What's the difference?
The Suzuki Jimny is back with a tech refresh and very minor update after a year-long pause in production.
The line-up now has an updated autonomous emergency braking (AEB) system – so that system is now compliant with Australian Design Rules standards – as well as adaptive cruise control, lane departure prevention, and front and rear parking sensors.
My test vehicle – the entry-level Jimny Lite – also gets a new 7.0-inch touchscreen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto as part of this latest line-up refresh.
So, does the updated base-spec Jimny – which now costs $1500 more than it did before – represent best value for money in this Zook range?
Read on.
The Mitsubishi Pajero Sport is one of the quiet-achieving top-sellers in the Australian 4WD market and now 2WD five- and seven-seater variants have been added to further expand the popular SUV wagon line-up.
With sub-$50,000 price-tags being touted, is a 2WD Pajero Sport worth your consideration?
We had a seven-seater variant for a week to see how it stacks up against its 2WD rivals and its own 4WD stablemates.
Read on.
The Suzuki Jimny Lite is the most basic of the Suzuki Jimny line-up but that’s not a bad thing.
It’s ordinary on-road, it’s on the wrong side of small – especially in terms of cargo-carrying ability – and it’s still an exercise in driver-adaptability because it’s basic, bouncy and requires a lot of effort to keep it driving in a straight line.
But the Jimny is a lot of fun off road and even on sealed surfaces. It is go-kart-like in terms of everyday suitability and comfort, but its day-to-day drivability has received a healthy boost by way of those new driver-assist technologies and the updated AEB.
If you’re willing to give into the fun and cop a few compromises along the way, then you won’t be disappointed, because the Jimny is a tonne of fun.
The Mitsubishi Pajero Sport GLS 2WD seven-seater is a well-built and well-priced family-friendly wagon.
It's nice to drive, has a rather comfortable interior and – bonus – the vehicle on which it's based has proven credibility as a no-nonsense and highly functional touring vehicle.
But in 2WD guise it's missing something: namely Super Select II, which accounts for a considerable chunk of the 4WD Pajero Sport’s appeal – so the absence of that in this 2WD version is a significant negative, in my books.
The not-so-subtle point I’m trying to make? Sure, the 2WD Pajero Sport is a few grand cheaper than its 4WD stablemate and it's a solid value-for-money buy as is, but I reckon paying the extra cash to get your hands on a Pajero Sport that's equipped with Super-Select II is the better bet.
The Lite is, like the rest of the Jimny line-up, retro-cool and classic with a striking straight-up-and-down appearance sure to draw more admiring glances than sneering ‘WTF?!’ looks.
The three-door Suzuki Jimny is 3650mm long (with a 2250mm wheelbase), 1645mm wide, 1720mm high, and it has a kerb weight of 1100kg.
The Jimny has it over any rivals in this category when it comes to exterior design.
The Jimny’s interior is plain and practical. It has cloth seats, expanses of durable plastic and an overall utilitarian look and feel.
It is spartan inside, but this all-pervasive no-frills approach best suits the Jimny's simple spirit.
The Pajero Sport is 4825mm long (with a 2800mm wheelbase), 1815mm wide and 1835mm high. It has an official kerb weight of 1980kg.
I don’t mind the styling of the Pajero Sport. It doesn’t look as bulky as many of its rivals and it manages to have a rather contemporary, but comfortably middle of the road, presence.
If you’re that concerned about keeping up appearances, perhaps take a look at a Pajero Sport in the metal, drive it, imagine yourself living with it day to day, then make up your own mind whether you think it suits you or not.
Easy.
Functionality is highest on the agenda with the Jimny rather than any attempt at a semblance of plushness.
Having said that, it is comfortable inside, but it is very basic, which is actually part of its charm though some people may rapidly grow weary of its bare-bones interior.
The big news in this small 4WD is the fact it now has a new 7.0-inch touchscreen with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. That screen is too small but the hands-on controls everywhere else remain one of the refreshingly simple aspects that is easy to like about the Jimny.
There’s also now a 4.2-inch digital driver display between the analogue dials and that includes a speedo, as well as fuel-consumption and driving range details.
With the three-door Jimny's second-row seats in use, boot space is listed as 85L. With the second row stowed away, there’s a claimed 377L of cargo space.
