Used Perodua Axia for sale in Malaysia
29 cars in stock · 2018–2024 · RM21,800–RM42,800 · monthly from RM262
Affordable hatchback with excellent fuel economy and widespread service support.
29 used Perodua Axia in stock from RM21,800
Perodua Axia: what to know before you buy
The Perodua Axia is Malaysia’s staple A-segment hatchback, aimed at buyers who want low-cost, simple urban transport rather than space or performance. It has been around since 2014, with facelifts in 2017 and 2019 before the current D74A generation arrived in 2023. The latest new-car range runs from the G at RM38,600 to the AV at RM49,500, all with a D-CVT.
On the used market, current listings run from RM22,800 to RM42,800, covering 2018 to 2024 cars with mileages between 26,661 km and 98,733 km. Three-year value retention is strong at 81%, helped by the Axia’s huge presence on Malaysian roads, with 861,358 registrations recorded and 2024 alone accounting for 88,137 units.
When shopping, be clear on which generation you are viewing, as a 2019 facelift car and a 2023 D74A sit in very different parts of the market. Also compare late used prices against the new-car list, especially for higher-priced 2024 units.
Used Perodua Axia prices by year
Asking prices for the Perodua Axia by model year, from recent listings here and across the wider Malaysian used-car market. Condition, mileage and variant move individual cars within these ranges.
| Year | Generation | Asking price range | Typical |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | D74A | RM21,740 – RM49,500 | RM38,340 |
| 2025 | D74A | RM18,000 – RM53,000 | RM37,600 |
| 2024 | D74A | RM19,800 – RM54,000 | RM40,000 |
| 2023 | D74A | RM14,800 – RM54,800 | RM39,500 |
| 2022 | Mk1 E | RM18,000 – RM45,400 | RM33,800 |
| 2021 | Mk1 E | RM13,800 – RM44,600 | RM33,800 |
| 2020 | Mk1 E | RM13,800 – RM44,800 | RM33,800 |
| 2019 | Mk1 E | RM10,500 – RM42,900 | RM30,850 |
| 2018 | Mk1 Facelift | RM8,150 – RM37,300 | RM26,100 |
| 2017 | Mk1 Facelift | RM12,388 – RM35,000 | RM23,800 |
| 2016 | Mk1 | RM9,800 – RM33,000 | RM18,400 |
| 2015 | Mk1 | RM6,800 – RM30,800 | RM16,800 |
Based on 1115 recent asking prices — 20 Perodua Axia found buyers in the last 30 days. Across Malaysia, 1,599 Perodua Axia are listed for sale right now, median asking RM23,000. See recently sold Perodua Axia prices.
Which used Perodua Axia should you buy
Used Axia stock in Malaysia now spans 2018 to 2024, so the real choice is between cheaper Mk1 Facelift/Mk1 Facelift 2 cars and the 2023-on D74A with the DNGA platform, D-CVT and bigger body.
- Mk1 Facelift and Mk1 Facelift 2 (GXTRA, G (FL), Style): these 2017- and 2019-on old-shape cars suit tight budgets, with GXTRA the most common trim in stock and Style the 2019 SUV-look variant rather than a current D74A grade.
- D74A G and X: the 2023-on modern-shape cars use the 1.0 litre 1KR-VE three-cylinder engine, D-CVT automatic, VSC and a 265-litre boot; X is the value step because it adds LED headlamps, keyless entry and push start over G.
- D74A SE and AV: SE adds LED DRLs, a body kit, semi-bucket seats, digital air-conditioning and Eco Idle, while AV adds six airbags, ASA 3.0, a digital cluster and a 9-inch touchscreen.
- Axia E: the 2019 Mk1 E is the only manual Axia and uses the old-shape body, but its basic spec with two airbags, no central locking and no VSC makes it a niche buy unless purchase cost is the only priority.
- Bottom-line pick: buy a 2023-on D74A X if you want the best balance of safety, convenience and running costs; choose an older GXTRA only when the budget rules out the newer platform.
What to check when buying a used Perodua Axia
The Perodua Axia is an A-segment hatchback with a 1.0 litre 1KR-VE three-cylinder engine, with older Mk1 cars, the basic Axia E manual and the 2023-on D74A G, X, SE and AV using different equipment and gearboxes.
