GST Cuts and Navratri Fuel Surge in Car Sales for Tata, Maruti, Hyundai

GST Cuts and Navratri Fuel Surge in Car Sales for Tata, Maruti, Hyundai

India’s car market is on a roll this Navratri, driven by a historic combination of GST (Goods and Services Tax) cuts and strong festive demand. Industry leaders Tata Motors, Maruti Suzuki, and Hyundai posted bumper single-day sales, setting new records as lower prices and seasonal offers lured thousands of buyers into showrooms.

GST 2.0: Direct Benefits for Compact Car Buyers

The gamechanger this season is the revamped GST structure. Under the latest rules, the tax on sub-4-metre cars (with petrol, LPG, or CNG engines below 1200 cc, and diesel below 1500 cc) has been slashed from 28% to 18%, while the additional compensation cess is eliminated[livemint][ndtv][autocarindia]. This means popular models in the compact and premium segment—like Maruti’s Baleno, Swift, and Tata’s Punch—are now significantly more affordable, with on-road prices dropping by thousands of rupees per car.

Bumper Sales: Navratri’s Opening Day Stats

  • Maruti Suzuki: Sold over 30,000 cars in a single day, its best performance in 35 years; received 80,000 enquiries. Small car bookings spiked 50% versus usual festive periods.

  • Tata Motors: Retail sales around 10,000 units on day one of Navratri; received over 25,000 customer enquiries, led by strong demand for the Nexon and Punch.

  • Hyundai: Delivered 11,000 cars—its strongest single-day tally in five years.

Showrooms in major cities extended hours to accommodate the rush, and several best-selling variants are reportedly running short on stock due to “unprecedented” demand[livemint][ndtv].

The Power of Price Cuts and Festive Offers

Industry executives cite a combination of lower GST rates and aggressive discounts as the main driver of this surge. With price cuts as high as ₹1 lakh on select compact cars after GST 2.0, buyers are seizing the opportunity, and analysts note that the market response has been “phenomenal.”

“Lower prices have brought in a wave of new customers just as the festive mood sets in,” said a Maruti Suzuki executive. Hyundai’s Tarun Garg described the rush as “our highest single-day performance in the last five years,” and Tata’s dealers are working overtime to keep up with bookings and walk-ins.

What Next? Can the Surge Last?

While this spike is tied to Navratri and post-GST rate enthusiasm, questions remain about how sustained demand will be:

  • Compact and entry-level cars get the lion’s share of benefits, which could drive further small-car market share gains.

  • EVs, SUVs, and luxury models saw comparatively smaller price cuts, so their sales trends may differ.

  • Automakers expect strong momentum through Diwali: a wait-and-see approach is advised for how the GST cuts affect monthly sales going forward[autocarindia][cardekho].

As of now, India’s auto industry is enjoying a rare alignment of tax reform and festival cheer—one that’s put new cars and compact Nexa models into the hands of more buyers than ever before.