New Delhi: McLaren’s India line-up may be heading for a dramatic price correction, with market sources indicating substantially revised pricing for the brand’s supercar range. If the leaked figures hold true, the British performance marque could suddenly look a little less “lottery-winner only” and a bit more “still wildly expensive, but mathematically less frightening.”
According to the market price leak, the McLaren 750S Coupe could be priced at around ₹4.94 crore, a sharp drop from its current listed price of approximately ₹7.94 crore. The open-top McLaren 750S Spider may see its price revised to around ₹5.46 crore, compared to the present figure of about ₹8.78 crore.
The more grand touring-focused McLaren GTS is also expected to witness a notable correction, with the leaked price suggesting a figure of around ₹3.83 crore, against the current price of nearly ₹6.15 crore.
If implemented, the move would mark one of the most significant price adjustments in India’s ultra-luxury performance car segment. The revised figures could make McLaren’s range more competitive against rivals from Ferrari, Lamborghini, Porsche and Aston Martin, particularly among buyers who are already shopping in the rarefied air of multi-crore supercars.
The McLaren 750S is among the most powerful series-production models from the brand, carrying forward the legacy of the 720S with sharper performance, lower weight and track-focused engineering. The Spider offers similar performance with the added benefit of roof-down drama, because apparently 700-plus horsepower was not already dramatic enough.
Meanwhile, the McLaren GTS is positioned as a more usable supercar, combining long-distance comfort with McLaren’s lightweight construction and high-performance character. In simple terms, it is the one you can take to a five-star hotel without explaining why your spine needs a service appointment.
There has been no official confirmation from McLaren India regarding the revised prices. Until formally announced, the figures should be treated as indicative market information. However, if the leaked pricing becomes official, it could give McLaren a stronger foothold in India’s growing super-luxury car market, where exclusivity still matters—but a few crore rupees saved never hurt anyone’s garage plans.
For now, Indian supercar buyers may want to keep one eye on McLaren’s official price list and the other on their bank relationship manager.