Autocar India

Last Updated on: 19 May 2026

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Tata Sierra EV price in Mumbai

Tata Sierra EV Launch Date
Mid 2026
Tata Sierra EV Estimated Price
₹ 20.00 - ₹ 25.00 Lakhs

Tata Sierra EV price could start at around Rs 20 lakh for the base variant, while the top model Sierra EV price is estimated to be approximately Rs 25 lakh (ex-showroom).

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Tata Dealers in Mumbai

Planning to buy Sierra EV? Here are a few dealers in Mumbai

Fortune Cars

Plot No. D-400, TTC Industrial Area, MIDC, Near Uran Phata Signal, Nerul, Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra 400706

4

10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

8291157813

crmnerul@fortunecars.com

Fortune Cars-Vashi

No 10, Satra Plaza,Palm Beach Road, Sector 19 D, Vashi, Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra 400703

3.8

10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

8291158056

calvina@fortunecars.com

Inderjit Cars - Andheri West

Opposite Lotus Petrol Pump, A/7,41,Gujarati Samaj Bhavan,Adarsh Ngr, Oshiwara New Link Rd, Mumbai, Maharashtra 400102

Inderjit Cars - Boisar

Atithi Hall, Betegaon Maan Road, Boisar, Boisar, Maharashtra 401501

4.4

Keshva Motors-Mulund

Shop No.10/11, Marathon Max Co-Operative Housing Society, Mulund Goregaon Link Road, Mumbai, Maharashtra 400080

10:00 AM - 7:00 PM

8291042059

gm.sales@keshvamotors.com

View all dealers

Tata Sierra EV Images

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Tata Sierra EV videos

Questions you may find useful

AK

Akshay

6h

Asking on behalf of a colleague. He plans to buy an EV for regular use, which includes weekly office work (3-4 days), weekend trips with his small family, all within the Bangalore city area. He has booked the Mahindra XEV 9S. Should we wait for the launch of Sierra EV, as it is a bit smaller in size, which may be useful for his city usage? Also, since the Sierra petrol and diesel are still not visible on Bangalore roads as of mid-May 2026, despite having a huge hype during launch, would waiting for the Sierra EV be a wise decision or just a waste of time? Can the increasing petrol price lead to an increase in the cost of EVs? The Bangalore government has already removed the road tax discount on EVs.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
21m

The Mahindra XEV 9S is the more sensible choice rather than waiting for the Tata Sierra EV. With no firm launch date for the Sierra EV and uncertain delivery timelines, it makes more sense to opt for the XEV 9S, which is already on sale.Yes, the XEV 9S is a bit larger than the Tata; however, its light steering, tight turning radius, good visibility and driving aids make it surprisingly easy to drive and live with.Coming to the second part of your question, Karnataka has introduced new slabs for EV road tax from May 1, 2026, so on-road prices are higher than before, but still running costs remain much lower than petrol. Since your colleague is buying the car now, it will save him from any potential price hikes due to the higher battery import cost or any new taxes.

VehicleMahindra XEV 9S
VehicleTata Sierra EV
KK

Kks

1w

We have owned a Tata Zest for 10 years and are looking for a family car for 4 adults and 1kid 9year old. Our running for the year is 12k to 13k kms with 60% city and the rest highway for occasional trips. We intend to keep it for 10 years and zeroed in on Seltos, but worried about ethanol blending and pricey petrol. So, for our requirement, we are thinking of moving to EV and are confused whether we should wait for Sierra EV, go with Harrier EV or XEV 9s. Although we aren’t keen on a 7 seater, and 9E seems to be gimmicky. Please help.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1w

For your usage, we would not switch to an EV purely because of ethanol blending worries. With 12,000 to 13,000 km a year, 60 per cent city use and a 10-year ownership plan, a petrol SUV like the Kia Seltos is still a perfectly practical choice. E20-compliant petrol cars will continue to be supported, and a move to higher ethanol blends like E85 would require dedicated flex fuel engines, so there is no realistic scenario where today’s compliant petrol cars suddenly become unusable.If you genuinely want to move to an EV, then the decision should be based on your usage pattern, charging convenience and ownership comfort, not fuel policy anxiety. Between your options, the Tata Harrier EV looks like the most complete fit today. It gives you the space you need for four adults and a child, feels like a proper family SUV and removes the uncertainty of waiting for an unlaunched product. The Mahindra XEV 9e is also a strong EV, but since you already find it a bit too gimmicky and are not looking for that kind of experience, it does not sound like the natural fit.As for the Tata Sierra EV, we would absolutely suggest waiting if you are not in a rush, because it is expected soon and could land in the sweet spot between the Harrier EV and the smaller EV SUVs in terms of practicality and positioning. The only caveat is that buying an EV without a reliable home charging setup would make far less sense than simply buying the Seltos petrol and moving on.

VehicleKia Seltos
VehicleTata Harrier EV
VehicleMahindra XEV 9e
VehicleTata Sierra EV
TU

Tushar

1w

Sir, how is the rear suspension and ride quality of the Mahindra XEV 9e Pack One and Two? I tested the Pack Three and found the rear seat very boat-like with too much movement both vertically and sideways, which can get nauseating for rear-seat passengers. Is the suspension setup in Pack One and Two any better? Should I instead go for the Harrier EV 75 RWD if I want better ride quality, or should I wait for the Sierra EV? I want an EV bigger than the Nexon, but I do not like the Curvv EV and was thinking of avoiding Mahindra because of the suspension. I tried the Nexon EV and new Punch EV and found their rear suspension much better than the XEV 9e and even the eVitara. Please guide.

Autocar India team

Autocar India

Verified
1w

What you felt in the Mahindra XEV 9e Pack Three is a fair observation. The XEV 9e does have a softer suspension tune, and for some rear seat passengers, that can translate into a floaty, slightly boat-like vertical movement over undulations, which can feel uncomfortable or even nauseating if you are sensitive to that kind of motion. As far as we know, there is no major suspension hardware difference between Pack One, Two and Three that fundamentally changes this character, so we would not expect the lower variants to feel significantly different in this regard.If rear seat ride quality and body control are a major priority, the Tata Harrier EV is the better option right now. It feels more tied down, composed and generally better controlled from the rear, without that excessive floatiness. If you still want to stay with Mahindra, the XEV 9e actually feels more balanced in this respect and does not have the same exaggerated bouncy character as the XEV 9S.That said, since you are clearly particular about ride quality and already like how Tata’s EVs are tuned, we would absolutely suggest waiting for the Tata Sierra EV as well, especially since its launch is right around the corner. It should sit in that sweet spot above the Nexon EV in size while potentially offering the kind of more settled suspension setup you seem to prefer.

VehicleMahindra XEV 9e
VehicleMahindra XEV 9S
VehicleTata Sierra EV
VehicleTata Nexon EV
VehicleTata Harrier EV