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Home » Blog » 8 Mass-Market Electric Cars You Can Bring Home by Diwali 2025
EV Launch

8 Mass-Market Electric Cars You Can Bring Home by Diwali 2025

Sunita
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Sunita
Last updated: 25 August 2025
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8 Mass-Market Electric Cars with 300+ km Range You Can Bring Home by Diwali 2025

Contents
  • 1. Tata Tiago EV
  • 2. Tata Punch EV
  • 3. Tata Tigor EV
  • 4. MG Windsor EV
  • 5. Mahindra XUV400
  • 6. Tata Curvv EV
  • 7. Kia Carens Clavis EV
  • 8. Tata Harrier EV
  • A Buyer’s Note Before Diwali

With India’s festive season just over a year away, automakers are gearing up to meet rising demand for electric mobility. If you’re planning to upgrade your car or purchase your first EV, this Diwali 2025 could be the perfect time to make the switch.

All India EV has compiled a list of eight mass-market electric cars currently available with waiting periods of 1.5 to 2 months in key Indian cities. If booked now, these EVs can be delivered just in time for the celebrations. Models with longer waiting periods, such as Mahindra BE.06 and XEV 9e (2.5–3 months), and cars with incomplete availability data, such as Hyundai Creta EV, are excluded.


1. Tata Tiago EV

Price: ₹7.99 lakh – ₹11.14 lakh
Availability: New Delhi, Bengaluru, Mumbai, Jaipur, Gurugram, Lucknow, Thane, Surat, Ghaziabad, Chandigarh, Coimbatore, Faridabad, Indore, Noida

  • Battery: 19.2 kWh / 24 kWh
  • Range (MIDC): 223 km / 293 km
  • Charging: 3.3 kW AC (6.9–8.7 hrs) | 7.2 kW AC (2.6–3.6 hrs) | DC fast (10–80% in 58 min)
  • Key features: 7-inch infotainment screen, cruise control, dual airbags, reversing camera.

2. Tata Punch EV

Price: ₹9.99 lakh – ₹14.44 lakh
Availability: Same as Tiago EV in top cities.

  • Battery: 25 kWh / 35 kWh
  • Range (MIDC): 265 km / 365 km
  • Charging: 3.3 kW AC (9.4–13.5 hrs) | 7.2 kW AC (3.6–5 hrs) | 50 kW DC fast (10–80% in 40–56 min)
  • Key features: Dual 10.25-inch displays, ventilated seats, 360° camera, six airbags.

3. Tata Tigor EV

Price: ₹12.49 lakh – ₹13.75 lakh
Availability: Similar to Tiago EV in major cities.

  • Battery: 26 kWh
  • Range (ARAI): 315 km
  • Charging: 3.3 kW AC (9.4 hrs) | DC fast (10–80% in 59 min)
  • Key features: 7-inch infotainment, automatic climate control, dual airbags, rear parking camera.

4. MG Windsor EV

Price: ₹14 lakh – ₹18.39 lakh
Availability: Bengaluru, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Pune, Chennai, Lucknow, Thane, Surat, Ghaziabad, Faridabad, Indore.

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  • Battery: 38 kWh / 52.9 kWh
  • Range (claimed): 332 km / 449 km
  • Charging: 7.4 kW AC (7–9.5 hrs) | DC fast (20–80% in 45–50 min)
  • Key features: 15.6-inch infotainment screen, reclining rear seats, six airbags, Level-2 ADAS.

5. Mahindra XUV400

Price: ₹15.49 lakh – ₹17.69 lakh
Availability: Bengaluru, Mumbai, Jaipur, Ahmedabad, Lucknow, Kolkata, Thane, Surat, Faridabad, Indore, Noida.

  • Battery: 34.5 kWh / 39.5 kWh
  • Range (MIDC): 375 km / 456 km
  • Charging: 7.2 kW AC (6.5 hrs) | 50 kW DC fast (0–80% in 50 min)
  • Key features: Dual 10.25-inch displays, dual-zone climate control, wireless charging, six airbags.

6. Tata Curvv EV

Price: ₹17.49 lakh – ₹22.24 lakh
Availability: Major metros including Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Jaipur, Gurugram.

  • Battery: 45 kWh / 55 kWh
  • Range (MIDC): 430 km / 502 km
  • Charging: 7.2 kW AC (6.5–7.9 hrs) | DC fast (10–80% in 40 min)
  • Key features: 12.3-inch infotainment screen, panoramic sunroof, ventilated seats, Level-2 ADAS.

7. Kia Carens Clavis EV

Price: ₹17.99 lakh – ₹24.49 lakh
Availability: Bengaluru, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Ahmedabad, Thane, Chandigarh, Coimbatore, Faridabad.

