Scorpio N
Scorpio N is perfect for adventure enthusiasts and off-roaders, offering premium features like a sunroof, Sony 3D immersive music system, Level 2 ADAS, and seamless wireless Android Auto and Apple CarPlay—without any compromise.
Key specifications.
Configure your Scorpio N.
46 variants available. Select a variant to view full specs and pricing.
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Available colors.
7 colors available for the Scorpio N.
On-road price in your city.
Final price varies by RTO, dealer, insurance choice, and state-specific charges. Select your variant and city for the full breakdown.
Scorpio N on-road price across India.
RTO road tax, registration, and insurance vary by state. Click any city for the full breakdown.
Download the Scorpio N brochure.
Get the official Mahindra Scorpio N brochure — full specifications, color options, variant details, and pricing in one document.
Cars similar to Scorpio N.
Scorpio N FAQs.
Common questions about Scorpio N cars, pricing, ownership, and after-sales support.
The torque advantage is what matters most here — up to 400Nm available low in the rev range means the diesel pulls cleanly in slow trail situations without needing to work the engine hard. Hill climbs, rocky stretches, loose surfaces — these conditions suit a diesel's torque curve far better than a petrol's power band. City mileage in the 12 to 14 km/l range is reasonable for a vehicle this size, so the daily commute does not punish you either.
The 2-litre petrol is genuinely powerful at 203 PS and it is a more enjoyable engine when the road opens up. Where it falls short is low-speed crawling on trails — it is not built for that kind of work and it shows when you are picking your way through technical terrain at walking pace.
If the off-roading is serious — Himalayan trips, forest trails, anything that demands low-speed control and consistent pulling power — go diesel, Z4 or Z6 with 4WD. If the off-roading is mostly light gravel roads and the occasional forest track, the petrol is fine and the driving experience in the city is arguably more pleasant.
Most buyers doing both will find the diesel more capable across the full range of what they are asking the car to do.
If seven seats are not a hard requirement, the 6-seater captain seat variant is worth considering. It drops the third row entirely and puts the focus on second-row comfort instead — which is genuinely good in that configuration.
Where the Scorpio N's third row becomes a real limitation is when seven usable seats are actually needed. The Tata Safari and Hyundai Alcazar both handle the third row more practically for adult passengers — not perfect in either case, but meaningfully better than what the Scorpio N offers back there. If regular use of all seven seats is part of the plan, those two are the more honest options to evaluate.


