India's Used Car Market Shifts Gears as Tier-2 Cities Drive 62 percent Demand: Cars24 Report
NewsVoir
Gurugram (Haryana) [India], March 27: For most of the past decade, the story of India's used car market was essentially a story about its largest cities. Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, and Hyderabad drove volumes. National trends were, in many ways, just metropolitan trends dressed up in aggregate numbers.
That is no longer true. According to the Cars24 Gears of Growth Report 2025, Tier-2 cities now account for 62% of all used car sales in India, with metro cities contributing the remaining 38%. The centre of gravity has shifted, and it has brought with it a fundamentally different kind of buyer with different priorities, different budgets, and different ideas about what a car should do.
The numbers from the Cars24 Gears of Growth Report tell a clear story about where momentum now lives in the Indian used car market. Delhi's share of national sales dropped from 13.8% in 2024 to 5.8% in 2025. Haryana fell from 10.7% to 5.6%. These are not marginal corrections. They represent a structural rebalancing of where demand is being generated.
State-wise market share: 2024 vs 2025
Metro and non-metro buyers are not buying the same car for the same reason
What makes this shift analytically interesting is that metro and non-metro buyers are not simply buying the same cars in different locations. They represent genuinely distinct demand profiles, shaped by different economic circumstances, road conditions, income levels, and expectations of car ownership.
Metro buyers tend to treat used cars as a stepping stone to a better vehicle. They upgrade more frequently, are more willing to pay for convenience features like automatic transmissions, and lean toward SUVs and premium hatchbacks. For this segment, the used car market functions as an aspirational ladder.
Non-metro buyers approach the market differently. For many, this is their first car purchase. The decision is driven by functional need: reliable daily transportation, low maintenance costs, fuel efficiency, and strong parts availability at local service centres. Longer ownership cycles mean resale value and durability matter more than style.
Model preferences reveal two distinct sets of priorities, not just two price points
The Nexon is the top-selling model in both geographies, which speaks to its broad appeal across price points and use cases. But the divergence begins immediately after. Metros rank the Baleno second, a premium hatchback with feature-rich trims and strong automatic penetration. Non-metro markets place the Grand i10 second, a model valued for its simplicity, low running costs, and widespread service network.
The Nexon is the top-selling model in both geographies, which speaks to its broad appeal across price points and use cases. But the divergence begins immediately after. Metros rank the Baleno second, a premium hatchback with feature-rich trims and strong automatic penetration. Non-metro markets place the Grand i10 second, a model valued for its simplicity, low running costs, and widespread service network.
Tamil Nadu leads on spending, Uttar Pradesh reflects a value-first buyer base
Average selling price by state: top 5 markets (2025)
Tamil Nadu leads on average selling price at Rs 5.49 lakh, supported by strong mid-to-premium demand and a higher concentration of newer vehicles. Uttar Pradesh sits lowest at Rs 4.90 lakh, reflecting its value-oriented buyer base and a higher share of older, entry-level vehicles.
Three forces turning smaller cities into the engine of national used car demand
Expanding Tier-2 cities and rising incomes among salaried and self-employed households have created a new class of first-time car buyers. For these buyers, a used car is not a compromise. It is a considered financial decision that maximises value while managing risk on an unfamiliar purchase.
Digital platforms reducing the trust gap
SME activity and trade-driven demand
Gujarat's sharp rise from 8.7% to 13.1% market share is not purely a consumer story. The Cars24 Gears of Growth Report points to strong SME activity, expanding trade hubs, and rising digital adoption across industrial clusters as key drivers. In many non-metro markets, vehicles serve dual purposes, moving families and moving goods, which creates a more consistently motivated demand base than pure urban consumption.
The used car market's geographic diversification is not a temporary pheno
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