Key highlights
- Renault Duster pickup teased with Niagara nameplate
- It will be revealed in Latin America on September 10, 2026
- It will share the design, features, and engine with Renault Boreal
Renault has officially teased its upcoming monocoque pickup truck in the global market. It will be called Niagara, and it is the production-spec version of the Niagara pickup truck concept. Read more about it below.
Also read: Upcoming Honda ZR-V Hybrid SUV teaser released, launch on May 22
What to expect from the upcoming Renault Duster pickup truck?
The first teaser of Renault’s upcoming pickup truck is out. The French brand has named it Niagara, and it is suspected to be based on the global-spec Duster or its seven-seater sibling, called the Boreal.
The Niagara pickup truck will not be a commercial-styled, hardcore model, but it will be based on a monocoque setup, offering the comfort and tech of a five-seater SUV, along with the chassis-embedded loading bed. The teaser image shows the loading bed itself, which features a drop-type tailgate with Niagara lettering and sharp LED taillights.
Renault has already shown the Niagara concept model, and the production-spec test mules have already confirmed that it will be a dual-cab version. It is suspected to boast a similar styling as the Boreal, but the butch and muscular updates like the flared wheel fenders, more suspension travel, etc, will be exclusively fitted to it.
On the inside, we suspect it to get the comfortable five-seater layout with features like the floating infotainment screen, digital driver console, ADAS, self-parking assist, a 360-degree camera, electronic parking brake, terrain modes, traction modes, etc.
Powering the Niagara will be the same engine specs as the Renault Duster. Thus, the 1.3-litre turbo engine will be offered with a slight re-tune for better low-end power delivery, and a 1.8-litre hybrid is also on the cards as per the online reports.
Renault will reveal the Niagara pickup truck in the Latin America on September 10, 2026. We believe that it is highly unlikely to be introduced in the Indian market.