BMW India’s CEO reaffirms the 30% EV-sales target by 2030, citing 21% current EV share, strong iX1 growth and efforts to expand to Tier-2/3 markets.
Ambitious EV Target, Despite Slower Sector
BMW India is doubling down on its electric-vehicle ambitions even as demand in the broader EV market cools. Its India President and CEO, Hardeep Singh Brar, says the company is on track to achieve a 30% EV share of overall sales by 2030 — and he believes this goal is “definitely doable.”
Currently, 21% of BMW India’s sales are EVs, reflecting major progress.The company sold 2,509 EVs between January and September 2025, marking a staggering 246% year-on-year increase.
How BMW Plans to Get There
Brar outlined several strategic levers BMW India will use to meet this target:
- Expanding Its Network
- BMW is accelerating its presence in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities to tap into the growing EV appetite outside large metros.
- Making EVs More Affordable
- Through tailored financing schemes and attractive residual-value plans, BMW aims to bridge the cost gap between luxury EVs and more accessible segments.
- Model Depth Across Portfolio
- Brar emphasises BMW wants “electric models in every vehicle segment” it sells in India — signalling future EV launches beyond current models.
Key Drivers Behind the Optimism
- Changing Customer Mindset: Brar notes that luxury consumers are increasingly valuing sustainability alongside performance, making EVs more appealing in the premium space.
- Steady EV Sales Momentum: BMW already crossed the 21% EV-share threshold.
- Strong EV Models: The iX1 and i7 are currently leading BMW’s EV lineup in India.
- Government Push: The 30% EV-by-2030 target aligns with broader national EV-adoption goals.
Challenges to Watch
- Cost Premiums: EVs still cost 10–20% more than petrol or diesel equivalents, according to Brar.
- Range Anxiety: Many EVs in India don’t yet offer a 500 km+ range, though Brar points out typical Indian driving patterns (under 400 km/day) mitigate this concern.
- Charging Infrastructure: Scaling EV sales requires deeper charging network deployment — something BMW is betting on, especially in smaller cities.
- Regulatory Risk: Policy shifts, import duties, or financing incentives could affect EV economics.
- Supply Constraints: As EV demand rises, supply-chain bottlenecks (particularly in batteries) could present headwinds.
Why BMW’s Push Matters
- Premium EV Leadership: If BMW hits its target, it could further cement its position as a leader in luxury electric mobility in India.
- EV Adoption Momentum: Its ambitious goal may accelerate EV penetration in the luxury segment and encourage other premium brands to commit more strongly to EVs.
- Market Expansion: By focusing on Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities, BMW could expand the rich-electric-mobility market beyond traditional metro customers.
The Road Ahead
To hit 30% EV sales by 2030, BMW India will need to:
- Sustain its rapid EV sales growth.
- Deliver new EV models that resonate with Indian luxury buyers.
- Expand its sales and service footprint aggressively.
- Maintain favourable financing and residual value offers.
- Monitor costs and policy shifts closely.
Conclusion
BMW India’s 30% EV-share goal by 2030 is bold but backed by strong performance and a coherent strategy. With nearly a quarter of its sales already electric and plans to deepen its reach and affordability, the company is well-positioned to lead India’s luxury EV wave. But execution will be key — the next few years will show whether BMW can turn its EV ambition into reality.




