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Tata Motors reported negative free cash flow of ₹26,823 crore in FY26, compared with positive free cash flow of ₹22,236 crore a year earlier, as challenges at Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) weighed heavily on the group’s finances. The company’s consolidated balance sheet also moved from a net cash position of ₹1,018 crore to net debt of ₹30,710 crore, reflecting weaker cash generation at JLR and continued investment spending across the business.
Despite the financial pressure, Tata Motors maintained a strong investment programme, committing ₹36,236 crore in capital expenditure and ₹34,562 crore in research and development during the year, according to its 81st Integrated Annual Report. The biggest drag on performance came from JLR, where a cyber incident led to a five-week production shutdown and tariff-related pressures affected key export markets. Wholesale volumes declined 23.2 per cent year-on-year to 307,915 units, excluding the China joint venture, while revenue fell 20.9 per cent to £22.9 billion from £29 billion in FY25.
The impact was visible at the group level. Consolidated revenue stood at ₹3,35,582 crore, while profit before tax before exceptional items dropped sharply to ₹2,519 crore from ₹28,650 crore a year earlier. Even as profitability weakened, Tata Motors continued to invest in future products and technologies. Intangible assets under development — covering vehicle programmes and technologies across JLR and Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles — rose to ₹76,154 crore as of March 31, 2026, from ₹48,182 crore a year earlier.
“Rapid global advances in digital technologies and AI are transforming how mobility products are designed, experienced and supported,” Chairman N. Chandrasekaran said in his message to shareholders. He noted that clean-energy transition, safety requirements and supply-chain shifts are reshaping competitiveness in the global auto industry. There were signs of recovery toward the end of the year. Following the resumption of production, fourth-quarter revenue reached ₹1,05,447 crore and profit before tax before exceptional items improved to ₹7,167 crore.
While JLR struggled, Tata Motors’ domestic passenger vehicle business provided support. Revenue rose 20.7 per cent to ₹58,465 crore and profit before tax before exceptional items increased 32.6 per cent to ₹1,436 crore. Electric vehicle sales climbed 43.4 per cent to 92,179 units, helping the company retain a 40.2 per cent share of India’s EV market.
JLR accounted for ₹31,185 crore of the group’s capital expenditure during the year, while Tata Passenger Vehicles invested ₹4,311 crore. Key investments are being directed towards products such as the Range Rover Electric, Jaguar’s Type 01 electric grand tourer, and Tata Motors’ next-generation software-defined vehicle and EV programmes, underscoring the group’s long-term technology focus despite a difficult FY26.
Published on June 16, 2026
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