  • Battery: 42 kWh / 51.4 kWh
  • Range (claimed): 404 km / 490 km
  • Charging: 11 kW AC (4–4.75 hrs) | 100 kW DC fast (39 min)
  • Key features: Dual 12.3-inch screens, ventilated seats, 360° camera, six airbags, Level-2 ADAS.

8. Tata Harrier EV

Price: ₹21.49 lakh – ₹30.23 lakh
Availability: Broad coverage across metro and tier-2 cities.

  • Battery: 65 kWh / 75 kWh
  • Range (MIDC): 538 km / 627 km
  • Charging: 7.2 kW AC (9–10.7 hrs) | DC fast (20–80% in 25 min)
  • Key features: 14.5-inch infotainment screen, AWD option, dual-zone climate, transparent 360° camera mode, Level-2 ADAS.

A Buyer’s Note Before Diwali

Waiting periods vary by city and variant. Booking early is essential to ensure delivery by Diwali 2025. With multiple options now available across price segments, this festive season could mark a major milestone in India’s shift to clean mobility.

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What: India’s finance ministry has directed public sector banks, insurers, and financial institutions to reduce operational spending and accelerate adoption of electric vehicles across official fleets. The move is part of a wider austerity push linked to rising global economic uncertainty and fuel-related risks. The Number: The directive impacts major public institutions including State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, and Life Insurance Corporation of India, covering millions of employees and thousands of operational vehicles nationwide. The Impact: The policy signals a new phase of institutional fleet electrification in India, where EV adoption is now being tied directly to fiscal discipline, fuel import management, and public-sector operational efficiency. The Core News India’s finance ministry has formally instructed state-run financial institutions to implement strict expenditure controls while simultaneously accelerating EV adoption for official transport operations. The directive from the Department of Financial Services asks organisations to replace petrol and diesel vehicles used at head offices and branch operations with electric vehicles “as far as possible.” The order comes amid growing concern over the economic impact of prolonged geopolitical instability in West Asia, which threatens to increase crude oil prices, widen India’s import bill, and pressure the rupee. Alongside the EV transition mandate, the government has also pushed virtual meetings, reduced foreign travel, and tighter administrative spending controls across public-sector institutions. For India’s EV ecosystem, the directive is strategically important because it expands demand visibility beyond state transport undertakings and government departments into the financial sector itself. PSU banks and insurers operate one of the country’s largest distributed office networks, including regional offices, branch fleets, field operations, and administrative mobility services. Even a phased transition could create a sizeable procurement pipeline for electric passenger vehicles, charging infrastructure providers, and fleet management companies. Breaking Down the Update • The Department of Financial Services issued the austerity and EV adoption directive to PSU banks, insurers, and financial institutions. • The government wants petrol and diesel vehicles used in official operations to be progressively replaced by EVs wherever operationally feasible. • The policy push follows Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s appeal for fuel conservation and controlled discretionary spending amid global energy uncertainty. • The directive also mandates greater use of video conferencing to reduce travel-related operational expenditure. • The move could indirectly support domestic EV OEMs, leasing firms, and charging infrastructure operators through institutional procurement demand. • The banking and insurance sector may emerge as a new enterprise fleet electrification category in India’s EV transition roadmap. How PSU banks EV adoption will help Indian EV Market The expansion of PSU banks EV adoption could create a strong institutional demand layer for India’s electric mobility sector. Public sector banks and insurers operate thousands of branch offices across urban, semi-urban, and rural India. Their transition to EV fleets can generate predictable procurement volumes for domestic automakers, especially in the electric sedan, compact SUV, and commercial mobility segments. Beyond vehicle sales, the policy may also accelerate deployment of workplace charging infrastructure at bank headquarters, zonal offices, and regional branches. This can support charger utilisation economics while helping normalise EV infrastructure in tier-2 and tier-3 cities. Another important impact is signalling. When large state-linked financial institutions adopt EVs as operational assets rather than pilot projects, it improves confidence across the broader enterprise mobility market. Private banks, NBFCs, and insurance firms could eventually follow similar fleet transition models to reduce long-term fuel and maintenance costs. PSU banks EV adoption also aligns with India’s larger energy security strategy. Lower petroleum consumption in institutional fleets directly supports efforts to reduce crude import dependence while stabilising operational expenditure during periods of volatile global oil prices. Conclusion & Next Steps The government’s push toward PSU banks EV adoption reflects a broader shift where EV deployment is increasingly being linked with macroeconomic resilience rather than only sustainability targets. Execution, however, will depend on procurement timelines, charging infrastructure readiness, and operational suitability across
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