Mitsubishi’s New Pickup Has a Factory Snorkel and Can Wade Through 2.5 Feet of Water

2 days, 10 hours ago - 2 December 2025, Autoblog
Mitsubishi’s New Pickup Has a Factory Snorkel and Can Wade Through 2.5 Feet of Water
Limited to just 80 units, the Savana is the most off-road ready variant of the Mitsubishi Triton pickup, and its only available in Brazil.

Key Points

  • Mitsubishi launches limited-run Triton Savana, factory-equipped for off-road adventures in Brazil.
  • Features include skid plate, snorkel, unique colors, and adventure-ready body enhancements.
  • Only 80 units available, priced around $65,500, roughly $2000 more than Katana trim.

Off-Road Ready, Right From the Factory

The sixth-generation Mitsubishi Triton made its world debut in 2023, and entered the Brazilian market last year. Now, for 2025, Mitsubishi have introduced a limited-run Savana edition, that takes the popular pickup’s ruggedness to the next level with a host of factory-fitted adventure-oriented equipment. 

What Is It?

To create the Savana, Mitsubishi started with a Triton in the flagship Katana trim and gave it a tasteful makeover, with a focus on adventure. This includes a more substantial front bumper and skid plate, a snorkel that raises the truck’s wading depth from 19.7 inches to 31.5 inches, tough cladding to protect the body panels from stone chips and scrapes, rock sliders that can also be used as side steps, and a roof rack. The black 18-inch alloy wheels, while still the same size as those on the Katana trim, now sport a fresh design. The Triton Savana is also available in two unique colorways that aren’t offered on any other variant — the bright Rally Yellow you see here, and a darker Forest Green. The bumper, skid plate, cladding, and front grille all get a unique matte graphite grey finish. 

Under the Skin

Mechanically, the Savana is no different than the Triton Katana that it’s based on. It is powered by the same 2.4-liter, four-cylinder, twin-turbo diesel motor that puts out 202 horsepower and 346 lb-ft of torque. The engine is mated to an eight-speed auto ‘box, and employs Mitsubishi’s Super Select II four-wheel-drive system which offers seven terrain modes to tailor traction just about any surface. Suspension is shared with the Katana variant as well, with an independent double wishbone setup up front, and leaf springs with a solid axle at the rear.

On The Inside

The premium cabin once again mirrors the Katana trim, featuring leather upholstery with red stitching, a 9-inch touchscreen infotainment system, a 7-inch digital driver display nestled between the dials, wireless charging, dual-zone climate control, seven airbags, and a 360-degree camera setup with a full suite of driver-assist tech.

Limited Numbers, Fair Price

With only 80 units on offer across Brazil, the Mitsubishi Triton Savana is set to become quite an exclusive pickup truck. It is priced at the equivalent of about $65,500, which is approximately $2,000 more than the top spec Katana trim, and seems like a fair markup for a limited-edition, adventure-focused factory special.

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