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Subaru Impreza vs Suzuki Baleno

What's the difference?

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Subaru Impreza
Subaru Impreza

$31,490 - $37,990

2024 price

Suzuki Baleno
Suzuki Baleno

$15,880 - $21,990

2020 price

Summary

2024 Subaru Impreza
2020 Suzuki Baleno
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Flat 4, 2.0L

Inline 4, 1.4L
Fuel Type
-

Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
7.5L/100km (combined)

5.1L/100km (combined)
Seating
5

5
Dislikes
  • No hybrid option
  • Engine noisy when pushed
  • Loves a drink

  • Expensive servicing
  • Cheap interior
  • Dull
2024 Subaru Impreza Summary

For over thirty years, the Subaru Impreza has been an icon on Australian roads.

If you’re a member of the ‘PlayStation generation’ like me, there’s a very good chance you slapped P plates on one as your first car.

For Subaru the Impreza is more than that. Along with its WRX performance variant, it's the car which put Subaru on the map, raising it from a relatively unknown Japanese automaker to a global household name.

Things change, though, and despite 30-plus years of history as a beloved nameplate, the Impreza has gone from a best-seller to tumbling down the sales charts as buyers shuffle into small SUVs rather than hatchbacks or small sedans.

The question we’re looking to answer today is what this new-generation Impreza has to offer in 2024, and whether it is still worth a look.

Read on to see what we found.

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2020 Suzuki Baleno Summary

The fact of the Suzuki Baleno's existence is one of the more puzzling features on the automotive landscape. It's a car that pits itself against all manner of worthy competition - some of it exceedingly so - in the small hatch segment.

People still buy what the industry calls light cars (in ever-diminishing numbers) so perhaps Suzuki thought offering two would be a good idea, as its Swift occupies the same patch of sales ground in this city-sized segment.

In this part of the market, you've really, really got to want it. You need to be stylish, sophisticated and packed with tons of safety gear if you've any hope of so much as laying a fingernail on the Mazda2. Or, let's face it, be dirt cheap to counter Yaris and (the soon to depart) Accent.

It's all the more puzzling because Suzuki does interesting cars like the Jimny, Swift, Vitara and Ignis. And the oddball S-Cross (RIP).

The Baleno seems far too tame, timid and, well, blergh. But according to VFacts, Suzuki shifts at least a hundred of these per month, sometimes over 200.

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Deep dive comparison

2024 Subaru Impreza 2020 Suzuki Baleno

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