Tata Motors said on Friday it has increased prices of its passenger vehicles, except small car Nano and premium crossover Aria, by up to Rs 12,000 to mitigate the impact of high input costs.
The company said the price hike has been effective from Thursday across the country.
"The high input costs have been impacting us for quite some time. We have decided to pass on some burden to our customers.
"The quantum of the hike will vary between Rs 7,000 and Rs 12,000 depending on the model," a company spokesperson told PTI.
Now, Tata cars dearer by up to Rs 12,000
Image: Tata Nano.Photographs: Reuters
He, however, said this price increase exercise will not include Nano and Aria.
"The price hike has been effected since Thursday," the spokesperson added.
Last month, other passenger vehicle majors Maruti Suzuki and General Motors increased the prices of their various models by up to Rs 17,000 to offset rising input costs and the impact of currency fluctuation.
Maruti Suzuki India hiked prices of its vehicles, except for entry-level sedan DZire, by between 0.3 per cent and 3.4 per cent.
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Now, Tata cars dearer by up to Rs 12,000
Image: Tata Aria.Photographs: Courtesy: CarDekho.com
This translated into a minimum increase of Rs 2,400 on the SX4 sedan and a maximum of Rs 17,000 on the diesel variant of its Swift hatchback.
Similarly, General Motors India also increased product prices by between 0.5 per cent and 1.75 per cent for models, including the Spark, Beat, Cruze and Tavera, translating into an increase ranging from Rs 3,000 to Rs 15,000.
GM India, however, left the prices of its Aveo, Aveo UVA, Optra and Captiva SUV models unchanged.
. . .
Now, Tata cars dearer by up to Rs 12,000
Image: TKM managing director Hiroshi Nakagawa poses with Land Cruiser.Photographs: Sahil Salvi
Toyota Kirloskar Motor had also hiked the prices of its different models, including the Liva and Etios, between 0.75 per cent and 3 per cent from January 1 onward.
Mahindra & Mahindra increased the price of its latest SUV, the XUV500, by up to Rs 55,000.
Hyundai Motor India, which had in December said it would increase prices of its vehicles by 1.5-2 per cent from this year, however, has not taken the step as yet.
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