The Carnival has them. With children, with elderly passengers, in a tight parking area, the difference versus a wide swinging door is something you notice every single time. It's a small thing until you are living with it daily.
Find MPV options on CarBazzar India
Which One Should You Actually Buy
Hycross, if you drive yourself every day, cover high monthly kilometres, want the best fuel efficiency in this segment and Toyota reliability behind it.
Crysta, if long-distance ride comfort is the family's main requirement, elderly passengers travel with you regularly, and a car with a proven track record on Indian roads matters more than the latest features.
Carnival's rear seat experience is the whole point; the budget is in the Rs 70 to 76 lakh on-road range, and a driver handles city use daily.
Invicto if the Hycross hybrid setup appeals, but you prefer Maruti's service accessibility, or if the pricing works better for your situation.
Filter by seating, fuel type and budget on CarBazzar India
Questions People Actually Ask
Q1. Which 8-seater is the best right now?
Depends on the family. Hycross for daily efficiency. Crysta for long-distance comfort. Carnival for a premium rear seat experience. No single answer fits everyone.
Q2. How much is the Carnival on the road?
Rs 59.42 lakh ex-showroom. Add registration, insurance and other charges, and it typically lands between Rs 70 and Rs 76 lakh. State registration costs vary, so confirm your exact figure on CarBazzar India before planning.
Q3. Is the Carnival a 7-seater or an 8-seater?
7 seater in India. Two front, two captain seats in the middle, three in the back. The 8-seat version was not launched here.
Q4. Which gives the best real-world mileage?
Hycross and Invicto are both hybrid. Genuinely good city mileage for their size. Carnival diesel does 12 to 13 on the highway and drops to 7 or 8 in city traffic. Crysta is steady but not exciting on efficiency.
Q5. Is the Crysta still worth buying?
For certain buyers, yes. Dated design, fewer features, but the ride quality and reliability on Indian roads still hold up. Resale is consistently strong. For long-distance family use, especially, it remains a well-justified purchase.
Q6. Where to properly compare these?
CarBazzar India's compare tool puts two cars side by side. Or filter by body type and seating to see everything in one place.
Q7. Can I book a test drive on CarBazzar India?
Yes. Book here. At this price point, sit in the car properly before you sign anything. A spec sheet will not tell you how the third row feels on a speed breaker with four adults on board.
Last Thing
A family car lasts for years. School mornings, long drives, relatives visiting, airport pickups at odd hours. Getting this right actually matters in daily life.
Hycross is suitable for most families if daily mileage is high and running costs need to stay manageable. Crysta, if comfort on long routes is the priority. Carnival's rear seat experience is worth paying for. Invicto, if you want the hybrid setup with Maruti's service network.
All strong options. Just for different families.
Start your search on CarBazzar India, compare your shortlist, and go sit in the ones that make the cut before you decide.

