Cheerful on the outside, fuss-free drivability, and easy on fuel consumption. The Suzuki Swift Hybrid checks many of the good boxes of what makes a good B Segment econobox


Singapore – With the sudden surge of EVs here, especially from Chinese carmakers, it is refreshing to have something simple and somewhat more traditional (or you could say, more โ€œnormalโ€) to review. The Suzuki Swift has gone through a much-needed middle-of-life refresh. A fuss-free, more attainable car for those who want to keep personal transport simpleโ€ฆ well, I mean that is if our COEs had not rocketed, and priced most of the Swiftโ€™s buyer demographic out of the picture.

Competition for B Segment hatchbacks have also narrowed. The only two in the same โ€œplaypenโ€ are the Honda Jazz and the venerable Mazda 2; the latter which I must say, is very well put together, but lacks the Suziโ€™s mild-hybridised engine tech.


Small Improvements, Notable Impact

While I cannot say I am a fan of the Swiftโ€™s new major exterior revamp, it does catch my attention. You have to give Suzuki some credit though, since profit margins for small cars like these are wafer-thin. But what matters more to me, is that the interior does feel notably more refined.

Most of this, or I could safely say, all of this lies in the reworked dashboard, which seemingly has better fit and finish. The infotainment screen has a new home at the top of the dash, which is a plus, since you need only to glance left to check the screen.


They Call me the Fuel Sipper

The noticeable positive on the road would be the sorting out of the engineโ€™s start-stop and mild-hybrid issues which dogged the pre-facelift car. However, I am still not a fan of that CVT, since it โ€œrubberbandsโ€ the hatchbackโ€™s acceleration. The 3-cylinder, 1.2-litre engine operates with relative smoothness, putting out a humble 81hp and 112Nm, which gets you there. With the help of its MHEV tech, and also an unladen weight of 945kg, the small hatch stubbornly returns anything above 18km/l; which means that day-to-day running is going to be very affordable. 

It may be frugal, but where the Swift shines is how it handles. Remember that Suzuki engineered the Swift, with the โ€˜Sportโ€™ small hot hatchback in-mind; very much like Volkswagen with their bread-and-butter Golf, and the GTI. So, it holds itโ€™s own around the twisties, though putting your foot down, does reveal its economy-leanings.

In a time where too much VES, COE, BEVs and KFC have dulled the allure of smaller cars, the Swiftโ€™s lower price-point may just attract a few who want a new (small) personal car. But a car like this could use a bit of COE breathing room.

Words & Photos: Clifford Chow


ProsCons
Improved-smoother drive quality3-cylinder engine can sound rough when worked hard
Tiny fuel billCVT dulls what could be a more entertaining drive
Fun to driveSuper-high COEs not helping its case

Suzuki Swift Mild Hybrid

DrivetrainPetrol-electric mild hybrid
Layout1,197cc, inline 3 
Motor power / torque81hp / 112Nm
TransmissionCVT
Efficiency20.4km/l
Fuel Capacity37 Litres
0-100km/h
Top Speed
VES BandA2
DealerChampion Motors
PriceS$137,888 with COE and VES
VerdictNear fuss-free ownership, fun to drive. Pity the high-trending COEs