In October 2025, India’s overall fuel sales slightly declined by 0.4% year-on-year to 20.17 million metric tons. Diesel consumption fell marginally by 0.3%, while petrol sales surged 7.4%, driven by strong festive travel demand. LPG and aviation turbine fuel also recorded steady growth during the month.
India’s fuel consumption in October 2025 exhibited divergent trends amid the festive season. Total fuel sales dipped 0.4% year-on-year, amounting to 20.17 million metric tons, reflecting subdued diesel demand offset by a robust increase in petrol consumption, according to data from the Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell (PPAC).
Diesel, the country’s most consumed fuel, saw a slight decline of 0.3% at 7.62 million metric tons compared to the previous year. This decline breaks the usual seasonal recovery pattern post-monsoon, likely due to slower industrial and freight activity, alongside increased adoption of cleaner alternatives like electric vehicles and compressed natural gas in transport.
Conversely, petrol sales rose sharply by 7.4% to 3.67 million metric tons, fueled by heightened private mobility and festive travel, alongside increased two-wheeler and passenger vehicle sales.
Other fuel segments also showed positive momentum:
LPG sales rose 5.6% to 2.87 million metric tons, supported by household demand and expansion of the PM Ujjwala Yojana scheme.
Aviation turbine fuel (ATF) sales increased by 1.6%, aligned with growing air travel demand.
This data reflects a dynamic fuel consumption landscape, with petrol and cleaner energy choices gaining ground even as traditional diesel demand remains challenged.
Key Highlights:
-
Total fuel sales down 0.4% YoY at 20.17 million metric tons in October 2025
-
Diesel sales decline by 0.3% YoY to 7.62 million metric tons
-
Petrol sales increase 7.4% YoY to 3.67 million metric tons, driven by festive travel
-
LPG consumption rises 5.6% with expanding household coverage
-
Aviation turbine fuel sales grow 1.6% reflecting air travel recovery
-
Diesel demand subdued due to slower freight activity and shift to cleaner fuels
Sources: Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell (PPAC), Business Standard, Reuters, ANI, Times of India