Suzuki Jimny vs Hyundai Tucson

A proper head-to-head in South Africa — we cover price, performance, petrol economy, safety and what it'll actually cost you to own each one long term.

Suzuki Jimny in South Africa

Suzuki Jimny

1.5 GLX AllGrip AT Petrol Automatic
ZAR 466,900 ex-showroom
⚡ 75 kW 🔧 130 Nm ⛽ 15.9 km/l
VS
Hyundai Tucson in South Africa

Hyundai Tucson

2.0D AT Executive AWD Diesel Automatic
ZAR 764,900 ex-showroom
⚡ 137 kW 🔧 416 Nm ⛽ 14.5 km/l
Add a 3rd car

At a Glance — Who Wins What

Performance Tucson
Fuel Economy Tie
🛡 Safety Tie
📦 Practicality Tucson
🔑 Ownership Tie
Jimny starts ZAR 568900 cheaper Jimny from ZAR 444,900 · Tucson from ZAR 568,900

Key Specs Side by Side

The specs that matter most — highlighted where one car leads.

Spec Jimny Tucson
Engine Power 75 137
Torque 130 416
Engine Size 1462 1995
Claimed Mileage 15.9 14.5
Ground Clearance 210 181
Boot Space 85 540
Airbags 6 6
Kerb Weight 1115 1720
Seating Capacity Available 5
Warranty 5 5

= leads in this spec

The Overall Score — Here's How They Stack Up

🏆 Winner
#1

Tucson

66
/ 100
+13
pts
#2

Jimny

53
/ 100

Moderate difference between the models.

The Bottom Line

Tucson has a slight advantage, but Jimny remains highly competitive.

Where They Actually Differ

Performance Tucson +8 pts
Efficiency Equal
Safety Equal
Practicality Tucson +5 pts
Ownership Equal

Score Breakdown by Category

🏆 Overall Winner

Tucson

Performance 14/20
Efficiency 0/20
Safety 18/20
Practicality 14/20
Ownership 20/20

Jimny

Performance 6/20
Efficiency 0/20
Safety 18/20
Practicality 9/20
Ownership 20/20

What Each Car Gets Right (and Wrong)

Jimny

Strengths
  • Nothing stands out clearly here.
Weak Spots
  • Less powerful engine setup
  • Less practical in daily usage
Best suited to: General Use
🏆 Overall Winner

Tucson

Strengths
  • More powerful engine output
  • More practical for daily use
Weak Spots
  • No obvious weak spots to flag.
Best suited to: Highway Driving Family Usage

Which One's Right for You?

Jimny

  • Buyers looking for a balanced all-round vehicle

Tucson

  • Drivers who prioritise strong highway performance and overtaking power
  • Large families needing more practicality and usability

Full Specs, Side by Side

Spec Jimny Tucson
Engine 1.5L K15B 4-Cylinder Petrol 2.0 R2 CRDi Diesel
Engine Type Inline 4 Cylinder Naturally Aspirated Diesel
Engine Code K15B Available
Cylinder Layout Inline 4 (I4) Available
Engine Aspiration Naturally Aspirated Turbocharged
Displacement 1462 1995
Cylinders 4 4
Valves per Cylinder 4 16
Cylinder Bore 74.0 Available
Piston Stroke 85.1 Available
Compression Ratio 10.5:1 16.0:1
Engine Position Longitudinal Front-Mounted Front
Variable Valve Timing VVT on Intake Camshaft Yes
Fuel System Multi-Point Fuel Injection (MPFI) Common Rail Direct Injection
Turbocharger Not Applicable Yes
Power 75 137
Power @ RPM 6,000 rpm 3800
Power 100 150
Torque 130 416
Torque @ RPM 4,000 rpm 2000
Maximum Engine RPM 6800 Available
Engine Oil Capacity 3.7 Available
Fuel Grade Required 93 RON Unleaded Petrol Diesel
Top Speed 145 195
0-100 km/h 14.5 9.5
Engine Type Config Available Inline
0–100 km/h Available Available
Battery Capacity Available Available
Charging Port Available Available
AC Charging Time Available Available
Engine Displacement Available Available
EV Range Available Available
Spec Jimny Tucson
Transmission 4-Speed Automatic Torque Converter 8-speed Automatic
Transmission Type 4-Speed Automatic Automatic
Number of Gears 4 7
Drive Type 4WD — AllGrip PRO Part-Time All-Wheel Drive
Drivetrain Layout Rear Wheel Drive (2WD) / 4WD with Low-Range AWD
Final Drive Ratio 4.090:1 Available
Steering Turns Lock to Lock 3.8 Available
Clutch Type Single Dry Plate Diaphragm Available
LSD Available Not Available Yes
Differential Lock Not Available Electronic LSD
Transfer Case Two-Speed Transfer Case (Hi / Lo Range) HTRAC AWD with Terrain Mode
Paddle Shifters Not Available Yes
Drivetrain Available Available
Transmission Available Available

So, Which One Should You Buy?

🏆 Hyundai Tucson wins with 66 pts vs 53 pts for Jimny

In structured scoring, Tucson emerges as the stronger overall package. However, Jimny may appeal to buyers prioritising different factors. Ultimately, the right choice depends on your driving priorities in South Africa.

Buyers Also Looked At These

Other comparisons that people in the same boat tend to check out.

Questions Buyers Usually Ask

On our scoring the Tucson edges ahead overall. That said, the right choice depends on what you actually use the car for — the breakdown above shows exactly where each one wins and loses.

Efficiency scores: Jimny 0 vs Tucson 0. In the real world, diesel variants of either car will beat the claimed figure on long highways and fall short in Joburg traffic.

Safety scores: Jimny 18, Tucson 18. Check each model page for NCAP ratings and which trim levels include AEB and blind-spot monitoring — those features aren't always standard.

Long-term ownership scores: Jimny 20, Tucson 20. Service intervals, parts availability in SA, and whether a service plan is bundled all factor in — check the individual variant specs for that detail.

Practicality scores: Jimny 9, Tucson 14. This covers boot space, seat flexibility, and day-to-day usability — not just interior dimensions on paper.

Performance scores: Jimny 6, Tucson 14. This looks at real-world pace — 0–100 kph, highway flexibility, and how either car feels when you actually need to overtake on an N-road.

Resale varies with colour, spec, and market timing, but Japanese brands — and Toyota specifically — have a strong track record in SA. Check current used prices for both on AutoTrader to see the real gap right now.

Ground clearance and 4WD availability are what matter most here. Scroll to the spec table above to compare both side by side — if either model offers a 4WD variant, that's the version worth comparing.

Fuel, insurance, and service costs are the big three. Diesel variants of both models typically save R800–R1,500/month in fuel at current SA pump prices. The Tucson edges the overall ownership score, but check whether either variant includes a service plan — that changes the monthly maths significantly.

The Tucson scores better overall, but neither car is a bad buy here. It comes down to what features matter to you — check the full spec table above to see exactly what you gain and lose at each price point.

In Depth — Breaking It All Down

The comparison between Jimny and Tucson in South Africa evaluates performance, efficiency, safety, practicality and long-term ownership value.

Performance: Jimny scores 6 vs 14.

Efficiency: Jimny scores 0 vs 0.

Safety: Jimny scores 18 vs 18.

Practicality: Jimny scores 9 vs 14.

Ownership: Jimny scores 20 vs 20.

Final structured scoring gives Tucson the advantage in this comparison.