Is XP95 Ethanol Free? The Myth Every BS4 Owner Needs to Stop Believing

Is XP95 Ethanol Free? The Myth Every BS4 Owner Needs to Stop Believing

XP95 is not ethanol free. It contains 20 percent ethanol, the same as standard petrol. This has been confirmed by an RTI filed with Indian Oil Corporation, independently verified by a laboratory gas chromatography test conducted by Autocar India, and corroborated by multiple Right to Information replies across cities. If you have been paying the XP95 premium believing it protects your BS4 or older vehicle from ethanol-related damage, you have been paying for additives while receiving identical ethanol exposure.

This article presents the evidence, explains why the myth persists, and tells you what actually works.

Table of Contents

Is XP95 Ethanol Free?

No. XP95 is E20 petrol. It contains 20 percent ethanol by volume, the same as standard petrol at every other pump in India. There is no reduced-ethanol or ethanol-free option available in the XP95 grade or any other sub-100-octane premium grade at Indian retail pumps.

This is not ambiguous. It is not a matter of interpretation or regional variation. It is confirmed by the oil company itself through an official government transparency mechanism.

The Evidence, RTI Replies and a Lab Test

RTI Reply, IOCL, July 2025: A Right to Information application filed with Indian Oil Corporation in June 2025 asked two direct questions: what is the ethanol percentage in XP95 petrol sold in Kolkata, and what is the ethanol percentage in standard Motor Spirit sold in Kolkata. The reply, issued by IOCL’s Public Information Officer on 3 July 2025, gave the same answer to both questions: 20 percent. XP95 and standard petrol contain identical ethanol content.

A separate RTI filed earlier confirmed the same finding across Delhi outlets. IOCL’s pan-India response has been consistent: XP95 is blended with up to 20 percent ethanol across India, depending on availability of ethanol at supply locations. The upper limit is 20 percent. There is no minimum-ethanol or ethanol-free XP95 variant.

Gas Chromatography Lab Test, Autocar India, September 2025: Autocar India obtained fuel samples of standard petrol and XP95 from retail pumps and sent them for independent gas chromatography testing, the only scientifically reliable method for measuring ethanol content in fuel. The results were unambiguous. Standard petrol tested at 20.86 percent ethanol, slightly above the stated 20 percent, within blending tolerances. XP95 tested at 19.88 percent ethanol. Both grades are E20 fuels by any reasonable definition.

Autocar India also tested XP100 and Power 100 from the 100-octane segment. Both returned zero percent ethanol, confirming that E0 status is genuine and exclusive to the 100-octane grades.

The chromatography test is important because it eliminates the ambiguity created by water separation tests, a popular DIY method used by enthusiasts to detect ethanol in fuel. Water separation tests are unreliable. Fuel additives including MTBE can produce false positives, suggesting ethanol-free fuel when ethanol is present, or vice versa. The GC test is definitive.

Why the Myth Persists

Several factors reinforce the XP95-is-ethanol-free belief, none of them accurate.

The price premium signals quality: XP95 costs more than standard petrol. Consumers reasonably infer that a premium price means a purer or higher-quality product. In terms of performance additives, that is partially true, XP95 contains a detergent and deposit-control additive package that standard petrol does not. But those additives have no bearing on ethanol content. The price premium reflects additive cost, not ethanol reduction.

The name “XP95” sounds performance-oriented: “XP” implies extra performance. “95” appears to reference the octane rating. Neither part of the name says anything about ethanol content, but the branding positions the fuel as a cut above standard, leading buyers to assume it is better in every dimension.

Oil companies initially gave contradictory answers: When vehicle owners contacted IOCL, BPCL, and HPCL on social media in 2025 asking about ethanol content in premium grades, some responses incorrectly stated that premium fuels contained E10 or E15. Those responses were inaccurate. The RTI mechanism and independent testing have since provided authoritative confirmation that all sub-100-octane grades are E20.

Water separation tests produced confusing results: Home ethanol testing using the water separation method became popular on forums and YouTube in 2025. These tests frequently produced inconsistent results, sometimes suggesting low or zero ethanol in XP95, sometimes suggesting high ethanol. The inconsistency led some owners to conclude that XP95 had variable or lower ethanol content. The GC test confirmed this interpretation was wrong. The water separation method is not reliable for these fuels.

