- You want a car that's genuinely fun to drive, not just practical. The 1.0L TSI engine, tight steering, and light weight make this feel more like a hot hatch than an SUV. If you've been eyeing second-hand Polo GT TSIs, drive this first — it might end that search.
- You want Skoda build quality and European driving feel without stretching to Kushaq or Taigun money.
- You drive in the city a lot. The sub-4-metre dimensions make it incredibly easy to place in traffic and squeeze into parking spots. The 6-speed automatic keeps things effortless in stop-and-go.
- You care about features at this price point. Ventilated seats, a virtual cockpit, and 17-inch alloy wheels on a sub-4-metre car is a genuinely strong package.
- You need serious rear-seat space. It's a sub-4-metre car — the laws of physics apply. If rear-seat comfort for adults on long drives is a must, step up to the Kushaq or look at the Creta.
- Low maintenance costs are a priority. Skoda service and spares cost more than Maruti, Hyundai, or Tata equivalents. The gap has narrowed with the newer platform, but it's still there. If you're the kind of buyer who compares cost-per-service before buying, check the numbers first — they may change your mind.
- You live somewhere extremely hot and depend on strong AC. Owners are flagging cooling performance as a concern. If you're in Rajasthan, central India, or anywhere that regularly crosses 42-43°C, test the AC hard during your evaluation.
- Bonnet visibility matters to you. You cannot see the bonnet from the driver's seat. In tight city lanes and while parking, you're judging distances blind. This is something you adapt to, but if you're coming from a car where you could see the bonnet, the first few weeks will be stressful.
- You want all-four disc brakes. The Kylaq runs front discs only — rears are drums. Braking performance is adequate and the car feels stable under hard stops, but if you're an enthusiast who wants disc brakes all around on principle, this will bother you.
- You're cross-shopping purely on space and practicality. The Brezza, Nexon, and Sonet all offer more rear-seat room. The Kylaq wins on how it drives, not how much it carries.
The Drive — What Actually Matters
The TSI Engine Punches Above Its Weight
It’s a 1.0-litre three-cylinder turbo-petrol — on paper, that sounds small for an SUV. In practice, it doesn’t feel small at all. The TSI engine has strong mid-range power that makes highway overtakes confident and stress-free.
Here’s the real advantage: the Kylaq is roughly 100kg lighter than the Kushaq. Same engine family, significantly less weight to pull. The result is that the Kylaq actually feels faster than its bigger sibling in real-world driving. The 6-speed torque converter automatic pairs well — it’s not the quickest to downshift, but it’s smooth and predictable in the way a daily driver should be.
Steering and Handling — This Is Where It Wins
The steering feel is the Kylaq’s secret weapon. It’s direct, well-weighted, and gives you genuine feedback about what the front wheels are doing. Most sub-4-metre SUVs have numb, over-assisted steering that feels like stirring soup. This one actually communicates with you.

The suspension is tuned for Indian roads — compliant over bumps and broken patches — but it doesn’t sacrifice body control the way softer-riding competitors do. You can push this car into a corner and it stays composed. If you enjoy driving, this car rewards you for it.
High-Speed Stability and Cabin Insulation
At 100 km/h, the Kylaq is remarkably quiet inside. The cabin insulation is a level above what you’d expect in this segment. There’s very little wind or road noise intruding, which makes highway cruising relaxed and effortless.
Stability at triple-digit speeds is excellent — the car feels planted and confident, not nervous or floaty. For a sub-4-metre vehicle, this is impressive. Skoda’s European chassis tuning DNA shows up here in ways that the spec sheet can’t communicate.
The Bottom Line
The Skoda Kylaq Prestige does something rare in the sub-4-metre SUV segment — it makes you want to take the long route home. The steering feel, the composed chassis, the punchy TSI engine, and the surprisingly refined cabin create a driving experience that no Brezza, Nexon, or Sonet can match.
The trade-offs are real: you give up rear-seat space, bonnet visibility, and rear disc brakes. But if you’re the primary driver and you value how a car makes you feel over how much it can carry, the Kylaq is the most satisfying thing in this segment.
And if you’ve been hunting for a clean second-hand Polo GT TSI because you want an affordable driver’s car — stop looking. The Kylaq gives you that spirit in a new car with a full warranty.

