The central-western part of the Indian subcontinent exhibits significant geological diversity and possesses a rich record of different tectonothermal events in the earth's evolutionary history, spanning from the Archean to the present. Precambrian geology in the region is mostly obscured by Cretaceous-Tertiary/Paleocene volcanic eruptions and Proterozoic to Quaternary/recent sedimentary cover. Magnetotelluric (MT) impedance and tipper responses from 146 stations, covering central-western India in a grid fashion with a spacing of ∼55 km, were analyzed to evaluate the subsurface structural trends, dimensionalities, and qualitative characteristics of the electric lithosphere in the region. An advanced Complex Apparent Resistivity Tensor (CART) approach, along with the popular Phase Tensor (PT) approach and induction arrows are utilized to achieve the above goals. The analysis revealed a high degree of 3D induction effects in the data at almost every station and period. The directionality information retrieved from the tensor properties showed that the structural trends in the deep crust and upper mantle of the major geologic domains correlate with the known surface tectonic trend of the respective geologic domain. This study provides vital evidence to support the suspected bifurcation of the Precambrian Aravalli-Delhi Mobile Belt (ADMB) tectonic trend and its extensions into neighboring Kutch, Saurashtra, and Central Indian Tectonic Zone (CITZ) domains. The analysis results indicate a lithospheric scale enhanced conductivity beneath the Malwa plateau, which marks the first major phase of the Reunion mantle plume eruption in India. A critical finding of this study is that the Resistivity Phase Tensor better defines the subsurface resistivity structure and provides much clearer structural information than the conventional Phase Tensor.