What XP95 Actually Is

XP95 is standard E20 petrol with a performance additive package. The additives serve real purposes:

Detergent additives help prevent carbon deposits on fuel injectors and intake valves, particularly relevant for fuel-injected engines that accumulate deposits over time.

Deposit-control chemistry helps maintain fuel system cleanliness in engines that see varied fuel quality or extended service intervals.

The 95 RON octane rating is not meaningfully higher than standard E20 petrol. Before the E20 mandate, standard petrol in India had a RON of approximately 91. Blending 20 percent ethanol raises the octane rating to approximately 95 RON. Standard E20 petrol now meets the 95 RON minimum under BIS IS 2796. XP95 and standard petrol are both 95 RON fuels. The octane gap that once existed between them has been eliminated by the ethanol mandate itself.

In practical terms: XP95 offers cleaner injectors and intake valves compared to standard petrol in fuel-injected engines. It offers no ethanol reduction, no corrosion protection from ethanol, and no mileage improvement beyond the small cleaning benefit for deposit-laden injectors.

What About Speed 95, Power 95, and Shell V-Power?

The same answer applies to all of them.

Bharat Petroleum’s Speed 97 contains 20 percent ethanol. BPCL confirmed this directly. Hindustan Petroleum’s Power 95 contains 20 percent ethanol. Shell V-Power, sold at select Shell outlets in India, contains 20 percent ethanol. All premium petrol grades below 100 octane in India are E20.

CarDekho independently confirmed this through oil company responses: there is no intermediate blending in India’s retail fuel market. The choice is binary, standard E20 petrol, premium E20 petrol with additives, or 100-octane E0 petrol. There is no reduced-ethanol middle ground at any price point.

What Should BS4 Owners Do Instead?

The underlying concern driving XP95 purchases among older vehicle owners is legitimate: ethanol damages fuel system components in BS3 and BS4 vehicles not designed for it. That concern is real and well-founded. The solution, however, is not premium petrol. It is targeted maintenance.

Replace nitrile rubber fuel hoses with Viton FKM equivalents. Nitrile rubber degrades under sustained ethanol exposure. Viton, also called FKM fluoroelastomer, is ethanol-resistant and is the appropriate replacement material. This is a one-time intervention that eliminates the primary mechanical risk. The relevant article on this site covers the replacement process in detail.

Inspect and replace carburettor bowl gaskets at service intervals. The carburettor bowl gasket in a carburetted BS4 bike is typically nitrile rubber. It is inexpensive and accessible. At your next service, ask the mechanic to check its condition and replace it if there is any sign of swelling or degradation.

Rejett the carburettor if misfiring. Carburetted engines running lean on E20, because ethanol has lower energy density than petrol, may exhibit rough idle, misfiring under load, or hesitation at partial throttle. Rejetting the carburettor corrects the air-fuel ratio for E20. This is a mechanic task, not DIY. It does not involve the ECU and applies only to carburetted engines.

Establish a mileage baseline. Measure your kmpl over three full tanks using a consistent method. Knowing your actual mileage gives you a reference point. A drop of more than 10 to 15 percent from your pre-E20 baseline suggests a fuel system issue worth investigating, not simply the expected mileage reduction from ethanol.

None of these steps involve premium petrol. The additive package in XP95 does not prevent ethanol-related seal degradation, does not reduce moisture absorption, and does not compensate for lean running in carburettors.

The Only Ethanol-Free Option at Indian Pumps

If you genuinely need ethanol-free petrol, for a vintage motorcycle, for long-term vehicle storage, or for a superbike with a 100-RON engine requirement, the options are XP100 from IOCL, Speed 100 from BPCL, and Power 100 from HPCL. All three are 100-octane, E0 fuel, confirmed ethanol-free by independent testing and RTI. They are available at select pumps in major cities and priced at approximately Rs 149 to 160 per litre.

They are not practical for daily commuting on cost grounds. For daily use in a BS4 bike, targeted maintenance is the answer. For long-term storage or a vehicle that genuinely requires ethanol-free fuel, XP100 and its equivalents are the correct choice.

XP95 is neither. It is E20 with additives. Use it for cleaner injectors if that matters to you. Do not use it as a substitute for ethanol-free petrol, because it is not one.

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