MUMBAI, India: Tata Motors has concluded the fiscal year on a high note, reporting a robust performance in its passenger vehicle segment for March 2026. The homegrown automaker dispatched 66,192 units last month, marking a significant 28.24% year-on-year (YoY) growth compared to the 51,616 units sold in March 2025.
The upward trajectory was not limited to yearly comparisons; Tata also witnessed a healthy 6.20% month-on-month (MoM) increase over February 2026’s 62,329 units. This growth was primarily fueled by the brand’s “New Forever” SUV range, with the Punch and Nexon continuing to act as the primary engines of volume.
Table 1: Tata Motors Passenger Vehicle Sales Breakup (YoY Analysis)
| No. | Tata Model | Mar-26 Sales | Mar-25 Sales | Difference (Units) | Growth % YoY | % Share Mar-26 |
| 1 | Punch / EV | 20,977 | 17,714 | +3,263 | 18.42% | 31.69% |
| 2 | Nexon / EV | 19,810 | 16,366 | +3,444 | 21.04% | 29.93% |
| 3 | Sierra | 9,003 | 0 | +9,003 | – | 13.60% |
| 4 | Tiago / EV | 7,119 | 7,946 | -827 | -10.41% | 10.76% |
| 5 | Harrier / EV | 2,826 | 1,265 | +1,561 | 123.40% | 4.27% |
| 6 | Altroz | 2,344 | 1,658 | +686 | 41.38% | 3.54% |
| 7 | Curvv / EV | 1,602 | 3,785 | -2,183 | -57.68% | 2.42% |
| 8 | Safari | 1,530 | 1,415 | +115 | 8.13% | 2.31% |
| 9 | Tigor / EV | 981 | 1,467 | -486 | -33.13% | 1.48% |
| – | Total PV Sales | 66,192 | 51,616 | +14,576 | 28.24% | 100.00% |
Punch and Nexon: The Powerhouse Duo
As highlighted in Table 1, the Tata Punch (including EV) maintained its crown as the brand’s top performer. With 20,977 units sold, the micro-SUV recorded an 18.42% YoY jump. Following closely was the Nexon (including EV), which secured the second spot with 19,810 units and a 21.04% YoY increase. Together, these two models accounted for over 61.6% of Tata’s total sales for the month, demonstrating that the appetite for these high-riding compacts remains insatiable.
Sierra Gains Momentum; Harrier Sales Double
The newly introduced Tata Sierra is quickly carving out its own space in the portfolio. It clocked 9,003 units in March 2026, already capturing a significant 13.60% market share within the Tata lineup. Its inclusion provides Tata with a strong mid-tier volume contributor.
In the premium SUV space, the Harrier (including EV) reported a staggering 123.40% YoY growth, with sales rising to 2,826 units from 1,265 units a year ago. Similarly, the Safari posted a steady 8.13% YoY growth with 1,530 units.
Mixed Bag for Hatchbacks and Sedans; Curvv Normalizes
While SUVs flourished, traditional segments showed varied results:
- Altroz: The premium hatchback performed well, with 2,344 units reflecting a 41.38% YoY increase.
- Tiago (including EV): Faced a 10.41% YoY decline to 7,119 units, though it remains a key volume driver below the SUVs.
- Tigor (including EV): The compact sedan struggled, dropping 33.13% YoY to just 981 units.
- Curvv (including EV): After strong initial momentum, the Curvv appears to be undergoing demand normalization. It recorded 1,602 units in March, a sharp 57.68% YoY drop.
Table 2: Tata Motors Passenger Vehicle Sales (Month-on-Month Trend Analysis)
Sorting this data (excluding Sierra, which had zero sales in the previous March) reveals the recent momentum changes across models.
| No. | Tata Model | Mar-26 Sales | Feb-26 Sales | Difference (Units) | Growth % MoM | % Share Feb-26 |
| 1 | Punch / EV | 20,977 | 18,748 | +2,229 | 11.89% | 30.08% |
| 2 | Nexon / EV | 19,810 | 19,430 | +380 | 1.96% | 31.17% |
| 3 | Sierra | 9,003 | 7,100 | +1,903 | 26.80% | 11.39% |
| 4 | Tiago / EV | 7,119 | 7,040 | +79 | 1.12% | 11.29% |
| 5 | Harrier / EV | 2,826 | 3,096 | -270 | -8.72% | 4.97% |
| 6 | Altroz | 2,344 | 2,063 | +281 | 13.62% | 3.31% |
| 7 | Curvv / EV | 1,602 | 1,755 | -153 | -8.72% | 2.82% |
| 8 | Safari | 1,530 | 1,650 | -120 | -7.27% | 2.65% |
| 8 | Tigor / EV | 981 | 1,447 | -466 | -32.20% | 2.32% |
| – | Total PV Sales | 66,192 | 62,329 | +3,863 | 6.20% | 100.00% |
Note: Table 2 has duplicate number 8 (Safari & Tigor / EV), sorted by MoM decline magnitude.
Conclusion
Tata Motors’ March 2026 sales breakup underscores the company’s successful pivot toward an SUV-centric strategy. Table 2 clearly highlights that despite an overall positive trend, almost half the lineup (Harrier, Curvv, Safari, and Tigor) experienced negative month-on-month growth. However, the sustained performance of the Punch, Nexon, and the immediate traction gained by the Sierra ensure that Tata remains a dominant force in the Indian PV market, even as its traditional segments face cooling demand.
