The Hyundai Creta sold over 1.2 million units cumulatively in India by mid-2025, according to Hyundai India’s official sales figures — a number that puts it in a category of its own among mid-size SUVs. That scale of ownership means one thing in practical terms: the aftermarket and OEM accessories ecosystem built around the Creta is among the richest of any SUV in its segment. Whether you want to protect the interior from day one or transform the exterior with upgraded Hyundai Creta alloy wheels and body styling, the options are specific, well-supported, and available across most cities without long wait times.
This guide covers Hyundai Creta accessories in full — the genuine OEM price list from Hyundai dealerships, the best third-party alternatives for seat covers, key covers, and exterior styling, alloy wheel upgrade options, and which accessories genuinely add value versus which ones dealers push because they carry the best margin. You will get specific product names, real price ranges, and honest recommendations for each category.
Most accessories articles for the Creta either reproduce a generic OEM price list or list third-party options without any context on fitment, compatibility, or actual quality. This one does something more useful: it tells you which genuine accessories are worth paying Hyundai dealer prices for, which categories are better served by the aftermarket, and which accessories most buyers regret either skipping or buying. For buyers still finalising their variant before accessorising, the Hyundai Creta SX, Knight, and N Line configuration guide on ExoWheels is worth reading first — some accessories come factory-fitted on higher trims and are not worth paying extra for separately.
Hyundai Creta Genuine Accessories Price List — What Hyundai Officially Offers
Hyundai India sells a curated set of accessories through its authorised dealer network under the Hyundai Genuine Accessories (HGA) label. These are designed and tested specifically for the Creta and come with a fitment warranty when installed at an authorised workshop. According to Hyundai India’s official accessories catalogue (updated for the 2024 Creta facelift), the genuine accessories range is divided into exterior, interior, protection, and lifestyle categories.
On the exterior side, the most purchased genuine items are body side moulding (approximately ₹2,500 to ₹3,800), door edge guards (₹1,200 to ₹1,800), chrome door handle covers (₹800 to ₹1,200), roof rails for variants that do not come factory-equipped (₹5,500 to ₹8,000), and mud flaps (₹900 to ₹1,400 as a set). These are fitment-sensitive items where the genuine version genuinely makes sense — they are cut to the Creta’s exact body lines, and cheap aftermarket alternatives often leave visible gaps or require drilling.
Interior genuine accessories include a 3D or 7D floor mat set (₹2,800 to ₹4,500 depending on material), a trunk mat (₹1,200 to ₹1,800), a dashboard console organiser tray (₹600 to ₹900), and a rear seat organiser (₹1,500 to ₹2,200). The genuine seat cover set — offered in fabric and leatherette options — is priced between ₹8,000 and ₹14,000 depending on the trim level and material. Hyundai also lists a cabin air purifier with AQI display at approximately ₹4,200 to ₹5,500, and a wireless phone charger pad (for variants without factory-fitted wireless charging) at around ₹3,500 to ₹5,000.
Quick Note: Genuine accessories prices at Hyundai dealerships can vary by up to 15% between cities depending on the dealer’s margin and local taxes. Always ask for a written itemised quote and confirm whether installation is included in the listed price. In most cases, installation is free when you buy genuine accessories from the same dealer at the time of vehicle purchase or service.
Technology accessories in the genuine range include a dashcam (₹5,000 to ₹8,000 depending on specification), a tyre pressure monitoring system for variants without factory TPMS (₹3,500 to ₹5,000), and a reverse parking sensor kit for lower trims (₹3,000 to ₹5,500). The genuine dashcam supports a power-off voltage protection feature that prevents battery drain — an important detail often missing from cheaper aftermarket units.
Hyundai Creta Seat Cover Options — Genuine vs Third-Party Compared
The Hyundai Creta seat cover category is where most buyers have the clearest choice to make: genuine OEM or the third-party aftermarket. Both are viable — but for different buyers with different priorities. The genuine Hyundai seat cover set, installed at an authorised dealer, costs between ₹8,000 and ₹14,000 and is designed to fit around the existing side airbags without obstructing deployment. This is not a trivial point — a poorly fitted third-party cover that sits across an airbag seam can restrict side airbag inflation in a collision. If your Creta has side airbags (the SX and above), this matters.
