Full specifications for every Mitsubishi model. Compare prices, engine specs, fuel consumption and features.
Look through the Mitsubishi models on this site and a clear pattern starts to emerge. Mitsubishi has long held a sensible position between mainstream family use and more rugged, utility minded needs. That gives Mitsubishi a grounded identity, because even the road focused models carry some hint of durability and purpose.
Pajero, Triton, COLT, and ASX is a useful snapshot of Mitsubishi. Add in the fact that Mitsubishi is represented mainly by suv, bakkie, hatchback, and mpv, and the line-up starts to look intentionally shaped rather than random. The line-up is broad enough to reveal different facets of Mitsubishi without drifting into noise.
SUV led brands are often judged by how convincingly they combine stance, space and versatility rather than by any single headline number. Put another way, Mitsubishi is usually strongest in the hands of buyers who want dependable transport with enough toughness to handle more than city duty.
That is really what separates Mitsubishi from a brand that simply occupies space in the market. The identity feels lived in, not bolted on after the fact. Mitsubishi often makes the most sense when reliability, space and honest versatility matter more than trend chasing.
For readers comparing brands side by side, that clear sense of self is part of what makes Mitsubishi memorable.
That focused spread influences expectations as well. Buyers do not approach Mitsubishi looking for a sprawling catalogue or a dozen overlapping answers to the same problem. They come to it expecting a more specific job description, and the listed vehicles support that expectation cleanly.