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Toyota Yaris Cross launched in Malaysia – 1.5L NA and Hybrid, higher spec than Perodua Traz, from RM100k

Toyota Yaris Cross launched in Malaysia – 1.5L NA and Hybrid, higher spec than Perodua Traz, from RM100k

It’s rare that a newly-launched car feels so familiar, but here’s the Toyota Yaris Cross, now officially launched in Malaysia. Familiar because this is a twin sister of the Perodua Traz that debut in December 2025, and we got our first look of the B-SUV in Indonesia back in 2023. It was also launched in Thailand that year. Better late than never?

The Yaris Cross is meant to fill out Toyota’s ASEAN range, which until not long ago was lacking in crossovers. It sits in between the Toyota Raize (also known as the Daihatsu Rocky and Perodua Ativa) and the Corolla Cross – the Yaris and Corolla names are clear indicators of which segments the Big T wants these models in. Note that the Yaris Cross in Europe is a totally different car, and so are the grey imports from Japan.

At 4,310 mm long and 1,770 mm wide, the Yaris Cross’ footprint is in the ballpark of the Honda HR-V, which is 4,385 mm long and 1,790 mm wide – that’s 75 mm longer and 20 mm wider than the Toyota. However, the YC’s 2,620 mm wheelbase is 10 mm longer than the Honda’s, and its 210 mm of ground clearance is more than the HR’V’s GC, which tops out at 196 mm.

Toyota Yaris Cross launched in Malaysia – 1.5L NA and Hybrid, higher spec than Perodua Traz, from RM100k

Compared to another familiar benchmark, the Yaris Cross (and Traz, same dimensions) is 245 mm longer and 60 mm wider than the Perodua Ativa, while its 2,620 mm wheelbase is 95 mm longer than the compact SUV. You really do feel the size difference inside, especially in the rear. Toyota says that the YC’s 1,340 mm eye point is higher than many of its competitors.

Also significantly larger than the Ativa, by over 100L, is the YC’s 471-litre boot (465L for the hybrid, which has the 12V battery on the left side), supplemented by a 200 mm deep underfloor compartment. While the Traz has a full-sized spare steel wheel, the YC comes with a Bridgestone space saver spare tyre. If you’ve ever attempted a balik kampung trip with the Proton X50, try this boot out for size, it’s 141 litres bigger and it can take in up to six trolley bags.

The large bay is shielded by a conventional retractable tonneau cover and there’s a powered rear hatch with a kick sensor for hands-free opening. Freeing up space for the big boot is a torsion beam rear suspension, which is the norm for this segment. Toyota claims a class-leading turning circle of 5.2 metres.

Top row Toyota Yaris Cross, bottom row Perodua Traz

Looks wise, the Yaris Cross for ASEAN reminds me of the previous-generation Toyota RAV4 with its straight lines and sharp angles. Some might see the previous-generation Harrier in the rear design (again, this was designed some time ago) and even the original Lexus NX.

The main difference between Toyota and Perodua versions is in the nose – the YC’s grille is like a downturned bowl while the Traz gets a hexagon. At the back, the Traz has a black bar that visually connects the tail lamps – without this, it’s body colour on the YC. Also, the Toyota rides on two-tone 18-inch wheels (215/55 Toyo Proxes tyres), an inch larger than the Traz’s rims. There are also roof rails and a silver strip along the wheelbase.

UMW Toyota Motor (UMWT) is offering the Yaris Cross in two variants – NA and hybrid. The pure-petrol 1.5S has a familiar engine in the 2NR-VE, which makes 106 PS at 6,000 rpm and 138 Nm of torque at 4,200 rpm, as per the Traz and various Toyota group models in our region – it’s as proven as engines can be. The DOHC Dual VVT-i naturally aspirated unit sends drive to the front wheels via a CVT automatic with seven virtual speeds and paddle shifters.

Toyota Yaris Cross launched in Malaysia – 1.5L NA and Hybrid, higher spec than Perodua Traz, from RM100k

The hybrid option that the Traz didn’t get is here in the Yaris Cross. The fourth-generation Toyota Hybrid System is anchored by the 2NR-VEX, a 1.5L NA Atkinson cycle engine with 91 PS/121 Nm, paired to an electric motor rated at 80 PS/141 Nm.

