Toyota Vios Hybrid in Malaysia – 111 PS, 27.8 km/l, CKD battery, HEV and GR Sport, RM104k to RM110k

Toyota Vios Hybrid in Malaysia – 111 PS, 27.8 km/l, CKD battery, HEV and GR Sport, RM104k to RM110k

Toyota Vios 1.5 HEV GR Sport

Teased earlier this month, the Toyota Vios Hybrid has been launched in Malaysia, some five months after it made its debut in Thailand. As previously reported, the petrol-electric B-segment sedan arrives in two variants, including a look-faster GR Sport variant.

Prices are exactly as estimated – RM103,900 for the regular 1.5 HEV and RM109,900 for the 1.5 HEV GR Sport, both on-the-road without insurance. That makes the car RM7,300 more expensive than the petrol-powered 1.5G, with the GR Sport costing RM13,300 more.

Against the RM111,900 Honda City e:HEV RS, the equivalent GR Sport is RM2,000 cheaper, and its main rival does not have a “base” variant to bridge the gap to the RM99,900 City RS petrol. All models come with a five-year warranty and an eight-year battery warranty, both with unlimited mileage. Customers can extend the battery warranty by another two years for an extra RM2,500, resulting in a total coverage of ten years.

Toyota Vios Hybrid in Malaysia – 111 PS, 27.8 km/l, CKD battery, HEV and GR Sport, RM104k to RM110k

Toyota Vios 1.5 HEV GR Sport

Just like the petrol Vios, the Hybrid is CKD locally assembled in Bukit Raja, Klang, and so is the battery. Distributor UMW Toyota Motor is proud of the localisation work done as part of its investment into the plant, with 97% of the battery’s components being assembled here. The factory is capable of producing up to 30,000 batteries annually.

Of course, the big news is the hybrid powertrain, which the Vios shares with the ASEAN-market Yaris Cross (and was expected for the Perodua Traz). Unlike its other Daihatsu New Global Architecture (DNGA) siblings, the Daihatsu Rocky e-Smart Hybrid/Toyota Raize Hybrid/Perodua Ativa Hybrid, this utilises the in-house-developed, fourth-generation Toyota Hybrid System setup, incorporating the E-CVT planetary gearset to enable a mechanical connection between the combustion engine and the driven wheels.

That engine is the 1.5 litre 2NR-VEX naturally-aspirated Dual VVT-i four-cylinder, which differs from the standard 2NR-VE by operating on an Atkinson cycle. Outputs are rated at 91 PS at 5,500 rpm and 121 Nm of torque from 4,000 to 4,800 rpm.

Toyota Vios Hybrid in Malaysia – 111 PS, 27.8 km/l, CKD battery, HEV and GR Sport, RM104k to RM110k

With the 80 PS/141 Nm electric motor coupled up, the Vios Hybrid makes a sum total of 111 PS – 5 PS more than the petrol Vios. A 0.76 kWh lithium-ion battery – more modern than the nickel metal hydride (NiMH) packs on previous Toyota hybrids – enables the car to run on pure electricity alone for brief periods. Fuel consumption is rated at 3.6 litres per 100 km (27.8 km per litre).

The rest of the car is standard Vios stuff, with MacPherson strut front and torsion beam rear suspension, electric power steering and disc brakes all around. However, the structure has been strengthened to improve quality and safety, and there has been additional sound insulation applied. The GR Sport, the second such model in the nameplate’s history, receives uprated springs and dampers (ride height remains unchanged), and for the first time, the EPS has also been retuned.

On the standard HEV model, the wheels are an inch smaller than the 1.5G’s and measure 16 inches in diameter, with a different turbine-style design compared to the 1.5E. The GR Sport steps back up to 17-inch aero wheels with slender machined silver “spokes”, with all rollers upgraded from four to five lugs – presumably to adapt to the hybrid’s 120 kg increase in weight.

Toyota Vios 1.5 HEV

Beyond the new wheels, the HEV looks very similar to the petrol Vios, retaining the aggressive, almost catfish-like front end. There are a few minor trim changes – for instance, the strip joining the headlights and the window trim are both finished in dark chrome.

The rest of the exterior pieces such as the massive slatted grille, the extended “vortex generator” bumper corners and even the rear number plate garnish have been lightened from the usual gloss black to metallic grey. As with other Vios models in Malaysia, the HEV comes as standard with a bodykit, boot lid spoiler and door visors, with the front splitter, two-tone side skirts and rear diffuser-like insert also finished in grey.

