Buying a new Mahindra vehicle will cost a little more from July 10, 2026. The company has confirmed a price revision across its SUV and Commercial Vehicle lineup. The decision comes after higher manufacturing costs, especially due to the rise in commodity prices.
The revised prices will apply across the portfolio, but the increase will not be the same for every model. The final amount will depend on the vehicle and variant selected.
Price Hike Announced
Mahindra has shared the following average price increase.
| Vehicle Category | Average Price Increase | Effective Date |
|---|---|---|
| SUVs | 2.7% | July 10, 2026 |
| Commercial Vehicles | 2% | July 10, 2026 |
The company said the increase is mainly because raw material costs have gone up.
What Buyers Should Know
If you are planning to buy a Mahindra vehicle, these are the key details.
- SUV prices will increase by an average of 2.7%.
- Commercial Vehicle prices will go up by an average of 2%.
- The revised prices will be applicable from July 10.
- The increase will differ depending on the model and variant.
- Existing prices may still be available before the revision, depending on dealer stock and booking terms.
Mahindra currently sells a wide range of SUVs. The lineup starts with the XUV 3XO and also includes popular models like the Thar, Scorpio range, XUV700, Bolero, BE 6 and XEV 9e. Its Commercial Vehicle portfolio includes small, light and heavy commercial vehicles, electric three-wheelers and passenger buses.
Why Prices Are Going Up
Vehicle manufacturers use materials such as steel, aluminium, copper, rubber and plastics to build vehicles. When the cost of these materials rises, production becomes more expensive.
Apart from raw materials, companies also face higher expenses for transportation, sourcing, energy and factory operations. Price revisions help recover part of these additional costs.
Other Brands Have Also Increased Prices
Mahindra is not the only manufacturer to revise prices this year. Tata Motors, Kia, Maruti Suzuki and Hyundai have also announced price increases in recent months because of rising input and operating costs.
