Skoda’s latest sales report isn’t just a numbers update — it’s a split personality story.
One SUV is carrying the brand almost alone. Another is suddenly exploding in demand. And the overall chart? Still pointing down.
In May 2026, the brand sold 5,760 units in India, but the real shock lies beneath the surface.
Because while one model is slipping fast… another is rewriting its growth curve.
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ToggleWhat Happened in May 2026
Škoda Auto India recorded 5,760 domestic units in May 2026, marking:
- 15% decline YoY (vs 6,740 units in May 2025)
- 16% decline MoM (vs 6,886 units in April 2026)
But the headline number hides a much louder internal shift.
A two-model SUV story is now dominating everything else.
Quick snapshot:
| Model | May 2026 | YoY Change |
|---|---|---|
| Kylaq | 3,443 | -30% |
| Kushaq | 1,310 | +103% |
| Slavia | 861 | -8% |
| Kodiaq | 146 | -30% |
| Superb | 0 | — |
| Octavia | 0 | — |
And just like that — over 82% of Skoda’s entire India volume now comes from just two SUVs.
That’s not balance. That’s dependency.
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The Kylaq Problem: Still #1, But Slipping Hard
The Kylaq remains Skoda’s best-selling model, but the momentum story is turning uncomfortable.
- 3,443 units in May 2026
- Down 30% year-on-year
- Down 16% month-on-month
Even more striking: despite falling sales, it still contributes nearly 60% of Skoda’s total volume.
That’s both strength and risk at the same time.
Because when one product dominates this heavily, even a small slowdown can shake the entire brand structure.
And that’s exactly what’s starting to show.
Kushaq Suddenly Wakes Up — and It’s Loud
If Kylaq is the concern, the Kushaq is the surprise twist no one saw coming.
The midsize SUV posted:
- 1,310 units in May 2026
- 103% growth YoY (from 644 units)
This isn’t gradual recovery. It’s a full double-up.
And it matters even more because it competes in India’s most brutal battleground:
- Hyundai Motor India (Creta)
- Kia India (Seltos)
- Maruti Suzuki India (Grand Vitara)
- Honda Cars India (Elevate)
- MG Motor India (Astor)
- Toyota Kirloskar Motor (Hyryder)
The Kushaq surge suggests something deeper is happening: demand for turbo-petrol midsize SUVs is still alive — aggressively alive.
But there’s a catch.
Can it sustain this momentum without slipping back into niche territory?
That’s the question dealers are quietly asking.
Slavia & Kodiaq: The Quiet Pressure Point
The sedan story is softer — and slightly worrying.
Slavia:
- 861 units in May 2026
- 8% decline YoY
- But slightly up vs April 2026
The Slavia is still one of the few sedans offering turbo-petrol across variants, but the segment itself is shrinking in silence.
Kodiaq:
- 146 units
- 30% YoY decline
- But 26% MoM recovery
The flagship SUV is stable in product identity, but volume remains thin.
Powered by a 2.0L turbo petrol engine, it sits in a premium niche — where competition is less about numbers and more about perception.
Key Takeaway: Skoda Is Now an SUV Story — Almost Entirely
Here’s the uncomfortable truth from May 2026:
- Kylaq + Kushaq = 4,753 units
- Total sales = 5,760 units
- That’s 82% dependency on just two SUVs
That level of concentration is rare — and risky.
Because if one of them stumbles, the entire chart tilts instantly.
Contrarian View: Is This Actually a Strength in Disguise?
Here’s the opposite argument — and it’s not easy to dismiss.
Some analysts would say this isn’t weakness… it’s market alignment.
India’s SUV demand is still overpowering sedans, and brands like Skoda are simply:
- cutting dead weight (Superb, Octavia = 0 sales)
- focusing on high-volume SUVs
- doubling down on platforms that actually sell
In that reading, Skoda isn’t shrinking — it’s streamlining aggressively for survival efficiency.
But there’s a flip side.
What happens if SUV demand slows even slightly?
That’s where the risk becomes visible again.
What Happens Next
The next few months will quietly decide the direction of Skoda’s India story.
Three signals to watch:
- Can Kushaq maintain its 100%+ growth trajectory?
- Will Kylaq stabilize or continue sliding?
- Can Skoda rebuild a third strong pillar beyond SUVs?
Because right now, the brand is walking a tightrope built on two wheels.
And it doesn’t take much for balance to shift.
Final Thought
May 2026 isn’t just a sales update for Skoda — it’s a structural snapshot.
A rising SUV engine on one side. A declining volume base on the other. And a brand trying to hold both together in a fiercely competitive market.
The bigger question now is simple:
Is Skoda building a stronger SUV-led future… or becoming too dependent on it to stay stable?
Disclaimer: This article is based on publicly available information. No facts, figures, or outcomes have been invented. Interpretation and analysis may evolve as new data emerges.