The GR Sport reverts all the aforementioned trim to black (including the rubberised window trim) and adds a unique bodykit – as before, it’s tacked onto the standard front and rear bumpers. The massive grille gains a honeycomb insert which, when combined with the angular corner air inlets, provides some resemblance to the pre-facelifted GR Yaris. You also get black door mirrors, single-tone side skirts and a different boot lid spoiler. The rear end is particularly aggressive, with a sizeable diffuser and L-shaped bumper corners.

Toyota Vios 1.5 HEV (left) vs. GR Sport

Available colours for the GR Sport are Scarlet SE, Platinum White Pearl and Attitude Black Mica, with the base HEV adding Silver Metallic and an exclusive Celestite Grey Metallic – the latter from the Corolla sedan and Corolla Cross. White is a RM400 option, and you can also spec the GR Sport in scarlet or white with a black roof, costing RM1,500 and RM1,800 respectively.

The Vios’ well-appointed interior is also mostly unchanged, still with a black and maroon colour scheme, a stitched soft-touch dashboard and black leather upholstery. It has been brightened up by a blue push-button starter and extended ambient lighting, with a new dashboard strip and door card illumination to join the footwells and centre console; users can still cycle through the 64 colours via buttons aft of the gearlever.

The Hybrid also introduces a much taller 10.1-inch touchscreen head unit, more than an inch larger than on the petrol models and with the capacitive shortcut keys moved from the right to the bottom. As before, you get wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, six speakers and a Qi wireless charger under the centre armrest. The seven-inch instrument display and digital speedometer are retained but feature hybrid-specific screens.

Toyota Vios Hybrid in Malaysia – 111 PS, 27.8 km/l, CKD battery, HEV and GR Sport, RM104k to RM110k

Toyota Vios 1.5 HEV GR Sport

As per the exterior, the GR Sport is slightly different on the inside, with an all-black colour scheme, darker silver trim and a GR-branded steering wheel with gloss black spokes. The seats are also exclusively trimmed in leather and suede, again with the GR logo embroidered into the headrests.

Moving rearwards, the hybrid battery is mounted under the rear seats without compromising the Vios’ already modest headroom; the usual cooling vent can be found on the passenger side. To make space for it, the fuel tank is slightly smaller at 36 litres, versus 40 litres for the petrol models. Also, the rear USB ports are now both USB-C, although the head unit still uses a USB-A port for data.

The addition of electric gubbins in the engine bay does mean that the 12-volt battery has been shunted to the boot (also on the passenger side), reducing boot space by 15 litres to 460 litres. You still can’t fold the rear seats, but you do at least now get spare tyre, and it’s a full-size alloy unit too – something UMW Toyota finally added last year in response to customer complaints. The more rearward weight distribution should also improve handling.

Standard kit continues to includes keyless entry, single-zone auto air-con with rear vents, manual front seat adjustment, auto lights and wipers, an acoustic glass windscreen, illuminated side sill scuff plates, an electronic parking brake, a rubber boot tray, solar and security window tint and a 360-degree camera system with a 3D view. The UMW-sourced dash cam has been upgraded to a 4K unit without a built-in screen, and you can still add a rear dash cam for an extra RM380.

Like the standard Vios, the Hybrid comes with the full Toyota Safety Sense suite of driver assists, including autonomous emergency braking, adaptive cruise control, lane centring assist, blind spot monitoring, rear cross traffic alert, front departure alert, pedal misapplication control and auto high beam. Six airbags and stability control are also fitted.

GALLERY: Toyota Vios 1.5 HEV in Malaysia


GALLERY: Toyota Vios 1.5 HEV GR Sport in Malaysia
GALLERY; Toyota Vios Hybrid CKD battery

Looking to sell your car? Sell it with Carro.

Certified Pre-Owned - 1 Year Warranty

Renew your car insurance with us

Compare prices between different insurer providers to save the most on your car insurance renewal compared to other competing services. Many payment method supported and you can pay with instalment using Atome, Grab PayLater or Shopee SPayLater.

Renew Car Insurance

Jonathan Lee

After trying to pursue a career in product design, Jonathan Lee decided to make the sideways jump into the world of car journalism instead. He therefore appreciates the aesthetic appeal of a car, but for him, the driving experience is still second to none.