Total output is 111 PS and the e-CVT channels drive to the front axle. The 1.5S HEV’s 36L fuel tank is smaller than the regular car’s 42L, but it has an extra lithium-ion battery onboard. Toyota is claiming 27.8 km/l fuel economy, just like it did for the Vios Hybrid that was launched earlier this year.

When the Traz was launched, some (including this writer, who is looking for a new daily ‘tool’) were disappointed that the Perodua didn’t have an AV range topper and a hybrid option. They’re all here, reserved for the more senior brand. Both the NA and HEV have the same ‘S’ grade, which means that the difference in price – RM99,900 on-the-road without insurance for the NA and RM109,900 for the HEV, RM10k apart – is mostly down to the powertrain.

Toyota Yaris Cross launched in Malaysia – 1.5L NA and Hybrid, higher spec than Perodua Traz, from RM100k

The Yaris Cross comes with a 10.1-inch touchscreen infotainment system with wireless Android Auto and Apple Carplay, and there’s a 7.0-inch digital meter panel with four different ‘skins’ to choose from – the latter will be familiar to P2 DNGA AV and Vios owners, while the Traz gets analogue dials.

The YC also comes with blue cabin illumination (centre console and door trim, four brightness levels), wireless charger (standard for HEV, a RM550 option for NA) and subtle blue accents in the cabin (seat stitching, meter graphics), versus the Traz’s red. The HEV features synthetic leather upholstery with a breathable mesh pattern on the seatback, a blue push start button and illuminated scuff plates.

Also included are an eight-way powered driver’s seat, which no Perodua bar the QV-E has. UMWT is also throwing in a vehicle telematics system that pairs with the Toyota MY app to provide owners with real-time location and info.

As for safety, you’ll find six airbags and the full Toyota Safety Sense (TSS) pack that includes adaptive cruise control and auto high beam. AHB is still a rung below the Ativa’s adaptive driving beam, though. A panoramic view monitor and clearance sonar system helps with parking. The Yaris Cross was crash tested by ASEAN NCAP last year and it emerged with the full five stars.

Five colours are available – Dark Turquoise, Silver Metallic, Attitude Black, Spicy Scarlet SE and Platinum Pearl White. You’ll need to top up RM400 for the pearl white. As mentioned, the wireless charger is a RM550 option for the NA (Qi2 surprisingly; the HEV’s factory-supplied unit is a regular one), while all YC buyers can an extra video recorder for the rear (front dashcam is standard) for RM380. Full spec sheet in the brochure scans above.

The warranty package is standard UMWT, which means five years unlimited mileage for the vehicle and eight years or unlimited mileage for the hybrid bits, which includes the lithium-ion battery, inverter and power management control ECU. You can top up RM2,500 to bring the hybrid warranty to 10 years. By the way, the Yaris Cross is made in Toyota’s own Bukit Raja plant alongside the Vios Hybrid, and not with the Traz in Rawang. The hybrid battery is also assembled in Malaysia.

2026 Toyota Yaris Cross spec sheet; click to enlarge

Again, the Yaris Cross 1.5S is priced at RM99,900 and the 1.5S HEV goes for RM109,900, on-the-road without insurance. That makes the NA nearly RM20k costlier than the Traz H, which goes for RM81,100. Badge aside, the YC does have more kit and can be seen as the ‘true AV spec’ for the Traz. Also, if you’re looking at a hybrid to maximise your Budi95 quota, the Yaris Cross HEV is an SUV option next to the Vios Hybrid sedan – both have the same powertrain and identical RRPs.

So, what do you think of the Toyota Yaris Cross’ looks and package? Worth the premium over the Perodua Traz? Here’s detailed spec comparison.

GALLERY: 2026 Toyota Yaris Cross 1.5S HEV

GALLERY: 2026 Toyota Yaris Cross 1.5S

GALLERY: 2026 Toyota Yaris Cross brochure and price list

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Danny Tan

Danny Tan loves driving as much as he loves a certain herbal meat soup, and sweet engine music as much as drum beats. He has been in the auto industry since 2006, previously filling the pages of two motoring magazines before joining this website. Enjoys detailing the experience more than the technical details.