That said, the genuine Hyundai fabric seat covers are not particularly impressive in terms of material quality for the price. They use a moderate-grade polyester fabric that resists basic spills but is not easy to deep-clean and does not hold up as well as leatherette in hot Indian summers. Trusted Indian aftermarket brands like Elegant Auto Retail and Carnation Auto offer airbag-compatible leatherette seat covers for the Creta in the ₹4,500 to ₹9,000 range — notably lower than the OEM price, with better material options including perforated leatherette and memory foam padding variants.
For the Creta SX, SX Premium, and King variants that come with factory semi-leatherette upholstery, adding a seat cover defeats the purpose of that premium upholstery and can look and feel worse than the factory finish. Our take: skip seat covers entirely if your Creta has factory leatherette. If you have a fabric-interior variant (E, EX, EX(O), S(O)), and you drive children or pets regularly, a quality airbag-compatible leatherette cover from Elegant Auto Retail or a reputable local shop is a better investment than the genuine OEM fabric option — better material, lower price, and easier to clean.
One honest trade-off: third-party seat covers, regardless of brand, typically do not come with any installation warranty from Hyundai. If anything goes wrong with the seat mechanism or if an airbag deploys, any claim involving aftermarket seat covers may complicate the manufacturer’s warranty process. This risk is low in practice, but it is real. Buyers who prioritise warranty simplicity should stick with the genuine OEM covers.
Hyundai Creta Alloy Wheels — Upgrade Options and What Actually Fits
The standard Hyundai Creta alloy wheels vary by variant. The base E and EX trims come with 16-inch steel wheels with covers. The S(O) steps up to 16-inch alloys. The SX and above get 17-inch dual-tone alloys, and the N Line runs on dedicated 17-inch N Line-specific alloys. If you are on a lower variant and want to upgrade to a larger or more stylish alloy, the fitment parameters are important: the Creta accepts wheels in the 16-inch to 18-inch diameter range, with a bolt pattern of 5×114.3, an offset of ET 46 to 50, and a centre bore of 67.1mm.
For genuine Hyundai alloy wheel upgrades, the dealer-supplied 17-inch dual-tone alloy (as fitted on the SX trim) is available as an accessory at approximately ₹14,000 to ₹18,000 per wheel, including the centre cap and lug nuts. A set of four with TPMS sensors runs approximately ₹65,000 to ₹75,000 fitted at the dealer. This is the safest upgrade path — the wheel is balanced, tested on the Creta’s suspension geometry, and will not affect your warranty.
The third-party aftermarket for Creta alloys is significantly wider. Brands like Lenso (Thailand), OZ Racing (Italy), and India-based manufacturers like ARC and Wander Alloys offer 17-inch and 18-inch fitments compatible with the Creta’s bolt pattern. Popular options in the ₹6,000 to ₹12,000 per wheel range include gloss black mesh designs and dark gunmetal multi-spoke patterns — styles that complement the Knight Edition’s aesthetic particularly well. According to a long-term ownership report published by Team-BHP in 2025, upgrading to 18-inch alloys on the Creta with low-profile tyres does measurably increase road noise and slightly stiffens ride quality on broken surfaces — a trade-off worth knowing before you go beyond 17 inches.
For buyers considering the on road pricing impact of variant choice before deciding how much to spend on alloy upgrades, the Hyundai Creta on road price comparison across 9 cities on ExoWheels shows how the starting price varies by city — which helps budget accessories more accurately.
Hyundai Creta Key Cover — Small Accessory, Real Daily Value
The Hyundai Creta key cover is one of those accessories that sounds trivial until you have been using the same bare plastic key fob for six months. The standard Creta smart key is a reasonably stylish unit, but the plastic casing scuffs and scratches easily and feels less premium than the rest of the interior on higher trims. A quality TPU or leather key cover protects the fob, prevents surface wear, and costs very little.