 

Comments

  • fudgemesideways on Jan 29, 2026 at 9:30 am

    DOA

    Thumb up 25 Thumb down 7
  • alibaba on Jan 29, 2026 at 9:33 am

    seriously, B segment 100k, how much tax inside yeah?

    Thumb up 24 Thumb down 2
  • vios brain on Jan 29, 2026 at 9:45 am

    this uses the drivetrain from old prius which was launched 10 years ago

    Thumb up 9 Thumb down 10
  • Kariayam on Jan 29, 2026 at 10:12 am

    This is very easily the worst RM110k driving experience you can buy. I applaud anyone who spend their hard earned money on one of these.

    Thumb up 20 Thumb down 9
  • perodua vios

    Thumb up 17 Thumb down 1
  • Vios KingoftheRoad on Jan 29, 2026 at 10:53 am

    Mega overpriced Bezza AV hybrid

    Thumb up 14 Thumb down 2
  • johntitor on Jan 29, 2026 at 11:10 am

    give us the prius, or prius c instead

    Thumb up 5 Thumb down 1
  • Justbrowsing on Jan 29, 2026 at 11:25 am

    A car half of this price has more power than this

    Thumb up 11 Thumb down 1
  • Tin Kosong on Jan 29, 2026 at 12:37 pm

    I still dont get it.. why need 17inch for the eco cars?

    Thumb up 12 Thumb down 0
  • FrankC on Jan 29, 2026 at 1:45 pm

    see, all b segment going hybrid. i wonder why saga mc3 doesn’t include hybrid options. at 3.6lit per 100km, that’s way way better then MyVi which is smaller car. see how hybrid makes use of less fuel without resorting to bev per se. this type of hybrid is good idea for majority of malaysian without home charger for BEV. moreover they tends to retain their re-sale value better than BEV for now.

    Thumb up 6 Thumb down 15
    • fankcc on Jan 29, 2026 at 2:25 pm

      paying extra RM20k for fuel savings and resale value ? doesnt make financial sense to me .

      Thumb up 8 Thumb down 0
  • azmir on Jan 29, 2026 at 2:06 pm

    Woow..isnt the entertainment screen blocking the driving view? So big.

    Thumb up 6 Thumb down 0
    • That’s the first thing I notice. Why don’t they stick it even higher? The design is so old and uncle feel. Let alone the pricing …

      Thumb up 4 Thumb down 0
  • Compared to the wey G9 (happen to notice as launched today), this vios seems expensive. Haha

    Thumb up 6 Thumb down 2
  • GReedy on Jan 29, 2026 at 3:51 pm

    Oo…This time give spare tyre, but the cramp rear headroom can’t be solves too much.

    Maybe is a good car but asking price not berbaloi. If perodua rebadge current vios E sell around rm60k i will buy.

    Thumb up 4 Thumb down 3
  • JustAGuy on Jan 29, 2026 at 4:11 pm

    yawn….

    Thumb up 3 Thumb down 2
  • Eyawn mask on Jan 29, 2026 at 7:08 pm

    It’s not “vortex generator” bumper corner. That’s for race car only and it will hurt fuel consumption. It doesn’t have specific universally accepted name, but definitely not “vortex generator”. That vents at the bumper corners directing air out around front wheel wells created an “air curtain” (not spiralling vortex) along the lower body parts all the way to the back. What does this achieved?: reducing rear aerodynamic drag improving efficiency, lowering fuel consumption. The exact opposite of what “vortex generator” does.

    Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0
  • Tuebrvz on Jan 29, 2026 at 8:17 pm

    Perodua Vios with GR badge !

    Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0
  • compare to China cars with this entry level valueless car from Japan, pui!

    Thumb up 2 Thumb down 0
  • aimannn on Jan 30, 2026 at 10:10 am

    I thought they might want to change wireless charger to be like the one from Yaris Ativ in Thailand. But when seeing the press photo, I can conclude that UMW so deeply in love with current “sepit ketam” type wireless charger.

    It’s hideous and slow af to charge.

    Don’t make me mention about rempit looking bodykit and door visor. That should be optional not standard.

    Thumb up 2 Thumb down 0
 

Add a comment

required

required


 
 
 
 
 
 
Related PaulTan.org Content: 2025 | Reviews: Reviews | Featured: Featured | Tech | News: News | Malaysia: Malaysia