Udiag X60 Review: Great Scanner, One Reason I Still Wouldn’t Buy It
Published: June 11, 2026 · Last updated: June 11, 2026
The Udiag X60 is a good tablet. The software is solid, it does real OEM level coding and adaptations, the live data is some of the best I’ve used at this level, and it’s easy to drive. So this isn’t a “bad scanner” review. It’s the opposite. The problem is the price. The X60 sells for around 800 euros, and it runs the same shared software you get on cheaper tablets like the Mucar VO8, which is hundreds less for the same job. I like it, and I still can’t tell you to buy it.
I earn from qualifying purchases and sometimes get tools for free (full disclosure). It never affects my scoring.

Udiag X-60
The Udiag X-60 is this scan tool has great features but for most stores it's overpriced. Same exact tool is sold sometimes for 1/2 of the price in Mucar or Dollarfix packacking but are same software rebrands..
- OEM coding
- Easy to use for everyday car work
- Faster and easier to use interface than competition
- Overpriced rebrand of Mucar VO8
Service functions (35+)
Scores
Specs
| Tool type | Standalone device |
| User level | Advanced |
| Vehicle focus | All makes |
| Free updates | Lifetime |
| Subscription | Not required |
Support & resources
| Need help with tool? | Open tool support page ↗ |
| Will this work for my car? | Open coverage check page ↗ |
| Hardware specs |
|
| Supported languages |
What it’s actually good at
The coding is the headline. On a VW Passat I went into the central electrics module and had full VCDS style access to adaptations and long coding. Enabling daytime running lights was a one byte change in hex, E7 to EF, with the full code shown so I could screenshot a backup before touching anything. That’s dealership level coding on a Chinese tablet, and the long coding helper makes it approachable instead of scary.

It also has the VAG guided functions, which walk you through a coding or adaptation step by step, plus online login and access permission. Service side, you get 34 service resets, with more unlocking once you’re connected through full diagnostics.
The live data is genuinely strong. Up to 12 graphs on screen at once, combine up to four values in one graph, save samples to compare two runs side by side, and record and play back, in any module, not just the engine. Reports are clean too, customizable with your shop info and shareable as PDF or email.

Where it falls short
Here’s the catch, and it’s the whole review. The X60 isn’t unique. It’s a rebadge of the same platform as the Dollarfix PF8 and the Mucar VO8. Same software, same coding, basically the same hardware. The difference is the sticker and the price. The X60 is around 800 euros. The identical Mucar VO8 is roughly 300 euros less. You’re paying a premium for nothing extra.
It also has a smaller user base than Mucar, so when you hit a car specific quirk there are fewer people online who’ve solved it on this exact tablet.

The smaller stuff is normal for the class. AutoVIN failed on the Nissan and I had to pick the make manually. Full scan speed depends entirely on the car, the Nissan took about six minutes while the Passat with more modules finished in about one. None of that is a dealbreaker. The price is.
Who should buy this
Yes, buy it if:
- You find the X60 discounted down to the same price as its cheaper twins, at which point it’s a perfectly good tablet
- You specifically want this brand’s support or warranty and the price difference doesn’t bother you
No, look elsewhere if:
- You can get the Mucar VO8 or another twin for hundreds less, which is almost everyone
- You want the biggest possible community behind your tool for troubleshooting
- You’re shopping on value, because nothing the X60 does justifies the premium
Udiag X-60
Mucar VO8
Udiag X-60
XTool D8s
Still deciding which mid-range tablet to actually buy rather than which X60 deal to chase? I put the coding capable tablets side by side in my best OBD2 scanners for coding roundup. The short version is that the X60’s platform is excellent, you just want to buy it under a cheaper name.

Final word
The Udiag X60 is proof that good software doesn’t make a smart purchase. Real OEM coding, great live data, easy to use, all true. But it’s the same machine as the Mucar VO8 for around 300 euros more. Buy the capability, not the badge. Get the cheaper twin and spend the difference on a key tool or a battery support unit.
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