- Service history Check for consistent Perodua or specialist servicing with invoices, because the Axia’s low running cost only holds when engine oil, coolant, plugs and filters have been changed on schedule. On 2023-on D74A cars, the D-CVT should pull away cleanly without judder, delay or whining.
- Flood and accident damage Inspect the boot floor, spare wheel well, seat rails, dashboard underside and wiring connectors for silt, rust or water marks. Check the front chassis legs, radiator support, rear floor and panel gaps because many Axias spend their lives in city traffic and minor knocks are common.
- Mileage verification Compare the odometer reading with service dates, tyre age, brake wear, pedal wear and seat condition. A low-mileage Axia should not have a shiny steering wheel, heavily worn driver’s seat bolster or mismatched cheap tyres on every corner.
- Cabin rattles and mounts Some owners report trim rattles, loose clips and dashboard noises on older Axias, so test the car over rough tarmac with the radio off. The 1.0 litre three-cylinder engine has some natural vibration, but heavy shaking at idle can point to worn engine mountings.
- Variant authenticity Match the badge, registration year and equipment to the correct grade, because the older Style is a 2019 SUV-look variant while the current D74A range is G, X, SE and AV. The AV should have six airbags and ASA 3.0, while the X adds LED headlamps, keyless entry and push start over the G.
- Electronics and safety kit Test all power windows, central locking, air-conditioning speeds, reverse sensors or camera, touchscreen functions and keyless operation where fitted. On D74A AV cars, make sure the ASA warning lights go out after start-up and the windscreen camera area is clean and undamaged.
Service & ownership costs
The Axia uses a 1.0 litre naturally aspirated three-cylinder petrol engine, and scheduled servicing is typically due every 10,000 km or six months at Perodua service centres. Service costs sit at the low end of the Malaysian market, with routine items such as engine oil, filters, spark plugs, brake pads and tyres cheaper than those for most larger hatchbacks.
Fuel economy is a major strength, with Perodua quoting 25.3 km/l for D74A G and X variants and 27.4 km/l for SE and AV variants with Eco Idle. Comprehensive insurance is generally affordable because the Axia is an A-segment hatchback with modest insured values, and parts availability is strong through Perodua’s large Malaysian service network and the model’s long production run.
Road tax: RM20/year (1,000 cc, saloon rate, Peninsular Malaysia). Estimate repayments with the paultan.org car loan calculator.
Used Perodua Axia: your questions answered
Is a used Perodua Axia reliable?
The Axia uses a 1.0 litre 1KR-VE naturally aspirated three-cylinder engine, and the model is widely regarded in Malaysia as one of the cheapest cars to maintain. A used example should still have a documented service history, smooth gearbox operation and no overheating, oil leak or warning-light issues.
Which Perodua Axia generation should I buy used?
The 2023-on D74A is the better car because it sits on the DNGA platform, has a bigger cabin, a 265-litre boot and VSC as standard. The 2019 facelift Mk1 is still worth considering if you want a lower-cost car, as that update brought VSC, ASA on selected variants and the SUV-look Style variant.
Which Axia variant is the best buy?
For the current D74A, the X is the sensible middle pick because it adds LED headlamps, keyless entry and push start over the G. The AV is the safety pick because it gets six airbags, ASA 3.0, a digital cluster and a 9-inch touchscreen.
How much should I pay for a used Perodua Axia?
Used Axia prices vary by year, mileage, generation, variant and condition. Check the asking-prices-by-year table on this page before comparing an older Mk1, a 2019 facelift car and a newer D74A.
Is the Perodua Axia cheap to service and run?
Every Axia uses a sub-1.0-litre engine, so it sits in the lowest road-tax band in Peninsular Malaysia. Perodua quotes fuel economy of 25.3 km/l for the D74A G and X, and 27.4 km/l for the SE and AV with Eco Idle.
What should I check before buying a used Axia?
Check for accident repairs, flood damage, uneven panel gaps, worn tyres, weak air-conditioning and missed scheduled services. On a D74A, the D-CVT should pull away smoothly without juddering, and on an AV the ASA camera area at the windscreen should be clean, undamaged and free of warning lights.
Also consider
How popular is the Perodua Axia?
867,328 Perodua Axia have been registered in Malaysia since 2000, according to open JPJ registration data — recent years below.
Source: JPJ vehicle registrations · full data at car-sales-data













