Car Mileage Calculator
Real mileage is measured between two full-tank fills, not from the trip computer. Enter the kilometres driven and litres filled, and this car mileage calculator gives your actual fuel average in km/l (kmpl). It also shows how far you are below the ARAI-certified figure. For most cars in India that gap is 10 to 15%.
Fill the tank, drive, fill it again — this calculator turns that one fill-up into your car's real mileage, then compares it with the ARAI claim so you know whether the gap is normal. It works as a fuel average calculator for any car; when you are done, the result hands straight off to the fuel cost calculator to see what your km/l costs per month.
Check Your Real Mileage
Brim-to-brim is the only accurate method: fill to the brim, drive normally, re-brim at the same pump — the second fill's litres are exactly what you consumed. Type the distance directly if you noted it from the trip meter.
Your tank-to-tank result carries over automatically — edit it here if you already know your figure.
Car mileage formula: Real mileage (km/l) = distance travelled (km) ÷ litres filled — the same kmpl / fuel average arithmetic every brim-to-brim test uses.
Assumes: the worked-example fill-up (odometer 18,240 → 18,690 = 450 km on 30.2 litres) and a 17.0 km/l ARAI claim; cost per km appears only after you pick a fuel and city — edit above.
Worked Example: One Fill-Up, Real Mileage
You brim the tank at 18,240 km on the odometer, drive normally for a week or two, and brim it again at 18,690 km — the pump cuts off after 30.2 litres. You covered 450 km, and those 30.2 litres are exactly the fuel you consumed. Real mileage = 450 ÷ 30.2 = 14.90 km/l. Against a 17.0 km/l ARAI claim, that is a 12.4% gap — squarely in the normal 10–15% band for real traffic.
ARAI Mileage of Popular Cars
The certified figures for cars in our portfolio — use them as the "claimed" side in Mode B, and expect real-world numbers 10–15% lower. Tap a car for its detailed mileage section.
What is good mileage for a car in India?
"Good" depends on the segment and the fuel, not a single magic number. In real-world driving — city and highway mixed — these are the honest bands; anything within 15% of the car's ARAI figure means the car is healthy.
| Segment | Good real-world mileage |
|---|---|
| Petrol hatchback | 14–18 km/l |
| Petrol compact SUV | 12–16 km/l |
| Diesel sedan / SUV | 18–24 km/l |
| CNG hatchback / sedan | 22–28 km/kg |
How to Measure Mileage Accurately: The Brim-to-Brim Method
Fuel gauges and trip-computer readouts estimate; a brim-to-brim fill-up measures. It works because a brimmed tank is the one fill level you can reproduce exactly.
- Fill the tank to the brim — until the nozzle cuts off twice — and note the odometer reading.
- Drive normally for at least 200–300 km. Don't baby the car; you want your real usage pattern.
- Return to the same pump, same nozzle angle, and brim it again. Note the litres dispensed and the odometer.
- Divide kilometres driven by litres filled — that is your real km/l (the Tank-to-Tank tab does the division and the cost math).
- Repeat over two or three tanks and average: one tank is a good estimate, three cancel out the noise.
Why Real-World Mileage Is Lower Than the ARAI Figure
ARAI certifies mileage on a laboratory dynamometer running the Modified Indian Driving Cycle — a fixed speed profile with gentle acceleration, no air-conditioning, no passengers, no headwind. Your commute has traffic idling, AC on full, cold starts and real acceleration, so a 10–15% shortfall is built into the physics, not a defect. The number is still useful: it is measured identically for every car, which makes it the right yardstick for comparing models — just not a promise for your fuel bill.
8 Factors That Tank Your Mileage
- Under-inflated tyres — rolling resistance climbs quietly; check pressures cold, monthly.
- Stop-go traffic and idling — kilometres per litre collapse when the litres burn while standing still.
- Air-conditioning in city driving — the compressor draws engine power exactly when speeds are lowest.
- Short trips on a cold engine — the first few kilometres run rich until the engine warms up.
- Aggressive throttle and late braking — every hard stop throws away energy you paid to build.
- Roof racks and open windows at speed — aerodynamic drag grows with the square of speed.
- Skipped servicing — a clogged air filter, tired spark plugs or old engine oil all tax combustion.
- Dead weight in the boot — hauling 40–50 kg you never unload costs fuel on every single trip.
When Low Mileage Signals a Service Issue
A gap of up to 15% below ARAI is normal wear-and-tear of real life; 15–25% deserves a second and third brim-to-brim tank to rule out measurement noise. If a verified gap stays above 25% — or your mileage drops suddenly without a change in route or driving style — suspect the basics first: tyre pressure, air filter, dragging brakes, old oil. That is service territory, and it usually costs less to fix than the fuel it wastes — see our annual car maintenance cost guide for what a routine service should cost.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is highway mileage really higher than city mileage, and by how much?
Yes, usually by 20–35%. On the highway the engine holds a steady, efficient rpm with no idling or stop-go losses; in city traffic those losses dominate. A car returning 13 km/l in city crawl can genuinely do 17–18 km/l on an expressway run — measure each separately with a brim-to-brim tank if you split your driving.
Why is my mileage lower than the ARAI figure?
ARAI figures come from a controlled test cycle at steady speeds without AC. Real traffic, AC use, short trips and driving style typically cost 10–15%. A gap in that band is normal; a gap beyond 25% is worth a service check.
Does using the AC reduce mileage, and by how much?
Yes — the compressor draws engine power, typically costing 5–10% in city driving. At highway speeds the penalty shrinks, and above ~80 km/h an open window's drag can cost more than the AC.
Is the tank-to-tank (brim-to-brim) method really accurate?
It is the most accurate method available to an owner — it measures actual fuel consumed over actual distance. Fill to the brim, drive normally for at least 200–300 km, re-brim at the same pump and nozzle angle, and divide km by litres. One tank gives a good estimate; three tanks average out the noise.
Why does my new car's first-tank fuel average look low?
A new engine is still freeing up, the first tank often includes PDI/delivery idling, and dealer fills are rarely brimmed — so the first calculation underestimates. Judge mileage only after the second or third brim-to-brim tank, once running-in has settled.
Data Sources & Methodology
ARAI figures quoted on this page are the certified test-cycle values published for each model. Your computed mileage is pure arithmetic on your own fill-up entries — no adjustment factors are applied to it. Real-world planning figures elsewhere on the page assume the typical 10–15% gap below ARAI observed in Indian traffic.
Estimates, not quotes. Computed from published state tax slabs, IRDAI-notified insurance rates and daily fuel price feeds; your dealer or lender's final figure can differ.
