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Rising Fuel Prices Drive Surge in Electric Vehicle Demand in India

At a glance

  • Petrol prices in Delhi surpassed ₹102 per litre in May 2026
  • Bookings for sub-₹15 lakh electric vehicles rose 2–2.5 times in two months
  • India’s charger-to-EV ratio lags behind global benchmarks

India is experiencing a sharp increase in electric vehicle (EV) demand as fuel prices continue to rise, but infrastructure and cost barriers remain prominent challenges for widespread adoption.

Petrol prices in Delhi exceeded ₹102 per litre in mid-May 2026 after a series of price hikes beginning May 15. This trend has contributed to increased interest in electric vehicles, particularly in the affordable segment.

Tata Motors reported a 2 to 2.5 times increase in bookings for electric vehicles priced below ₹15 lakh over the previous two months. The Tata Punch EV, following its latest update, saw bookings reach five times the pre-launch level.

Sales data for April 2026 indicated a 75.1% year-on-year rise in electric passenger vehicle sales, reaching 23,506 units. Electric two-wheelers also saw substantial growth, with sales up 60.7% to nearly 149,000 units in the same period.

What the numbers show

  • Petrol prices in Delhi crossed ₹102 per litre in May 2026
  • Electric passenger vehicle sales rose 75.1% year-on-year in April 2026
  • India has about 30,000 charging points for 7.5 million cars

In March 2026, registrations of electric cars increased by 49% compared to the previous year, while electric two-wheeler registrations grew by about 36%. Despite these gains, overall EV penetration in India remains at 4–4.5%, according to BMW Group India CEO, which is considerably lower than the nearly 40% rate reported for China.

Charging infrastructure remains a key obstacle. India’s ratio stands at approximately one charger for every 235 electric vehicles, which is significantly behind global standards that range from one charger for every six to twenty vehicles. BMW Group India CEO stated that there are around 30,000 charging points available for nearly 7.5 million cars in the country.

The 2026 Global Automotive Consumer Survey by Deloitte found that 43% of Indian respondents identified lack of public charging infrastructure as a concern, 41% were concerned about charging time, and 31% cited limited access to residential charging.

Industry reaction

Executives from Tata Motors, Hyundai Motor India, and BMW Group India stated that the main challenges for EV growth in India include insufficient charging infrastructure, reliability concerns, and low consumer confidence.

BMW Group India CEO also noted that the price difference between electric and internal combustion engine vehicles continues to be a significant barrier to faster EV adoption in the country.

According to a Business Standard editorial, the continued rise in fuel prices is reinforcing the need for a faster transition to electric vehicles in India, but high costs and infrastructure gaps remain persistent hurdles.

* This article is based on publicly available information at the time of writing.

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