Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: While oil grabbed the headlines, a quieter number told the more hopeful story. India’s electric-vehicle retail sales rose about 63% year-on-year to a record of roughly 3.06 lakh units in June, lifting EVs past 12% of all vehicles sold in the country for the first time. On a month when petrol and diesel prices were biting, more Indian buyers than ever chose to plug in rather than fill up.
The passenger segment crossed a symbolic line, with electric cars topping 30,000 units in a month for the first time — Tata Motors leading with about a 38% share, Mahindra posting its best-ever month above 7,000 units, and JSW MG close behind. Electric two-wheelers, still the volume engine of the transition, jumped around 75% to more than 1.9 lakh units, while electric three-wheelers remain India’s most electrified segment of all.
Every EV sold in a high-oil month is a small act of energy security — one household’s fuel bill decoupled, quietly, from a distant strait.
At a Glance
Total EV retail (June): record ~3.06 lakh units, up ~63% YoY
Penetration: EVs crossed 12% of all vehicle sales
Electric cars: topped 30,000 in a month for the first time
Leaders: Tata Motors ~38% share; Mahindra a record month
The timing is instructive. Higher pump prices sharpen the running-cost case for an electric car or scooter, and India’s widening model line-up — from mass-market two-wheelers to new premium electric SUVs and sedans — means the choice now exists across price points. Charging availability and up-front cost remain the honest constraints, and the road to mass adoption runs through both.
The constructive read is that the transition has momentum of its own. Each record month lightens the barrel count India must import, builds a domestic manufacturing and battery base, and cleans the air in its cities. The way forward is to keep charging infrastructure and financing expanding as fast as the vehicles themselves, so the switch stays as easy for the next buyer as it was tempting for this month’s.













