Budget 2026-27: Auto industry eyes EV incentives, GST clarity after strong GST 2.0-led recovery

After GST 2.0 tax rate rationalisation, India’s automobile industry reported a strong performance during the October–December 2025 quarter, supported by improved affordability, a pickup in rural demand and sustained festive momentum. With volumes recovering across segments, all eyes are now on the Union Budget 2026, scheduled to be presented on February 1.

Improved affordability, easing financing conditions and a recovery in consumer sentiment supported broad-based growth across passenger vehicles, two-wheelers and commercial vehicles during the quarter. However, rising raw material costs are expected to weigh on margins in the coming quarters, experts said.

An tax expert said accelerating electric vehicle adoption alongside the revival in internal combustion engine (ICE) demand under GST 2.0 requires steady and balanced policy support. “EVs continue to attract a 5 percent GST, but recent rate changes for some ICE segments have narrowed the gap. It is therefore important to protect a clear GST advantage for EVs, including on charging infrastructure, charging services and battery swapping, to keep EVs affordable and investments viable,” he said.

He added that demand incentives under the PM E-DRIVE scheme should remain focused on segments where electrification delivers maximum impact such as public transport, shared mobility, commercial fleets and last-mile delivery. Faster adoption in these areas is essential to achieving the 30 percent EV penetration target by 2030.

Big trends

  • Strong recovery in automobile volumes following GST 2.0 rate rationalisation
  • Renewed growth across passenger vehicles, two-wheelers and commercial vehicles
  • Continued momentum in SUVs and the premiumisation trend
  • Increasing focus on EV localisation and domestic manufacturing

Major issues and challenges

  • Rising raw material costs impacting margins
  • Shortage of rare-earth magnets affecting EV production
  • Narrowing GST gap between EVs and ICE vehicles
  • Dependence on imports for critical EV components

What happened in Budget 2025

  • Removal of import duties on 35 key EV battery components and critical minerals
  • Rs 2,819 crore allocation under the Auto PLI scheme to support domestic manufacturing
  • Rs 4,500 crore allocation for the PM E-Drive scheme to expand EV charging infrastructure
  • Investment and turnover limits for MSMEs increased by 2.5 times, along with enhanced credit guarantee cover
  • Tax-free income slab raised to Rs. 12 lakh to boost vehicle demand
  • Support announced for R&D in lightweight materials, advanced components and EV safety technologies

What the industry expects from Budget 2026

  • Protection of GST advantage for electric vehicles
  • Continued EV incentives under PM E-DRIVE
  • Extension of duty exemptions on critical battery inputs
  • Support for domestic rare-earth magnet production
  • Greater focus on localisation of EV components
  • Policy continuity for both EV and ICE segments
  • Sustained support for R&D, MSMEs and supply-chain development

Source from: https://www.moneycontrol.com/budget/budget-2026-auto-industry-eyes-ev-incentives-gst-clarity-after-strong-gst-2-0-led-recovery-article-13782129.html

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