
Suzuki Charges A Premium For Rhino Badges, Not Extra Power, On This Special Jimny
Australia gets a decked-out Jimny XL loaded with camping gear and confectionery, but the 101-hp engine underneath is untouched.
Suzuki Australia has just introduced the priciest Jimny the country has ever offered, and it's not because engineers found a way to squeeze more grunt out of the little off-roader. Instead, the "Rhino Special Edition" leans entirely on cosmetic flair and a generous bundle of branded extras to justify its roughly $10,000 markup over the standard Jimny XL.
Based on the five-door XL body style rather than the three-door variant used for a previous Rhino Edition sold in Malaysia, this Australian special gets its own visual identity. Gloss black and satin aluminum stripe decals wrap around the flanks alongside rhino graphics, while fresh 15-inch diamond-cut alloys, mud flaps, a blacked-out hex grille with Suzuki script, plus faux-aluminum skid plates and side skirts round out the exterior changes. Buyers are locked into a single color combo too: Kinetic Yellow paired with a Pearl Black roof, a shade previously reserved for the three-door model everywhere except Queensland. Worth noting, this five-door XL rolls off an Indian production line, unlike the Japan-built three-door.

Step inside and the rhino theme carries through with interior badging, satin silver accents, and black leather trim stitched in yellow with etched rhino logos. Manual transmission cars score a retro-style gear knob, and every Rhino edition adds a tougher cargo mat, eight-color footwell lighting, and beefed-up Pioneer speakers up front. Everything else, the 9-inch touchscreen, cloth seats, and leather steering wheel, carries over unchanged from the regular XL.
Here's the part that matters most for anyone considering this car for its driving credentials: nothing changes mechanically. The naturally-aspirated 1.5-liter four-cylinder still makes 101 hp (75 kW / 102 PS), still routes power through Suzuki's AllGrip Pro 4WD system, and still offers a choice between manual and automatic gearboxes. This edition is purely about styling and accessories, not capability.

Where Suzuki really tries to earn that premium is with the included "Rhino Go Pack," a collection of outdoor gear clearly aimed at Jimny owners who actually take their vehicles off-road. The pack includes a metal key case and keychain, a bucket hat, a portable lantern, a drink bottle, a blanket, a thermos tumbler, a cooler box, and a Bluetooth speaker, each item stamped with the rhino emblem to match the truck.
Suzuki even threw in a box of nine Koko Black dark chocolate pistachio pralines wrapped in rhino-branded packaging, a quirky bonus that won't move the needle on performance but adds a bit of personality to the deal. Australian shoppers miss out on one perk their Japanese counterparts get, though: a Jimny-themed vegetarian curry meal that hasn't made the jump overseas.

For buyers who care about capability first, this special edition offers nothing beyond what the standard Jimny XL already delivers off-road. But for those drawn to limited-run looks and a pile of adventure-ready swag, Suzuki's Rhino package turns an otherwise ordinary Jimny into a collector's curiosity, chocolate box included.
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