Payload is a claimed 350kg and gross vehicle mass is 1450kg (the Jimny is 1100kg) so there’s not a lot of flexibility in terms of how much camping gear, dogs, or Abba CDs you can pack into this diminutive 4WD.
While others may offer more in terms of comfort and general amenities, the Jimny still wins out for day-to-day durability.
The interior has a practical and familiar feel about it. Sure, it’s a bit on the basic side of things – with cloth seats and rubber floor mats – and it certainly lacks the plethora of soft-touch surfaces some of its more expensive rivals may have, but this interior’s life-friendly sense is a bigger positive for it than any posh addition could be.
The front seats are rather supportive, with a real snug feel to them, and are manually adjustable, which is fine with me.
The reach- and height-adjustable steering wheel has paddle shifters for when your driving takes on more of a sense of urgency.
The dash and 8.0-inch touchscreen media unit has an integrated sense to it. And this cabin’s all-pervasive sense of familiarity continues here with all of the buttons and dials easy to spot on the fly and, more importantly, operate without fumbling around for them.
Driver and front passenger have access to media and aircon controls, among others, as well as cup-holders in between the front seats, a bottle holder in each of the doors, and small spots here and there for your wallet, keys etc.
The second row is suitably comfortable and I sat behind my driving position and there was plenty of head and leg room. It’d be much squeezier for those of us who stand at six-feet (182cm) or beyond.
Second-row passengers have access to a fold-down arm-rest with cup holders, air vents and there are USB charge points and a power socket in the rear of the centre-console.
The seat-backs have map pockets and the doors each have a bottle holder.
The second row is equipped with three child-seat top-tether points, and two ISOFIX points. It is a 60:40 split-fold configuration.
Passengers in the third-row seat have access to cup-holders and air vents, but that’s little compensation because the space back here is on the wrong side of tight.
The third row is a 50:50 split-fold configuration.
In terms of packability, the rear cargo area’s volume is listed as 131 litres when all three rows are being used as seating; 502 litres when two rows are in use; and 1488 when the second and third rows are stowed away.
Annoyingly, the third row is a real bugger to stow away and doesn’t fold flat into the floor. Maybe I’m missing a trick but this third-row strife was a source of more than a bit of frustration for the photographer and I – and we’re both experienced vehicle-based travellers.
The rear cargo area is equipped with power sockets and tie-down points. There is a shallow underfloor storage box back there as well.
The Lite is the entry-level Jimny and as such has a manufacturer recommended retail price of $31,990 (excluding on-road costs).
Standard features in the Lite include a 7.0-inch multimedia touchscreen, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, updated AEB (with 'Dual Sensor Brake Support II' so the system now complies with the mandatory ADR 98/00 regulation), as well as the inclusion of lane departure prevention, adaptive cruise control, front and rear parking sensors, and traffic sign recognition.
It also has the usual Jimny gear: 15-inch steel wheels, halogen headlights and a rear-view camera.
Exterior paint choices include white as standard and jungle green (on this test vehicle) which is a premium/metallic paint and comes at an additional cost of $745.
The Jimny represents decent enough value against potential rivals, such as the Renault Duster 4x4, Mahindra Scorpio, and the GWM Tank 300, although you're buying a vibe more than any substantial amount of gear or comfort.
Our test vehicle – a Mitsubishi Pajero Sport GLS 2WD seven-seater – has a manufacturer suggested retail price of $49,190 (before on-road costs).
But our wagon had a stack of accessories, which included alloy front protection bar ($3879), towbar kit ($1386), towball cover ($7), rear cargo liner ($205), and carpet mat set ($230). That total accessories cost of $5707 (price includes recommended dealer fitment cost) brings this vehicle’s as-tested price to $54,897.
There is a 2WD GLX spec, a five-seater, which is slightly cheaper than our test vehicle, with an MSRP of $44,440.
The standard features list on the GLS is generous and includes an 8.0-inch touchscreen multimedia unit (with Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, and satellite navigation), dual-zone climate control air conditioning, a power tailgate, privacy glass, automatic rain-sensing wipers and dusk-sensing headlights and, of course, seven seats.
