Six months into 2026, the contest between Tata Motors and Mahindra & Mahindra for the number-two spot in India's passenger vehicle market has shifted. Where the two were closely matched at the start of the year, FADA retail data through January-June shows Tata pulling steadily ahead — a change driven as much by Tata's broad-based product mix as by headwinds Mahindra has had to work through.
January set the tone for how close the fight was. Mahindra retailed 63,066 units against Tata's 63,318, with market shares of 12.83 percent and 12.33 percent respectively separating the two by less than a point. Mahindra's SUV line-up was driving strong demand at the time, while Tata's refreshed portfolio was only beginning to gain traction. Looking at the full FY26 picture, Mahindra still finished ahead on paper, with 6,31,638 units and a 13.42 percent share against Tata's 6,13,513 units and 13.04 percent.
That picture started to change from February. Tata retailed 56,447 units for a 14.30 percent share, edging past Mahindra's 53,281 units and 13.50 percent share for the month. In March, the gap widened a little further: Tata posted 65,784 units and a 14.95 percent share, while Mahindra recorded 61,029 units and 13.87 percent.
April confirmed the shift as more than a short-term blip. Tata's tally came in at 57,688 units and a 14.16 percent share, against Mahindra's 55,236 units and 13.56 percent. The contrast with April a year earlier is notable — in April 2025, Mahindra had led with a 14.21 percent share to Tata's 12.43 percent — suggesting the two companies have meaningfully swapped positions over twelve months.
The trend held through May and June. Tata retailed 55,544 units in May for a 13.80 percent share, ahead of Mahindra's 51,311 units and 12.75 percent — again a reversal from May 2025, when Mahindra led 14.22 percent to Tata's 12.21 percent. By June, Tata had extended its position further to 57,009 units and a 13.88 percent share, compared with Mahindra's 54,099 units and 13.17 percent, against a Mahindra-led 13.85 percent to 11.81 percent split in June 2025.
The underlying drivers point to a fairly straightforward divergence in approach. A large part of Tata's gains can be traced to the Tata Sierra, relaunched in November 2025 and delivered to customers from January 2026. The midsize SUV quickly became Tata's third best-selling model after the Nexon and Punch, settling into a run rate of roughly 6,500-9,000 units a month and contributing around 11-12 percent of the company's PV volumes through the first half of the year — a timeline that lines up closely with Tata's move past Mahindra from February onward.
Beyond the Sierra, Tata's gains have also been supported by sustained EV demand and steady volumes across its hatchback range, which has made it less dependent on any single segment. Mahindra, meanwhile, has grown in absolute terms but lost relative share: production has faced supply chain constraints, its SUV-heavy line-up has come under pricing and feature pressure from rivals, and a slower pace of new launches compared with Tata and Hyundai has cost it some incremental demand.
Six months on, what began as a near-even contest has settled into a modest but consistent lead for Tata. Whether Mahindra can close that gap will likely depend on how quickly it can bring new launches to market and resolve its supply constraints as the industry heads into the traditionally stronger festive season of H2CY2026.