Upcoming Renault Duster Buyers' Questions Answered: Old Duster to New, First-Time SUV Buyer & Creta Fan Have Questions!

Written By: Kailash Jha
Published: November 29, 2025 at 10:39 AMUpdated: Updated: November 29, 2025 at 10:39 AM
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Renault is getting ready to bring the Duster back to India, with the new generation expected to arrive on 26 January 2026. This time, the SUV moves to a more modern platform, is likely to be petrol-only with mild-hybrid tech, and will sit right in the heart of the midsize SUV space that includes the Hyundai Creta, Kia Seltos, Maruti Grand Vitara, Honda Elevate and others. On paper, it promises a tougher, more adventure-flavoured alternative to the usual choices, while trying to fix the old car’s weaknesses on interiors, safety and features.

upcoming renault duster vs hyundai creta suv comparison

At Cartoq.com, we keep hearing variations of the same doubts from different kinds of buyers. Some are ex-Duster owners who still miss the old car’s ride quality. Some are typical urban buyers who had almost finalised a Creta or Seltos. Others are first-time SUV buyers who just want something that makes daily life easier, not harder. The questions are from those who have contacted us on Facebook and our Whatsapp Group with their doubts. We have answered them based on what is known so far about the upcoming Duster.

Last-gen Duster owner considering new Duster

I had the old Duster for years and I really got attached to the way it handled rough roads and long drives. It felt solid and steady, even on really bad roads. With the new model, I’m honestly wondering - will it still feel like that tough old Duster? Or is it going to be one of those new SUVs that looks nice but feels light and soft, more for city use than actual bad roads?

Rahul, Pune

Cartoq.com answers:

From what is known so far, the new Duster still seems to sit on the “tough side” of the midsize SUV segment.

Globally, the latest generation Duster continues with generous ground clearance, chunky tyres and a suspension tune aimed at coping with bad roads as much as smooth highways. Early international impressions point to a car that still rides with a certain firmness and confidence, rather than feeling overly soft or fragile.

The new platform underneath is stiffer than the old Indian Duster’s architecture. A stiffer structure usually helps both ride and handling, because the suspension can do more of the work instead of the body flexing over every bump. For an ex-Duster owner like you, that should translate into familiar confidence on broken patches, while feeling more refined than before.

2025-renault-duster-rear

Engine-wise, India is expected to get a 1.2-litre mild-hybrid turbo petrol and at least one stronger turbo petrol option instead of the old 1.5 diesel. These engines will feel different from your old diesel, but the mild-hybrid 1.2 has been tuned abroad to offer good low and mid-range response. That should suit Indian highways and mixed use, even if the power delivery feels more “petrol-turbo” than torquey-diesel lugging.

On overall toughness, the new Duster has been developed to meet stricter global safety norms and is being positioned as more mature, not cheaper. There is also a strong possibility of an all-wheel-drive or 4x4 variant for India, carried over from markets where a mild-hybrid AWD version already exists.

So the short CarToq view for you: the new Duster is shaping up as a more refined, safer and more efficient SUV that still takes rough roads seriously. It may not feel as raw as your old diesel, but the core “tough and planted” character is unlikely to be abandoned.

Creta Buyer Tempted By Duster

Question

Everyone around me keeps telling me to just buy a Creta or a Seltos and avoid headaches. Even my husband says they’re the safest choices because so many people buy them. I like the Renault because it looks different, but I’m honestly scared - am I taking an unnecessary risk by choosing something that’s not as common? Why should I even think about a Renault when the usual, popular options are right there?

Priya, Ahmedabad

Cartoq.com answers:

Your question is exactly what Renault has to answer in 2026, and the early signs suggest the Duster will try to stand out rather than copy-paste the segment leaders. No one can give you an answer with absolute certainty as of now, but we know that Renault has serious plans for India.

Apart from that, you may like the more modern looks of the Renault Duster than the Creta or Seltos which are now too common.

Duster will give you no trouble as a mostly city SUV, in your case. Ahmedabad is a big city and does not have any dealer/ service issues that we can see.

renault-duster

Safety and features of the Duster too will be at par with Creta and Seltos. Nothing to complain about there.

Pricing will be the final piece. If the Duster starts in the ₹10–12 lakh ex-showroom band and Renault uses pricing smartly, it can either undercut equivalent Creta/Seltos variants or offer AWD and mild-hybrid tech at similar money. That gives you a simple, value-based reason to put it on your shortlist.

You are not wrong to see Creta and Seltos as safe bets - they are. High-selling vehicles make us feel safe buying them. But if the India-spec Duster lands as expected, it will give you a different flavour – more adventure vibe, mild-hybrid efficiency and the option of AWD – without feeling like a compromise on basics.

First-Time SUV Buyer's Doubts

Question

I’ve never owned an SUV before, so this will be a big change for me. I like the idea of more space and sitting higher, but I’m also worried it might be harder to park and handle in my daily routine. My parking spot is small, and traffic is crazy where I live. So my question is: will getting this SUV actually make my day-to-day life easier, or will it just become one more thing for me to worry about?

Imran, Bangalore

Cartoq.com answers:

For someone coming from a compact sedan and living in crowded city conditions, the new Duster does look like it can genuinely make life easier, not just bigger. Bigger vehicles are generally better (if crash test ratings are good) on our crazy roads. However, small vehicles will always be a little easier to drive in congested roads. But that negative is balanced by other positives.

The new platform has allowed Renault to improve interior space compared to the old Indian Duster. Global versions offer more legroom, better headroom and smarter storage, while keeping the overall length and width manageable for city use. Boot space is healthy enough for airport runs and family trips, so you are not trading practicality for style.

Inside, the cabin layout is more modern but still friendly. Physical knobs for climate control, a clear central screen and improved seats mean you will not feel lost just because you moved up to an SUV. The higher seating position, better visibility and extra ground clearance should make speed breakers, potholes and monsoon puddles less stressful for you and your family.

The only real “headache risk” is how Renault structures the variants. If essentials like a reversing camera, rear sensors, cruise control and wireless smartphone connectivity start from the mid variants, the Duster can be a very practical upgrade from your sedan. If many of these are restricted only to the top trim, some rivals may look more tempting on a feature-for-price basis.

CarToq’s bottom line for you: Based on what is known so far, the new Duster should make everyday life easier through visibility, comfort and mild-hybrid support in traffic, without becoming a parking nightmare. The final decision will come down to variant mix and on-road pricing, but the fundamentals for a first-time SUV buyer are strong.

In a nutshell

Three different buyers, three very simple questions – and three areas where the upcoming Duster will have to prove itself. To ex-owners like Rahul, it has to show that the original Duster’s toughness and planted feel are still at the core. To cross-shoppers like Priya, it needs a clear hook versus the “safe” Korean and Japanese choices. To first-time SUV buyers like Imran, it must deliver genuine everyday ease, not just a bigger footprint. As final India-specific details on engines, variants, safety kit and prices become public, Cartoq.com will revisit these questions with harder numbers. For now, the new Duster looks set to re-enter the segment with a mix of familiar toughness and much-needed modernity – and that alone makes it worth watching.