Karnataka’s electric mobility policy, through road tax waivers and lower registration charges, had narrowed the upfront price gap more than expected. Add lower running costs, and the decision flipped.
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He drove out in an electric Mahindra XEV 9e. That last-mile shift in intent is increasingly defining electric vehicle (EV) transition, and helps explain why states such as Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal and Madhya Pradesh are emerging as key growth centres. In FY2026, India’s EV market continued to expand.
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The EV market crossed an estimated 2.5–2.7-million-unit sales across segments, according to industry estimates. Yet adoption remains uneven, with a handful of states driving a disproportionate share. Uttar Pradesh leads in absolute terms, with about six lakh EVs sold in FY26, largely dominated by electric three-wheelers. Here, the transition is driven by economics.
For drivers, EVs are less about sustainability and more about improving daily earnings through lower fuel and maintenance costs. Maharashtra, with roughly four lakh EV sales, reflects a more diversified market. Policy support, including purchase incentives, scrappage-linked benefits, and early investments in charging infrastructure, has enabled adoption across personal and commercial segments.Cities such as Mumbai and Pune are seeing rising traction in electric passenger vehicles alongside strong twowheeler growth. Karnataka, anchored by Bengaluru, has emerged as a key urban market, led by consumers focused on total cost of ownership. Tax waivers, faster registrations and improving charging infrastructure continue to support adoption.
Tamil Nadu, with about 1.5–2 lakh EV sales, benefits from its dual role as a manufacturing hub and a consumption market, allowing supply and demand to scale together. In West Bengal and Madhya Pradesh, where sales are estimated at about 1–1.5 lakh units each, affordability is shaping demand.
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Incentives targeted at two- and three-wheelers are drawing in first-time buyers and small businesses, positioning EVs as income-generating assets.
What ties these markets together is not just policy ambition, but execution. “Consumers respond when incentives are visible and predictable, which reduces hesitation at the point of purchase,” said Sai Giridhar, vice president of the Federation of Automobile Dealers Association. Industry players say the shift is no longer policy-led alone.
“EV adoption in these states is being driven by incentives alongside a clear economic shift away from ICE vehicles,” said Kaustubh Dhonde, founder and CEO of AutoNxt Automation.
