I’ve mentioned the accessories above – and there are lot more of a variety of those available from Mitsubishi as well as from Australia’s bloody awesome aftermarket industry – so let’s get cracking with the yarn proper.
This entry-level Suzuki Jimny has the same 1.5-litre four-cylinder petrol engine as the rest of the line-up, producing 75kW at 6000rpm and 130Nm at 4000rpm, and it has a five-speed manual transmission.
The Jimny is always zippy, manoeuvrable and punchy off the mark simply because it is so small and light, however, it feels underpowered on the open road and strained at highway speeds.
It has a part-time four-wheel drive system with high- and low-range, and off-road traction control.
While it’s far from offering the best power and torque outputs, even in the small 4WD realm, the Jimny is so light that there’s enough here to work with.
The Pajero Sport has a 2.4-litre, four-cylinder turbo-diesel engine, which produces 133kW at 3500rpm and 430Nm at 2500rpm, and it has an eight-speed automatic transmission.
This 2WD variant does not have Mitsubishi’s impressive Super-Select II 4WD system, of which I’m a big fan, and that absence is a substantial negative against it, I reckon. But more about that very soon…
The Suzuki Jimny has official fuel consumption of 6.4L/100km (on a combined cycle).
I recorded 7.2L/100km on this test but, as always, I did a lot of high- and low-range 4WDing.
The Jimny has a 40L fuel tank so, going by my fuel figures, a full tank should give you a driving range of about 550km.
The 2WD Pajero Sport has an offical fuel consumption of 8.0L/100km on a combined cycle.
On our test, which included a stint of dirt-road driving, we recorded fuel consumption from fill to fill of 9.2L/100km.
It has a 68-litre fuel tank so, with that sort of fuel-consumption figure, you can reasonably expect a driving range of approximately 690km from a full tank, but that’s factoring in a safe-distance buffer of 50km.
It may come as no surprise to any of you who have actually driven a Jimny but it is rather ordinary on road.
It's a small vehicle and quite light so it does get buffeted by passing traffic, thrown around by any wind stronger than a mild breeze, and this Zook’s ride and handling are barely the right side of atrocious.
But – and it’s a big BUT – the Jimny is still a lot of fun to drive, even as wild as it is on-road, and it absolutely comes alive when you hit the dirt.
Being light and nimble may detract from the Jimny's performance on sealed surfaces, but those characteristics help immensely when you go 4WDing in this little car.
It is highly manoeuvrable – it is very agile around the bush through tight tracks and up tight wheel-rutted hills – and it’s incredibly easy to find and maintain the correct driving line in the Jimny because it is so small and there's a tyre at each corner so you know where your wheels are positioned at any one time.
Low-range gearing is good and there's a nice spread of torque across a decent rev range. Traction control is reasonably well calibrated, although it is a little choppy in application now and then.
Basic but crucial physical aspects, such as the Jimny’s off-road angles, are well suited to off-roading with approach, rampover and departure angles clocking in at 37, 28 and 49 degrees respectively. Those help to make this little vehicle a champion in the dirty stuff.
Ground clearance is listed as 210mm but feels like more and while wading depth is not listed, it’s fair to say it’s about the 300mm mark.
Warning: the three-door Jimny is bouncy because it's so small, light and quite tall for its size, and has a narrow wheel-track.
It is very tippy and bouncy and you do get bumped around a lot but that's kind of the point of off-roading in the Jimny. It’s a barrel of laughs purely because it is such a dialled-in and driver-focused experience.
But those characteristics may rapidly become tiresome and tiring for some people who have grown accustomed and attached to more comfort and cushioning in modern vehicles.
This is a very capable off roader and it’s one of the few vehicles you can drive straight out of the showroom and have a tonne of fun in, in the dirt, but it is somewhat let down by its showroom-standard tyres (Dunlop Grandtrek AT20 195/80R15). Replace those with some more aggressive all-terrain rubber and Roberto’s your uncle.
As mentioned earlier, payload is 350kg, GVM is 1450kg.
Towing capacity is 350kg (unbraked) and 1300kg (braked) so you’re limited in how much you can drag with the Jimny, but that's okay because I don’t think too many people are buying a Jimny because they have to tow a caravan, horse float or boat. They’re buying it because it’s a shedload of fun off-road and the Jimny has that factor in abundance.