Hyundai’s genuine key cover — sold through dealers — is priced at approximately ₹400 to ₹800 depending on the variant and material. It is a silicone or TPU shell moulded exactly to the Creta’s smart key shape and includes precise cutouts for all buttons. The genuine cover is the easiest recommendation here: it fits perfectly, does not bulk up the key enough to affect pocket comfort, and costs almost nothing. There is no meaningful reason to buy a third-party key cover unless you want a specific material (genuine leather, carbon fibre look) that the dealer does not offer.
Third-party Creta key covers on Amazon India and Flipkart range from ₹150 to ₹1,200, with the most popular options being full-grain leather covers with contrast stitching and carbon fibre finish hard shells. These range widely in quality — the ₹150 options are typically thin TPU that split at the seams within a few months, while the ₹500 to ₹900 leather options from brands like Jnomads and Autofy hold up well with proper alignment and secure button coverage. If aesthetics matter to you and you want the key to match a premium interior, a leather cover in the ₹600 to ₹900 range is the sweet spot. For buyers who checked out the full Creta trim hierarchy in the Hyundai Creta city price comparison, adding a quality key cover is one of the few accessories that delivers real daily value at under ₹1,000.
Which Hyundai Creta Accessories Are Worth It — and Which to Skip
Not every accessory in the Hyundai genuine catalogue or the aftermarket is worth buying. Some protect the car meaningfully. Others look good in a brochure but rarely get used or deteriorate faster than expected. Here is an honest breakdown of the categories most worth prioritising:
- 3D or 7D floor mats: Genuinely worth it on every variant. The factory mats in the Creta do not provide adequate protection on the driver’s side particularly — spills reach the carpet immediately. A quality 7D mat set (genuine or aftermarket from brands like Speedwav or Auto Addict) at ₹2,800 to ₹4,500 is a one-time purchase that keeps the carpet clean for years.
- Mud flaps: Important in Indian monsoon conditions and on dusty roads. The genuine set fits the Creta’s wheel arch exactly and is cheap enough (₹900 to ₹1,400) that there is no good reason to skip it.
- Door edge guards: Low-cost protection against car park dings. The genuine fitment (₹1,200 to ₹1,800) is the right choice — aftermarket versions often do not match the body colour precisely enough on lighter-coloured Cretas.
- Cabin air purifier with AQI display: Worth considering for urban buyers in high-pollution cities — Delhi, Lucknow, Kanpur. The genuine unit (₹4,200 to ₹5,500) connects directly to the power socket without wiring complications.
- Dashcam: One of the most practically useful accessories for any new Creta owner. Insurance claim resolution is materially simpler with footage. The genuine Hyundai unit (₹5,000 to ₹8,000) includes the voltage cutoff feature. Third-party options from Viofo (Taiwan) and 70mai (China) at similar price points offer better video resolution and wider-angle coverage.
Accessories to approach with caution: roof-mounted LED light bars (often cause water ingress at mounting points on the sunroof variants), chrome body trim overlays (fade and peel within 18 months in Indian UV conditions), and seat massagers sold by third-party vendors (can interfere with seat belt pre-tensioners on the SX and above).
One specific recommendation worth highlighting: for buyers of the S(O) or lower trims who frequently park in tight city spaces, adding a rear parking sensor kit (genuine: ₹3,000 to ₹5,500, or a quality aftermarket unit from Nippon or Steelmate at ₹1,800 to ₹3,500) is a genuinely useful purchase. The 360-degree camera arrives only on the SX(O) and King trims; below that, the Creta has limited parking visibility, and sensors fill that gap practically.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Hyundai Creta genuine accessories price list for 2024-2026?
Hyundai India’s genuine accessories catalogue for the current Creta covers exterior items (body moulding ₹2,500 to ₹3,800, mud flaps ₹900 to ₹1,400, roof rails ₹5,500 to ₹8,000), interior protection (floor mat sets ₹2,800 to ₹4,500, seat covers ₹8,000 to ₹14,000), and technology accessories (dashcam ₹5,000 to ₹8,000, cabin air purifier ₹4,200 to ₹5,500, TPMS ₹3,500 to ₹5,000). Prices can vary up to 15% between dealerships. Always request a written itemised quote and confirm whether installation is charged separately — most genuine accessories include free installation when bought at the time of purchase or at an authorised service visit.
