CS
CarSorted
HomeComparisonsSuzuki e Vitara vs Hyundai Tucson
Spec Battle Updated 20 April 2026 5 min read

Suzuki e Vitara vs Hyundai Tucson

A detailed look at how two of Australia's most popular SUVs compare on price, running costs, safety, and everyday livability.

Specifications and pricing correct at time of publishing. Prices are RRP before on-road costs unless stated otherwise. Always confirm with the manufacturer or dealer before purchasing.

SpecSuzukiHyundai
Price (RRP)$36,990$38,900
Range (WLTP)344km
Battery49 kWh
Power128kW115kW
0-100 km/h9s9.2s
Max DC Charge129kW
10-80% Charge Time17 min
Fuel Economy15 kWh/100km6.5 L/100km
Boot Space306L539L
Towing750kg1,650kg
Warranty5yr / 999.999k km5yr / 999.999k km
ANCAP Safety5 Stars5 Stars

Price Breakdown

The Suzuki e Vitara starts from $36,990 before on-road costs, while the Hyundai Tucson opens at $38,900. That makes the Suzuki e Vitara the more affordable entry point by $1,910.

Once you factor in stamp duty, registration, CTP insurance, and dealer delivery, expect to add roughly 8-12% on top of the RRP depending on your state. That puts estimated driveaway prices in the ballpark of $40,689 and $42,790 respectively.

The Suzuki e Vitara qualifies for FBT exemption as an electric vehicle, which can dramatically reduce the effective cost for novated lease buyers. The Hyundai Tucson, as a petrol model, does not qualify.

Over 5 years, the running costs favour the Suzuki e Vitara by roughly $5,665 in fuel alone.

Safety Rundown

Both the Suzuki e Vitara and Hyundai Tucson hold a 5-star ANCAP safety rating. Adult occupant protection scored 77% for the Suzuki e Vitara and 86% for the Hyundai Tucson.

Where the two diverge is in active safety technology. Both models are evenly matched with 0 out of 10 key ADAS systems.

Both include the essentials: a reversing camera.

Feature Showdown

Both come with modern infotainment systems. Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are standard across both.

Drivetrain

The Suzuki e Vitara uses a Electric Motor producing 128kW and 189Nm of torque, sent through a automatic to a FWD layout. It covers the 0-100km/h sprint in 9 seconds.

The Hyundai Tucson responds with a Petrol making 115kW and 192Nm, paired to a automatic driving the front wheels. It gets to 100km/h in 9.2 seconds.

The Suzuki e Vitara has the clear power advantage at 128kW vs 115kW. In the real-world sprint, the Suzuki e Vitara is 0.2s quicker. For most buyers, the way each car feels day-to-day matters more than outright acceleration.

Space & Comfort

The Suzuki e Vitara measures 4,275mm long on a 2,700mm wheelbase, 355mm shorter than the Hyundai Tucson at 4,630mm (2,755mm wheelbase). The longer wheelbase on the Hyundai Tucson generally means more rear legroom.

Boot space is 306L in the Suzuki e Vitara and 539L in the Hyundai Tucson, giving the Hyundai Tucson a 233L advantage.

For towing, the Hyundai Tucson leads with a 1,650kg braked capacity vs 750kg. That 900kg difference matters if you regularly hitch up.

Turning Circle

Kerb-to-kerb diameter. Smaller turns easier in tight carparks and U-turns.

10.4m diameter

Good

Suzuki e Vitara Motion FWD
10.4m
Suzuki e Vitara
10.4m · Good

Based on 10.4m turning circle:

  • U-turn on standard street (7m+ wide)
  • Standard parking bay
  • Tight carparks
  • Narrow laneways

Turning circle ratings

Under 10m, Excellent
10 to 11m, Good
11 to 12m, Average
Over 12m, Large

True Cost to Own

Based on 15,000km of annual driving, fuel costs roughly $720/year for the Suzuki e Vitara and $1,853/year for the Hyundai Tucson. That is a $1,133 annual difference in favour of the Suzuki e Vitara.

Estimated annual total: $720 (Suzuki e Vitara) vs $1,853 (Hyundai Tucson). The Suzuki e Vitara saves you roughly $1,133 per year in total ownership costs. Use our Fuel Cost Calculator to estimate based on your driving.

Warranty: 5 years / 999,999km (Suzuki e Vitara) vs 5 years / 999,999km (Hyundai Tucson). Both match on warranty length.

Who Should Buy Which?

Buy the Suzuki e Vitara if: You want the lower entry price, prioritise performance, want lower running costs, or prefer Suzuki's approach to design and ownership experience.

Buy the Hyundai Tucson if: You need more boot space, need stronger towing, or prefer Hyundai's approach to design and ownership experience.

The Verdict

This is genuinely close. The Suzuki e Vitara and Hyundai Tucson trade blows across the spec sheet, and neither runs away with an outright win. The Suzuki e Vitara will save you roughly $1,133 a year in fuel. If boot space matters, the Hyundai Tucson has a clear edge. The best pick depends on what you value most. Explore the full specs for each model below.

Common questions

Which is cheapest, Suzuki e Vitara and Hyundai Tucson?

The Suzuki e Vitara is the cheapest at $36,990 before on-road costs. That undercuts the Hyundai Tucson by $1,910.

Which is the most fuel-efficient?

The Hyundai Tucson uses the least fuel at 6.5L/100km on the combined cycle.

Which is safest?

They are evenly matched — Suzuki e Vitara and Hyundai Tucson all hold a 5-star ANCAP rating. Compare the active-safety features above to separate them.

Which has the most boot space?

The Hyundai Tucson has the largest boot at 539L.

Which can tow the most?

The Hyundai Tucson has the highest braked towing capacity at 1,650kg.

Which is the most powerful?

The Suzuki e Vitara makes the most power at 128kW. The Suzuki e Vitara is quickest to 100km/h in 9s.

Disclaimer: All information in this comparison was believed to be correct at the time of publishing (20 April 2026). Prices are manufacturer recommended retail prices (RRP) and may vary by state, dealer, and options. Driveaway costs include estimated on-road costs for Victoria. Fuel economy figures are WLTP/ADR combined cycle. Specifications can change without notice. Always verify with the manufacturer before making a purchase decision. CarSorted does not accept payment for recommendations.

Auto-generated from CarSorted's specification data · 20 April 2026

Comments (0)

Sign in to join the conversation

No comments yet. Be the first!

More head-to-heads

Other matchups worth a look

Same segment, similar money. Tap any pair for the full side-by-side spec sheet.

All comparisons

Images are representative. Actual variant trim, colour and equipment may differ.

Browse all cars · All SUVs