39.26 percent. That is where Maruti Suzuki's market share landed at the end of FY26. The lowest in 13 years. Five years ago, every second car sold in India was a Maruti. Today, it is closer to two in five. The comeback plan now starts with a hatchback priced at ₹3.50 lakh.
How Maruti Suzuki Lost Its Grip on the Indian Car Market
India's buyers ran to SUVs over the last five years. Utility vehicles now make up 68% of the passenger car market. Hatchbacks have collapsed from 46% in 2019 to roughly 23% today. Maruti owned the small car space. It just did not own enough SUVs to catch the new wave.
Mahindra is now sitting at 14.21% of the market. Tata is right behind at roughly 13%. Both rode the SUV shift hard with the Scorpio, Thar, XUV3XO and Nexon while Maruti played catch-up. Even with the Brezza, Grand Vitara, Jimny, Victoris and the new e Vitara in the lineup, Maruti's share in the SUV space still sits below 25%.
The ₹3.50 Lakh S-Presso Is Now India's Cheapest Car
Then GST 2.0 changed the math. The government moved small cars under the 18 percent tax slab, and Maruti's quiet workhorse, the S-Presso, dropped to ₹3.50 lakh ex-showroom. That makes it the cheapest car you can buy in India today, taking the title from the long-running Alto K10.
Sounds small on paper. But for a young family stepping out of a two-wheeler, the gap is huge. EMI math at 9 percent over five years works out to roughly ₹7,300 a month. That is a number a household in a tier-2 town can actually plan around without losing sleep.
Maruti Chairman RC Bhargava Just Dropped a Number Worth Watching
Chairman RC Bhargava recently shared a stat most people glossed over. There are 1.9 lakh buyers on car waiting lists across India right now. 30,000 of them are waiting for a small car. That is not a dead segment. That is pent-up demand sitting in line.
Bhargava called the small car revival "inevitable" over the next few years. The reasoning holds up. Entry-level incomes are rising, two-wheeler buyers are still moving up to four wheels, and 18 percent is the lowest GST slab cars are realistically going to see.
Maruti also made six airbags standard across every Arena model from May 2025. That feature used to live in ₹15 lakh sedans. Now it sits in a ₹3.50 lakh hatchback. Combine that with the GST cut and cheaper monthly EMIs, and the small car story suddenly looks healthier than it has in years.
What Maruti's Slump Means for Your Next Car Purchase
If you are shopping below ₹6 lakh right now, the GST 2.0 reset is the single biggest thing in your favour in a long time. The S-Presso, Alto K10 and Wagon R are all cheaper than they were 12 months ago. Ask your dealer for the post-GST 2.0 price breakup before signing anything. Some are still quoting older figures.
If you can wait, the next 18 months may get even better. Maruti is working on a sub-Brezza micro SUV to take on the Tata Punch, and the brand is pushing CNG variants harder than ever across the Arena lineup.
Maruti is bleeding share. That part is real. But a 13-year low can also be the floor before the bounce, and right now Maruti has GST on its side, the cheapest car in the country sitting in its showroom, and a chairman pointing at a 30,000-strong waiting list. The next 18 months will decide whether this becomes the comeback story or the cautionary one.