A month further into my time with the Tata Altroz Accomplished Plus (Petrol DCA), the car has now entered that comfortable phase where it simply becomes part of your daily rhythm. The initial curiosity of testing every feature and observing every detail has faded, replaced by a quieter appreciation of how the car behaves day after day. And that, in many ways, is the real test of any long-term review.
Driving the Altroz regularly in Mumbai’s chaotic traffic has highlighted one of its biggest strengths, which is its composure. The suspension tuning strikes a very sensible balance for Indian conditions. It manages to absorb broken patches of road, speed breakers, and potholes without sending unpleasant jolts into the cabin. That ability becomes particularly noticeable during longer drives across the city, where the road surface constantly changes. The Altroz rarely feels unsettled.

The steering also deserves mention. Around the city, it remains light enough to make tight manoeuvres and U-turns easy, but it progressively gains a reassuring weight as speeds rise. That makes the car feel planted and predictable, which is something you really appreciate on faster stretches of road. There’s a quiet confidence in the way the Altroz tracks along a straight line; it never feels nervous or overly sensitive to sudden inputs.
Also Read: Tata Altroz Long-Term Review: Settling Into the Daily Rhythm
The petrol DCA powertrain has also started to feel more natural the longer I’ve lived with it. In slow-moving traffic, the gearbox behaves smoothly and doesn’t suffer from the jerky responses that some dual-clutch systems can exhibit. It allows the car to creep forward gently in bumper-to-bumper situations, which is exactly what you want in Mumbai’s stop-start traffic.
The engine itself isn’t what you would call enthusiastic, but it is adequate for everyday driving. It feels most comfortable when you adopt a relaxed driving style, allowing the gearbox to keep things smooth rather than pushing the car aggressively. That said, there is enough performance on tap for the occasional quick overtake when the road opens up.

Another quality that has grown on me over time is the sense of solidity the Altroz carries with it. There’s a reassuring heft in the way the doors shut and a planted feel when the car is moving. It gives you the impression of a hatchback that has been engineered with safety and structural strength in mind.
Fuel efficiency, however, continues to be the one lingering disappointment. In typical Mumbai driving conditions, the petrol DCA still returns around 8 km/l. That figure feels a little underwhelming for a hatchback meant to serve as an everyday city companion.

Even so, after another month together, the Altroz continues to prove itself as a well-rounded car to live with. It may not try to impress you with dramatic performance or flashy gimmicks, but its balanced ride, predictable handling, and everyday usability make it a car that quietly grows on you with time.