Are third-party seat covers safe for the Hyundai Creta?
Third-party seat covers are safe for Creta variants without side airbags — the E and EX trims. For variants with side airbags (SX and above), the seat cover must be explicitly tested as airbag-compatible and must not be stitched across the seat’s airbag seam. Reputable brands like Elegant Auto Retail and Carnation Auto specify compatibility clearly and design their covers to allow airbag deployment. Avoid generic, unbranded covers for any airbag-equipped variant. When in doubt, the Hyundai genuine cover is the safest choice by default — it is designed with airbag deployment clearance built in.
Which alloy wheels fit the Hyundai Creta without affecting the warranty?
The Creta accepts aftermarket wheels with a 5×114.3 bolt pattern, 67.1mm centre bore, and ET 46 to 50 offset. Staying within 16 to 17 inches in diameter and maintaining the stock tyre size (215/60 R17 on SX and above) keeps the speedometer accurate and does not affect ride quality meaningfully. Genuine Hyundai alloy upgrades bought through authorised dealers carry a fitment warranty and will not void your vehicle warranty. Third-party alloys are legal and widely used but should be balanced and certified by a reputable fitment shop before installation. Going to 18 inches with low-profile tyres noticeably increases road noise on the Creta — something most alloy vendors will not mention upfront.
How much does a Hyundai Creta key cover cost and which type is best?
Genuine Hyundai key covers are priced at ₹400 to ₹800 at authorised dealers and are the most straightforward option — perfect fit, all button cutouts aligned, and the correct thickness to avoid pocket bulk. Third-party TPU covers start from ₹150 online but quality drops significantly below ₹400. Leather key covers from brands like Jnomads and Autofy in the ₹600 to ₹900 range are the best third-party option if you want a more premium look. Carbon fibre hard shell covers look striking but can make the key slightly harder to grip — a minor but real everyday annoyance for some users.
Is it better to buy Creta accessories from a Hyundai dealer or aftermarket?
It depends on the accessory type. Fitment-sensitive items — door edge guards, body moulding, mud flaps, seat covers on airbag-equipped variants — are better purchased genuine, because the fit quality and safety compatibility justify the higher price. Universal or technology accessories — dashcams, air purifiers, key covers, phone mounts — are often better sourced from reputable third-party brands at significantly lower prices without meaningful quality trade-offs. The dealer is not always the better option, and knowing which category falls where saves you real money on a full accessories package.
What accessories does the Hyundai Creta Summer Edition include?
The Creta Summer Edition, currently available on the EX through SX Premium trims, includes a cabin air purifier with AQI display, a premium seat cover set, a luggage organiser, and an umbrella holder. It is priced at a ₹10,000 to ₹20,000 premium over the base trim it sits on, per Zigwheels’ May 2026 pricing data. If you were planning to buy the cabin air purifier and seat covers separately anyway, the Summer Edition often represents genuine value — the bundled price is typically lower than sourcing those items individually through the dealer. If you do not need both the purifier and the seat covers, buying the base trim and selecting only the accessories you want is the more efficient approach.
Final Thoughts
The Hyundai Creta accessories market is genuinely well-developed — both through Hyundai’s own genuine catalogue and the third-party aftermarket. The practical approach is to spend genuine OEM money on fitment-sensitive protection items (mud flaps, door edge guards, moulding, airbag-compatible seat covers if needed) and to shop the aftermarket confidently for technology and aesthetic items where brand-name third-party options match or exceed the dealer’s offerings at lower prices. Alloy wheel upgrades are the one area where researching fitment specifications carefully before buying makes a real difference to long-term ownership satisfaction.
If you are still deciding between variants before finalising your accessories budget, reviewing the full variant breakdown will help you avoid paying separately for accessories that come factory-fitted on the trim one step above yours. A few thousand rupees more on the right trim often eliminates the need for several accessories entirely. Start with the Hyundai Creta configuration guide on ExoWheels to map features against price tiers before walking into a dealer.