This is mostly a smooth driving wagon while tackling daily duties on the blacktop and with some highway stretches thrown into the mix.
Steering has a nice weight to it and the Pajero Sport is a nimble, highly manoeuvrable SUV, with a turning circle of 11.2m, even if it does start to reveal more than a bit of body-roll through more aggressive driving. No surprise and no worries – this is an SUV after all, not a sports car.
Also, worth noting is the fact that our test vehicle’s alloy bullbar made it heavier at the front end thus affecting its handling somewhat.
Throttle response is sharp and the 2WD Pajero Sport retains the line-up’s punchy turbo-diesel engine and teamed with the eight-speed auto it makes for a quietly effective, rarely stressed working partnership, rather than an energetic match-up.
The suspension set-up here – double wishbones with coil springs and stabiliser bar at the front, and three-link, coil springs and stabiliser bar at the rear – yields a very firm ride and one which can tend towards jarring if you’re traversing chopped-up back-country bitumen or really anything beyond bitumen that's in good nick.
The tyres – Toyo Open Country A32 (265/60R18) – are well-suited to bitumen, not so much to off-roading, which is perfectly reasonable for this 2WD vehicle. Also, this rubber is on the correct side of quiet.
As mentioned earlier, Mitsubishi’s Super-Select II 4WD system is missing from this variant, obviously, as this is a 2WD. And that’s a crying shame because even if you never venture off the road, Super-Select II is very handy. In Pajero Sports equipped with it, you can drive in 4H (4WD high range) even on bitumen or any high-traction surface because 4H in this vehicle means that – and I’m directly quoting Mitsubishi’s offical system explanation here – “all wheels are driven via the transfer case with an open centre differential, this means all four wheels will send power to the ground while still operating independently of one another”.
If you drove like that in most other 4WDs – at speed in 4H on bitumen or the like – you’d risk transmission wind-up, but there’s no danger of that in a 4WD Pajero Sport because its centre diff is open, not locked, when 4H is engaged.
This gives the driver increased traction and so better control and that means it’s a safer all-round driving experience for everyone involved.
Unfortunately, none of those benefits are available in this 2WD variant.
Having said all of that, this Pajero Sport is very drivable, functional and still manages to retain respectable, if not high, levels of refinement.
The current Suzuki Jimny does not have an ANCAP safety rating, because its three-star rating expired in December 2024.
It has six airbags (dual frontal, side chest-protecting and side head-protecting (curtain) airbags), AEB, lane departure prevention, adaptive cruise control, and front and rear parking sensors.
Other small 4WDs have the maximum ANCAP rating and offer more comprehensive driver-assist and safety gear suites than the Jimny.
The Pajero Sport has a five-star ANCAP safety rating based on testing in October, 2015.
Safety gear includes seven airbags (driver’s knee, driver and passenger front, driver and passenger front sides, and curtains) and this Pajero Sport’s suite of active safety and driver-assist tech includes AEB, adaptive cruise control, trailer stability assist, rear view camera and rear parking sensors, but it somehow misses out on blind spot warning and rear cross-traffic alert.
The Suzuki Jimny has a five-year/unlimited-kilometre warranty.
Suzuki offers the first service at two months/2000km for free, then under the capped-price servicing program, your Jimny is scheduled for a service every 12 months/15,000km at an average cost of $453.
Those costs are okay for something in the small 4WD realm.
Pajero Sport 2WD is eligible for Mitsubishi's so-called "10/10 Diamond Advantage" package, which includes a 10-year/200,000km warranty and 10 year/150,000km capped price servicing. But you need to ensure you get the vehicle serviced at an authorised Mitsubishi dealer to take advantage of the 10-year warranty plan.
Each capped price servicing extends free roadside assistance by another 12 months.
The servicing schedule and costs per service are: $399 (at 12months/15,000), $399 (24 months/30,000km), $499 (36 months/45,000km), $699 (48 months/60,000km), $499 (60 months/75,000km), $699 (72 months/90,000km), $499 (84 months/105,000km), $999 (96 months/120,000km), $599 (108 months/135,000km), and $699 (120 months/150,000km).