
Toyota Kirloskar Motor has raised prices across most of its model lineup effective April 2026. The revision touches nearly every car it sells, from the entry-level Glanza hatchback to the Land Cruiser 300. The increases range from Rs 5,000 on some Hyryder variants to Rs 2.16 lakh on the Land Cruiser 300, and most models sit in the 1.75 to 2 percent band.

The Fortuner, which is Toyota's highest-volume premium SUV, gets a flat Rs 69,000 hike across all variants, translating to 1.75 percent. That puts the entry Fortuner petrol manual at Rs 34.85 lakh ex-showroom. The Innova Crysta, which was already hiked in January 2026 by up to Rs 33,000, goes up by a further Rs 39,000 across the range in April, taking the base GX diesel manual to approximately Rs 19.24 lakh. The Innova Hycross hybrid variants go up by Rs 54,000 and petrol variants by Rs 39,000. The Taisor turbo variants get a Rs 22,000 increase, and the Glanza V AMT goes up by Rs 20,000.

It is worth noting that Toyota has now hiked prices three times since January 2025. In January 2025, the Fortuner went up by up to Rs 50,000. In January 2026, the Fortuner and Innova range were hiked again by up to Rs 74,000. This April round adds a further Rs 69,000 on the Fortuner. For a buyer who was watching the Fortuner GR-S variant in early 2025 at Rs 46.80 lakh and is now looking at it in April 2026, the cumulative price increase over 15 months is significant.
The Hyryder gets a more modest revision of just Rs 5,000 on select Neo Drive and hybrid variants, which is a 0.1 percent increase. This is essentially a token adjustment, suggesting Toyota is keeping the Hyryder price-competitive in the compact hybrid SUV segment where the Grand Vitara and Honda Elevate are direct alternatives.

The January 2026 hike was accompanied by variant rationalisation, with Toyota cutting several trim levels. This April round is a straightforward pricing update with no variant changes announced alongside. The most significant absolute increase is on the Land Cruiser 300 ZX at Rs 2.16 lakh, though in percentage terms at 0.8 percent, it is actually the lowest of all models. Hilux goes up by Rs 56,000.
For buyers finalising a Toyota purchase this month, the Fortuner and Hycross are the models where the increase is most tangible. The Rs 69,000 jump on the Fortuner in one update is meaningful enough to affect EMI calculations, particularly for buyers at the lower end of the price range who are stretching to the entry petrol manual variant. On a 7-year loan at typical interest rates, Rs 69,000 added to the principal adds approximately Rs 1,000 to the monthly instalment.
Toyota has now hiked prices on its models in January 2025, January 2026, February 2026, and April 2026. The stated rationale each time has been rising input costs and regulatory compliance expenditure. With no new model launches in the near term outside the already-launched Urban Cruiser Ebella, there is no natural reset point for pricing in the near future.