- Fuel and ownership costs make personal car cheaper daily.
Petrol and diesel prices have gone up by more than Rs 7 over the last two weeks, now breaching the Rs 100 per litre mark. For someone commuting from Noida to Gurugram, this price hike can be a big problem for monthly budgets. I asked ChatGPT which would be the cheaper, and perhaps the smarter, decision: driving your own car, or taking a cab?
The ChatGPT Prompt
I am a 35-year-old HR professional living in Noida Sector 76 and working in Sector 65, Gurugram. My daily commute covers around 58 kilometres one way. Due to heavy peak-hour traffic on the Noida-Gurugram route, the morning trip takes about 2 hours, and the evening return often stretches beyond 2 hours as well.
On days I take a cab both ways, I spend between Rs 1,800 and Rs 2,000. This includes a booking fee of Rs 6, tolls and surcharges of over Rs 100, and a one-way fare of Rs 900 to Rs 950.
On other days, I drive my personal hatchback, which gives around 15 km per litre in peak traffic. Petrol prices in Delhi have recently crossed Rs 100 per litre, rising by over Rs 7 per litre in the last 10 days alone.
Given these costs, which is the more economical option for my daily commute: booking a cab or driving my own car?
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ChatGPT Runs The Numbers
1. Driving Your Own Car
Round-trip commute: 116 km per day. With a hatchback mileage of around 15 km per litre in peak traffic and petrol at Rs 100 per litre, daily fuel consumption works out to roughly 7.5 litres, putting the daily fuel cost at around Rs 750.
But fuel is not the full cost of ownership. You should also factor in toll charges, car maintenance, tyre wear, engine wear from stop-and-go traffic, insurance, depreciation, and parking costs.
When all these expenses are considered, the practical running cost for a hatchback in heavy NCR traffic typically reaches Rs 8–Rs 10 per km, including fuel. Your realistic daily cost of driving a personal car comes to approximately Rs 930 to Rs 1,160.
2. Cab Both Ways
Your cab expenses work out to around Rs 1,800 to Rs 2,000 per day.
Driving your own hatchback is still significantly cheaper than booking cabs daily. However, there is a non-financial factor worth considering. Four-plus hours of daily driving in NCR traffic creates fatigue, stress, and long-term burnout risk.
If the budget allows, a hybrid approach may make more sense. Driving three to four days a week and using cabs selectively on more exhausting days. Exploring carpooling or a metro-plus-last-mile combination for part of the route is also worth considering. Purely on numbers, though, your own car is the more economical option right now.
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