Maharashtra Scraps Six Percent EV Tax Plan to Boost Adoption
Maharashtra has dropped a 6 percent sales tax proposal on EVs priced above $35,000 (roughly Rs. 30 lakh) to boost adoption in India, where EV sales remain low at 2 percent of four million cars sold last year. Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis cited unnecessary disincentivisation, while the federal goal aims for 30 percent EV adoption by 2030.

Maharashtra has withdrawn a proposal for a 6% sales tax on electric vehicles priced above $35,000 (roughly Rs. 30 lakh) to encourage adoption at a time when EV sales are still nascent in the country - the world's third-largest auto market.
"We are disincentivising (EVs in the luxury segment) without any reason ... we will not go ahead with this," Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis told lawmakers in the state assembly on Wednesday.
India's EV market is small, making up about two percent of total car sales of four million last year, as worries related to higher pricing and inadequate charging points weigh on adoption. The federal government wants to increase this to 30 percent by 2030.
A reversal of the proposal, made weeks earlier, comes as global EV giant Tesla is gearing up to sell cars in India where it will compete with homegrown rivals such as Mahindra & Mahindra and Tata Motors.
Mahindra and Tata already manufacture EVs in Maharashtra. The state has also attracted investment in new factories, including for EVs, from Hyundai Motor and Toyota Motor.
The new manufacturing facilities will help Maharashtra become the national capital of electric vehicles, Fadnavis added.
Maharashtra, one of India's wealthiest states, accounts for more than 10 percent of total car and EV sales in the country. It also has a separate EV manufacturing policy designed to give incentives to companies to build the cars in the state.
© Thomson Reuters 2025