E-Bikes: Are They Really Cost-Effective Amid Petrol Price Hikes in Pakistan?
Key takeaways
- Add ARY News on Google AAResize Pakistan’s petrol price hit Rs399.86/L on May 1, 2026, after a Rs6.51 hike, while high-speed diesel jumped Rs19.39 to Rs399.58/L.
- Petrol was Rs393.35/L in late April, up nearly Rs27/L in one go.
- Year-on-year, April petrol prices averaged Rs374.73/L vs Rs310.53/L in March, a 21% jump.
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
Add ARY News on Google AAResize Pakistan’s petrol price hit Rs399.86/L on May 1, 2026, after a Rs6.51 hike, while high-speed diesel jumped Rs19.39 to Rs399.58/L. That puts both fuels a hair away from the Rs400 threshold. For millions of commuters, students, and delivery riders, filling a 10L bike tank now costs ~Rs3,999. At 35-40 km/L, that’s roughly Rs10-11.4 per km in fuel alone. So the question is urgent: do e-bikes actually save money, or just shift the cost somewhere else?
The latest hike isn’t isolated. Petrol was Rs393.35/L in late April, up nearly Rs27/L in one go.
Year-on-year, April petrol prices averaged Rs374.73/L vs Rs310.53/L in March, a 21% jump. The trigger: Middle East tensions and a 167% spike in Pakistan’s weekly oil import bill, from $300M to $800M. Globally, Brent crude swung from $126/barrel fears to ∼$101 on May 6, but domestic levies remain heavy. The petroleum levy on petrol was cut to Rs103.50/L but a new Rs28.69/L levy was added on diesel. With IMF pressure to meet a Rs1.468 trillion levy target, relief looks unlikely.