Mahindra Genio value and depreciation
Known for big load bed on a budget.
Depreciation curve
We class the Mahindra Genio as a weak-franchise mainstream in our 12-tier model, which puts its retention at roughly 61% after three years and 48% after five. Perfectly good cars weighed down by dealer-network and parts-cost perception on the used market.
Retention table
| After | Retained |
|---|---|
| 1 year | 79% |
| 3 years | 61% |
| 5 years | 48% |
| 7 years | 37% |
| 10 years | 25% |
Estimates for a new purchase at list price; retail basis, trade-in ≈ 12% under retail.
Sharing its underpinnings with the Scorpio Pik Up, the Genio offered one of the biggest load beds in the class during the 2010s. It sold mainly to small businesses shopping on price, in single and double cab form. Mahindra dropped it as the Pik Up range expanded.
Genio against its rivals
Mahindra Genio: common questions
Does the Mahindra Genio hold its value?
We class the Mahindra Genio as a weak-franchise mainstream in our 12-tier model, which puts its retention at roughly 61% after three years and 48% after five. Perfectly good cars weighed down by dealer-network and parts-cost perception on the used market.
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All figures are modelled estimates for planning, not offers or valuations. Data reviewed 2026.