Maruti Suzuki Ertiga cars are parked beside an in-plant railway siding at Maruti Suzuki’s plant in Manesar, Haryana, India, June 17, 2025. REUTERS
May 5 (Reuters) – India’s retail car sales rose in April, an auto dealers’ body said on Tuesday, although the Middle ​East crisis and its impact on fuel prices ‌could hurt demand going into the summer months.
  • Passenger vehicle sales rose 12.2% year-on-year to 407,355 units, a record for April, helped by ​a boost from last September’s rate cuts, easier ​financing conditions and strong demand from smaller towns ⁠and rural areas, the Federation of Automobile Dealers Associations ​said
  • Overall vehicle retail sales climbed 12.9% to 2.6 million units, ​also an all-time high for April, with five out of six segments posting record volumes
  • Dealers warned that uncertainty stemming from the Middle ​East could weigh on sentiment if higher crude prices ​spill over into fuel costs, and also flagged risk from heatwaves ‌and ⁠supply constraints
  • Indian state fuel retailers have raised prices of liquefied petroleum gas for industrial customers and jet fuel sold to foreign carriers, but there has been no increase in ​retail prices ​of gasoline, ⁠gasoil, LPG or jet fuel for Indian carriers
  • For April, rural car sales jumped 20.4%, nearly ​three times faster than urban growth of ​7.1%, ⁠supported by a revival in small cars
  • Inventory levels edged up to around 28 to 30 days, within what the association ⁠considers ​a “healthy range”, though dealers urged manufacturers ​to go slow on dispatches as demand typically softens in May and ​June

Reporting by Kashish Tandon in Bengaluru; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala