The government has turned Nepal’s electric vehicle market completely upside down by throwing out the old tax system and building a brand-new one from scratch.
To help make sense of it all, here is a breakdown of what exactly changed, who wins, who loses, and the big-picture context that explains why this happened.
The Big Shift
For years, Nepal taxed electric vehicles based strictly on their motor size—measured in kilowatts (kW). The logic was simple: bigger motors meant a bigger tax bill.
The new budget completely scraps that logic. The government has entirely abolished the controversial EV excise tax. Instead, they are rolling out a system based purely on the invoice value (the actual cost) of the vehicle.
To power the country’s transition, the government has introduced a new “Clean Infrastructure Investment Fee.” Here is how the math shakes out now:
- Every single imported EV now faces a flat 20% customs duty.
- On top of that, the new infrastructure fee scales up drastically based on how expensive the car is.
- Toss in the unchanged 13% Value Added Tax (VAT) and a 5% road construction fee, and total tax rates now range from a base of 44% all the way up to a massive 217%.
Room Showdown: The Winners and Losers
Because the rules flipped from power to price, the entire showroom landscape has shifted overnight.
| Vehicle Type / Models | Old Tax Rate | New Tax Rate | Price Impact |
| High-Power, Mid-Budget (Jaecoo 6, Geely Galaxy, BYD Atto 2, Leapmotor) | ~81% | ~68% | These are the biggest winners. Under the old system, their high-kilowatt motors triggered massive taxes. Now, because their base price is lower, the tax burden has dropped by roughly 13.5%, making them cheaper to buy. |
| Budget Cars (Tata Tiago EV, Wuling Bingo, BYD Atto 1) | 41.5% | ~44% | Barely a Scratch: Affordable city hatchbacks see a tiny 2.5% tax bump. Showroom prices will stay relatively stable. |
| Premium Family SUVs (BYD Atto 3, Mahindra BE.6) | ~61% | 68% to 88% | Mid-to-high tier SUVs take a hit. Expect prices to jump noticeably as tax rates climb anywhere from 7% to 27% higher than before. |
| Luxury & Ultra-Luxury (Tesla, BMW, Audi) | ~81% | 163% to 217% | The government is aggressively squeezing luxury imports. Tesla’s tax rate has effectively doubled, while high-end European luxury brands face an eye-watering 135% tax increase. |
Why the Government Flipped the Script
The news reports map out what changes on the price tags, but they leave out the critical reasons why the Ministry of Finance made such a drastic U-turn:
Plugging a Revenue Deficit: Historically, fossil-fuel cars were the government’s cash cow, taxed at over 250%. When thousands of buyers switched to subsidized EVs, the national treasury’s tax revenue plummeted. This new policy aggressively reclaims that lost tax money from wealthy buyers purchasing luxury cars, while trying to keep mid-range performance vehicles affordable for the middle class.
Shoring Up Bleeding Cash Reserves: The sudden boom of premium EVs over the last two years caused a massive outflow of foreign currency reserves to China and India. By putting a heavy tax wall around high-end luxury EVs, the government is trying to slow down luxury spending and protect its foreign cash supplies.
The Hydro-Grid Bottleneck: Nepal produces an incredible surplus of clean electricity through its Himalayan hydropower plants, and the government wants citizens to use it. However, while the country has plenty of power, urban distribution grids are failing. Local transformers and neighborhood grids frequently blow out when thousands of EVs plug in at peak hours. The new “Clean Infrastructure Investment Fee” is explicitly designed to fund the urgent modernization of local power grids.