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India’s next auto battle has begun nearly four months before Diwali, and this time the industry is offering something for almost every buyer.
Over the next nine months, automakers are expected to introduce 23 new passenger-vehicle models, including 16 electrified offerings—10 battery-electric vehicles, four plug-in hybrids and two hybrid-assisted models — alongside seven all-new ICE vehicles. The lineup spans everything from sub-₹10 lakh city cars to ₹2-crore luxury sedans.
Setting the tone for the cycle, Mercedes-Benz India on Monday launched the S450e, its first plug-in hybrid S-Class in the country, priced at ₹2.20 crore (ex-showroom). Offering up to 115 km of electric-only range, the model reflects growing interest in alternative electrification pathways. “Customers increasingly want options, and adoption grows when more products and powertrain choices become available,” Mercedes-Benz India Managing Director and CEO Santosh Iyer told businessline.
The June-to-March launch cycle will involve nearly every major manufacturer, including Toyota, Tata Motors, BYD, MG Motor, Honda, Hyundai, Kia, BMW, Mahindra and Maruti Suzuki. Among the early launches are Toyota’s Urban Cruiser Ebella EV and Tata Motors’ Sierra EV, which will be followed by a steady stream of electric, hybrid and plug-in hybrid models through the rest of the financial year.
The numbers point to a clear trend. For every new internal-combustion vehicle entering the market, more than two electrified products are lining up behind it as automakers respond to rising fuel costs, tighter efficiency norms and changing consumer preferences. More importantly, electrification is no longer confined to a niche corner of the market. It is moving simultaneously into entry-level hatchbacks, family SUVs, premium crossovers and luxury vehicles.
At the entry end, BYD’s Seagull, Hyundai’s Inster EV and Maruti Suzuki’s Fronx EV are expected to test whether electric mobility can finally move into India’s largest volume segments. In the ₹12 lakh-₹25 lakh sweet spot, Tata Motors’ Sierra EV, Honda’s Elevate EV, Toyota’s Urban Cruiser Ebella, Kia’s Syros EV and MG’s Starlight plug-in hybrid will compete for family buyers increasingly conscious of running costs.
At the premium end, products such as BYD’s Seal U plug-in hybrid, Mercedes-Benz’s S450e, the upcoming GLC EV, BMW’s iX3 and MG’s IM6 suggest electrification is steadily moving from a niche proposition to a mainstream technology choice. The opening months of the cycle also showcase three distinct strategies. Mercedes-Benz is betting on plug-in hybrids, Tata Motors is pushing dedicated EV platforms through the Sierra EV and its acti.ev+ architecture, while Toyota continues to back hybrids as a transition technology. Together, these approaches highlight an industry that is no longer converging around a single solution but pursuing multiple pathways to electrification.
June opens with the Mercedes-Benz S450e, Toyota’s Urban Cruiser Ebella and Tata Motors’ Sierra EV. Kia’s Syros EV and Honda’s Elevate EV follow in the months ahead, while the festive season is expected to bring launches such as BYD’s Seagull, MG’s IM6, MG’s Starlight plug-in hybrid and BMW’s iX3. Further launches, including Hyundai’s Inster EV, Maruti Suzuki’s Fronx EV, BYD’s Seal U plug-in hybrid and Tata Motors’ Avinya, are expected before the end of FY27.
Tata Motors, Mahindra, BYD and parts of MG are investing aggressively in dedicated EV architectures. Mercedes-Benz and MG are combining EVs with plug-in hybrids, while Toyota, Honda and Maruti Suzuki remain the strongest advocates of hybrids as a bridge technology. Behind these launches lie billion-dollar platform bets. Tata’s acti.ev+, BMW’s Neue Klasse, Mercedes-Benz’s MMA, Mahindra’s INGLO and MG’s SIGMA architecture are not merely vehicle programmes but long-term investments that will shape product pipelines for much of the next decade.
With the launch cycle now underway, India’s next auto market is no longer a contest between petrol and diesel. It is increasingly becoming a contest between EVs, hybrids, plug-in hybrids and advanced combustion technologies, each competing for a place in the country’s automotive future.
Published on June 15, 2026
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