IndiGo’s financial turbulence intensifies with a Q2 FY25 net loss ballooning to Rs 987 crore, a stark reversal from the Rs 189 crore profit in the year-ago quarter, hammered by soaring fuel costs that surged 12.8% to Rs 6,605 crore and a peak of mid-70s aircraft groundings that crippled capacity amid seasonal weakness. The low-cost carrier’s total income climbed 14.6% to Rs 17,760 crore on 5.8% passenger growth to 27.8 million, yet EBITDAR dipped marginally to Rs 2,434 crore with margins slipping to 13.7% from 15.8%, as aircraft lease expenses quadrupled to Rs 764 crore and CASK ballooned 11.8% to Rs 4.69. CEO Pieter Elbers flagged the “traditionally softer” September as exacerbated by AOGs—now easing to upper-60s—and forex volatility, projecting low-double-digit capacity growth in Q3 while international yields soften.
The loss’s lineage: Operational expenses spiked 21.9% to Rs 18,666 crore, with non-fuel costs up 28% on airport charges and rentals, ancillary revenues rising 20.9% to Rs 1,875 crore unable to offset the drag. As of September 30, IndiGo’s cash pile swelled to Rs 39,342 crore (Rs 24,360 free), liquidity at Rs 651.6 million post-€343 million injection, yet shares tumbled 11.8% to Rs 3,849.50, erasing 7.2% weekly gains. Brokerages like Kotak trim FY25 EBITDAR 14% on yield softness, maintaining “buy” at Rs 5,200 PT amid 23% order book to Rs 3,200 crore and international expansion to 40 destinations by FY25-end (30% ASK share).
This wider loss unveils not quarter’s quagmire, but endurance’s durable dance—veiled veils of Rs 987 crore from fuel’s fury, where aviation’s artistry yields reinvention’s radius in IndiGo’s majestic march.






