28 Jul 2025
The Indian automobile sector is a vital pillar of the national economy, contributing significantly to GDP, employment, tax revenues, and industrial output. Industry is navigating a complex transition shaped by shifting consumer preferences, tightening regulations, and rapid technological advancements particularly in electric mobility. This overview highlights the sector’s economic importance, recent trends across key segments, and the evolving outlook amid structural and policy driven changes.
Key Highlights
- Contributes ~6.8% to India’s overall GDP and ~40% to manufacturing GDP
- Accounts for ~15% of total GST collections
- Provides employment to ~30 million people (direct + indirect)
- Comprises four major segments: Passenger Vehicles (PVs), Two Wheelers (2Ws), Commercial Vehicles (CVs), and Tractors
- Plays a crucial role in both urban and rural mobility, closely tied to consumption, infrastructure, and trade cycles
- The sector is witnessing a paradigm shift toward electric vehicles, driven by sustainability goals, emission norms, and improvements in battery technology
Source: Kotak institutional equities, SIAM. Data as on Mar’25. This is as per latest available data.
Recent Growth Trends and Outlook
1. Passenger Vehicles (PV)
- Entry level demand under pressure
- Premium segment (especially SUVs) growing
- SUVs now account for over 50% of PV market
- FY26 growth forecast: 1–2% (SIAM)
2. Two Wheelers (2W)
- Premium bikes growing faster, though base is low
- Entry level demand muted due to cost pressures
- FY26 growth forecast: 6–7%
Commercial Vehicles (CV)
- Mixed trends
- Passenger CVs (buses) recovering
- Goods segment growth remains weak
- Regulatory tailwinds may trigger replacement demand
4. Tractors
- Demand steady but faces high base and cost pressures
- TREM 5 regulations expected to raise ownership costs
- Cost per tractor may rise by ₹1–1.5 lakh
Source: Kotak institutional equities, SIAM. Data as on Mar’25. This is as per latest available data.
Headwinds vs Tailwinds by Segment
The Indian automobile industry is currently navigating a mixed environment. On one hand, rising input costs, evolving regulatory requirements, and the ongoing transition toward electric mobility are creating short term challenges. On the other, supportive macroeconomic factors such as infrastructure spending, rural income support, and improved credit access are providing a cushion. The table below outlines the key pressures and growth drivers across major vehicle categories:
Segment |
Key Challenges (Headwinds) |
Supportive Factors (Tailwinds) |
---|---|---|
Passenger Vehicles (PV) |
Increase in ownership costs, inventory buildup, and input price volatility |
Low vehicle penetration, deferred demand recovery, broader product availability, and improved financing conditions |
Two Wheelers (2W) |
Higher cost of entry level vehicles, transition impact from EV adoption, and softer volume growth |
Gradual recovery in rural and semi urban demand, export potential, expanding premium segment, and growing EV presence in scooters |
Commercial Vehicles (CV) |
Sluggish freight demand, modal shift towards rail transport, and evolving regulatory norms |
Investment in infrastructure and logistics, stable fleet utilization, and policies encouraging vehicle replacement |
Tractors |
Emission compliance costs (TREM 5) and a high base effect from previous years |
Structural under penetration, favourable monsoon conditions, supportive minimum support prices (MSP), and increased rural mechanization |
Shift Toward Premiumization in Passenger Vehicles: Entry Level Demand Slows, SUV Share Surges
The Indian passenger vehicle market is seeing a clear shift from entry level cars like hatchbacks and sedans to premium options such as SUVs. This trend is being driven by rising costs, changing consumer preferences, and the growing demand for better features. As a result, SUVs now make up over 50% of the market, while demand in the entry segment is declining.
- Higher insurance, regulatory, and commodity costs are impacting affordability for entry buyers.
- Customers expect more features even in base models, pushing them toward premium variants.
- Industry body Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM) forecasts only 1–2% growth in the overall passenger vehicle market in FY26.
Source: Kotak institutional equities, SIAM, Data as on Mar’25. This is as per latest available data.
Policy Support, Credit Expansion, and Soft Inflation to Drive Growth
Demand is expected to improve due to a combination of policy support, better income conditions, and lower inflation. The FY26 Budget includes higher rural allocations, enhanced credit support for farmers, and tax relief to boost consumption. Easing interest rates may also support borrowing and spending capacity.