 

Comments

  • 4GR-FSE on May 08, 2026 at 4:54 pm

    The way I see it
    Low Spec: RM81k
    Mid Spec: RM100k
    High Spec: RM110k

    Thumb up 46 Thumb down 1
    • You summarized it very well…..adaptive cruise control definately a very good safety feature…..mid spec is the best for me. Balance in term of cost and safety…….

      Thumb up 4 Thumb down 4
  • No Fos on May 08, 2026 at 5:24 pm

    When an to bring in Toyota BZ3X EV?

    Thumb up 1 Thumb down 1
  • ” Worth the premium over the Perodua Traz?”

    What kind of question is that? Anything is worth more than Perodua Trash or Trazsh or whatever the crap it’s called. And at those prices it blows Perodua for good only morons will continue to buy Perodua’s turd.

    However vs the Nissan Kick e-power the Yaris Cross is a weak motor and so not worth the price if you want a serious hybrid. These days I hear VLT spec going for 99K.

    Thumb up 18 Thumb down 26
  • pqrst on May 08, 2026 at 6:03 pm

    Pass. Not going to buy a car that some poor Perodua users can easily convert their Traz (trash) into, drive a Toyota ends up people are gonna say you drive a Perodua.

    Thumb up 24 Thumb down 22
  • normal_user on May 08, 2026 at 7:20 pm

    Perodua shd get HeV version for the high spec.. And remove the red interior garnish.

    Thumb up 11 Thumb down 2
  • Boy Racer on May 08, 2026 at 7:32 pm

    This is one of the reasons why MITI came up with RM200k min. CIF CBU.

    To slow down EV adoption and force the rakyat to buy dinosaur engine cars at such prices.

    Thumb up 39 Thumb down 6
    • Actually nope, if we use your logic, why emas 7 and emas 5 is popular?

      Thumb up 8 Thumb down 8
      • Mike Tee on May 11, 2026 at 10:17 am

        Because the reverse ceiling price of imported EVs is RM100,000 and soon going to be RM300,000.

        eMas 7 is a rebadged Geely Galaxy E5 whose selling price in China is ¥109,800 (RM63,500). We pay RM105,800 in Malaysia for the eMas7. It will be competing with RM65,000++ cars if there were no barriers.

        Thumb up 6 Thumb down 0
  • ahhookpin on May 08, 2026 at 11:05 pm

    Veloz hybrid when?

    Thumb up 2 Thumb down 1
  • ultraboom on May 09, 2026 at 5:46 pm

    this is basically perodua traz advance version, i dun blame toyota japan for this trash yaris, its not even the same platform as the real yaris cross that every other country has, i blame UMW toyota for this trash car, we dun even get the latest engine or the 5th gen hybrid, this is a failure of product and policy, the 75 – 110k price range is no mans land, the ativa will smoke this car, and abv 110k wud rather just spend more and get hrv, or 10 other chinese cars that are better than this, and if we see who owns the vendors that miti is trying to protect, we all knw why

    Thumb up 17 Thumb down 1
  • Brock on May 09, 2026 at 5:59 pm

    Was hoping for Toyota to release Yaris Hybrid (hatchback) instead of this one. Too many SUVs here.

    Thumb up 4 Thumb down 0
    • nah 95% of the so called “SUV” on the road are just fwd lifted hatchback with no body on frame & AWD

      Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0
  • Only ICE or Hybrid on May 09, 2026 at 6:11 pm

    Smelling ccp car sales people already panicking…expecting 130K but Toyota giving 110K for the Hybrid…
    This car definitely way handsome than ccp copy cat cars…most important proven reliability…
    Without 8 yrs hybrid system warranty i will still buy…

    Thumb up 12 Thumb down 7
  • myvi 1.5x on May 11, 2026 at 11:04 am

    If choose ICE just buy the traz x rm76k.
    If choose hybrid rm110k maybe test drive eMAS 7 Phev first.
    If choose full EV just buy eMAS 5 high spec.

    Thumb up 3 Thumb down 1
  • toyota plastic interior on May 15, 2026 at 9:30 am

    this car is 3 years too late to thailand, old crap

    Thumb up 2 Thumb down 0
 

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