Haryana has approved a 100% motor vehicle tax exemption for operators replacing BS-IV and older trucks and buses with new BS-VI, CNG or electric vehicles, marking the latest step in the state's broader clean-mobility push across the National Capital Region (NCR).
The decision, approved by the Haryana Cabinet this week, is aimed at accelerating the replacement of older commercial vehicles that contribute disproportionately to vehicular emissions in the NCR. Under the scheme, buyers of used replacement vehicles will also receive a 50% motor vehicle tax concession, while registration fees and certain pending liabilities on old vehicles will be waived.
The move follows the Union Cabinet's recent approval of a ₹9,585-crore Delhi-NCR vehicle replacement programme designed to encourage owners of older trucks and buses to shift to cleaner alternatives. The central scheme includes financial incentives such as interest subvention, fuel vouchers and support for vehicle replacement, while states are expected to provide tax and registration-related benefits.
What makes Haryana's latest announcement significant is that it comes amid a series of measures targeting commercial fleet decarbonisation rather than private vehicle adoption.
In May, the state approved new aggregator licence rules that require all new vehicles added by cab aggregators, delivery operators and e-commerce companies in NCR districts to run on CNG, electric or other cleaner fuels. Conventional petrol and diesel vehicles can no longer be added to these fleets under the revised framework.
The state has also outlined a wider air-quality roadmap that includes the deployment of 925 electric buses across key NCR cities, implementation of a "No PUCC, No Fuel" policy from October 2026 and intensified action against end-of-life vehicles.
Unlike many EV-focused incentive programmes, Haryana's latest truck and bus replacement policy remains technology-neutral. Operators can avail themselves of benefits when upgrading to BS-VI-compliant vehicles, CNG models or electric alternatives. This could prove particularly relevant for fleet operators that are not yet ready to transition fully to battery-electric vehicles because of cost, charging infrastructure or operational requirements.
For commercial vehicle manufacturers, the policy could support replacement demand in one of India's largest freight corridors. The benefits are also expected to support the scrappage ecosystem, CNG vehicle adoption and, over time, the transition towards lower-emission commercial transport in the NCR.
As regulatory pressure on older vehicles increases across the Delhi-NCR region, Haryana's latest incentive package suggests that fleet renewal, rather than outright electrification, is becoming the immediate policy priority.