Factors that will improve rural demand:
- Income tax slab revision will benefit 56 million taxpayers, resulting in ₹1 trillion in total tax savings
- Rural and agriculture spending increased by ₹766 billion in FY26 Budget Estimates (24.8% YoY growth)
- Kisan Credit Card (KCC) limit increased from ₹300,000 to ₹500,000, enabling ₹3.3 trillion in additional low interest credit
- Lower rural inflation has improved real purchasing power
- Nominal wages remain stable, but real wage growth has improved due to easing inflation
- Falling interest rates are expected to reduce cost of borrowing
- Continued government focus on rural welfare, subsidies, and infrastructure spending
- Regulatory Factor May Accelerate Replacement Demand
Source: Avendus Spark Research, CMIE, GOI. Data as on Mar’25. This is as per latest available data.
Long Term Growth Drivers: Demographics & Low Vehicle Penetration
- Low Car Penetration: India has only 26 cars per 1,000 people vs. 183 in China and 594 in the US
- Two Wheeler Penetration: Among the lowest in Asia, indicating room for expansion
- Young Population: 20-49 age group to form ~46% of population by 2031
- Rising Incomes: Per capita GDP projected to reach USD 4,281 by 2029
- Upside Potential: Structural runway for discretionary vehicle demand remains intact
Source: Kotak institutional equities, Data as on May’25, Bloomberg, SIAM, ACEA, Kotak estimates. Data as on Dec’21. This is as per latest data available.
Evolution of Passenger Vehicle Fuel Types
- Diesel, Petrol, CNG: Dominated the market for decades, now facing stricter regulations.
- Hybrid: Offers a transition by combining fuel efficiency with reduced emissions.
- Electric Vehicles (EVs): Gaining momentum with falling battery costs and subsidies.
- Fuel Cell / Hydrogen: Still in nascent stages but holds promise for long range, zero emission travel.
Traditional Fuels |
Emerging Alternatives |
Diesel |
Hybrid |
Petrol |
Electric Vehicle (EV) |
CNG |
Fuel Cell / Hydrogen |
EV Adoption in India: Accelerating but Uneven
Electric Vehicle (EV) adoption in India is growing at a faster pace than the overall auto industry, though it still starts from a low base. The growth has been more pronounced in the 3 wheeler and electric scooter segments, while adoption in passenger vehicles and motorcycles remains slow. Government incentives, regulatory mandates, and cost benefits are pushing the EV ecosystem forward. However, key challenges such as high battery costs, lack of charging infrastructure, and profitability concerns continue to hinder broader market absorption.
What’s Driving EV Demand |
What’s Holding It Back |
Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency norms nudging automakers to build more EVs like setting a diet plan for fuel usage |
Not enough charging stations like owning a phone without enough places to charge it |
Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of Hybrid & Electric Vehicles subsidies make EVs more affordable across segments |
Batteries are costly, wear out over time, and replacements aren’t cheap |
PLI schemes are encouraging local production of EV parts and advanced batteries |
EVs often seem affordable only after factoring in all subsidies like a discount sticker |
Lower GST rates help reduce upfront cost a direct price cut |
EVs rely on imported materials, and global supply hiccups can throw a wrench in progress |
Many states offer extra perks like tax rebates and road tax waivers |
Internal combustion engine led profits have made legacy automakers slow to embrace EVs. |
Valuation Snapshot - The Nifty Auto Index is currently trading near its long term average based on 1 year forward Price to Earnings (P/E) estimates.
Source: Bloomberg, Data as on 30th Jun, 2025
Conclusion: Sector in Transition, Long Term Fundamentals Intact
The Indian auto sector is navigating short term challenges rising costs, regulatory shifts, and uneven EV adoption while its long term fundamentals remain strong. Premiumization, rural demand recovery, and supportive policy are driving growth across segments.
Electric mobility is gaining traction, especially in 3Ws and scooters, though full scale adoption will take time due to infrastructure and cost hurdles. Low vehicle penetration, a young population, and rising incomes provide a strong growth runway.
Valuations are in line with historical averages. Selective opportunities exist in companies with strong product mix, EV readiness, and margin resilience. As the industry transforms, adaptability will define future winners.
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