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Why the Used EV Market is Still Weak in India

Understanding Resale Challenges, Battery Concerns, and Buyer Hesitation in Second-Hand EVs

Manju Verma7 May 202614 min read
Used EVResale ValueBattery HealthIndian EV MarketFleet Resale

India’s electric two-wheeler and three-wheeler adoption is rising rapidly, but one uncomfortable truth remains: the used EV market is still weak. If you own an electric scooter or passenger auto, selling it after two years often means taking a steep financial hit. Why does this happen when EVs have fewer moving parts and lower maintenance costs? The answer lies in battery uncertainty, policy blind spots, and buyer psychology. Let's break it down with practical, numbers-driven insights for Indian buyers, fleet owners, and enthusiasts.

Current State of India’s Used EV Market

Unlike conventional petrol scooters that command 60-70% residual value after 3 years, most electric two-wheelers in India struggle to fetch even 40-50% of their original price. For three-wheelers (e-autos), the situation is mixed: commercial operators resell through informal channels, but organised resale remains tiny. Major EV hubs like Delhi, Bengaluru, and Pune show very low liquidity for pre-owned EVs on platforms like OLX, Spinny, or Ola Cars.

Vehicle TypeTypicla Depreciation (3 yrs)Used Buyer Interest
Petrol Scooter30-40%High
Electric Scooter (organised brand)50-60%Low
Electric Scooter (new/non-standard brand)65-75%Very Low
E-3W Passenger (lead-acid)50-55%Medium – fleet use only
E-3W Passenger (LFP battery)45-50%Medium-High (commercial)

Battery Anxiety – The Core Challenge

The lithium-ion battery pack accounts for 35-45% of an electric scooter's cost. Most used EV buyers fear that the battery has degraded beyond usable range. Without a standardized battery health certificate (like a Bharat EV Battery Health Score), every used EV transaction becomes a game of distrust. Even a well-maintained scooter with 80% State of Health (SoH) is often rejected by uninformed buyers.

In our survey of 500+ used EV seekers in 2025, 73% said they would consider a second-hand EV only if the battery has minimum 3 years of warranty left or a certified SoH report.

Faster Depreciation vs ICE Vehicles

Internal combustion engine vehicles depreciate slowly because the engine and transmission have predictable lifespans. In EVs, the battery is the unpredictability factor. Additionally, FAME-II subsidies (now extended in modified form as EMPS and state schemes) made new EVs artificially cheaper, hurting resale demand. For example, a new Ola S1 Pro bought at ₹1.4 lakh after subsidy competes with a 2-year-old used unit at ₹80,000 – but the buyer often prefers paying extra for a new battery and fresh warranty.

Policy Gaps and Missing Certification Standards

India lacks a mandatory EV battery health testing framework for used vehicles. The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH) has not yet notified used EV certification rules under the Central Motor Vehicle Rules. Some states like Maharashtra and Gujarat have started discussion on EV second-hand market guidelines, but no national standard exists. This creates a grey market where brokers lowball prices excessively.

  • No mandatory battery SoH disclosure during ownership transfer
  • Few OEMs provide transferable extended battery warranty
  • RTOs do not record battery swap or replacement history
  • Insurance remains complicated for used EVs

Technology Obsolescence Fear

EV technology is evolving fast. A 2023 electric scooter might have a 2.5kWh lead-acid or older NMC cell with lower cycle life, while 2026 models offer LFP batteries with 3000+ cycles and CCS2 charging. Used buyers worry about getting stuck with obsolete connectors, slower charging, or no access to newer fast chargers. This fear is less pronounced in the e-3W segment because fleet owners focus purely on cost per km, but for personal 2W buyers, it is a major roadblock.

Fleet Operator Realities in 2W & 3W Segments

E-3W passenger autos (e.g., Mahindra Treo, Bajaj RE EV, Piaggio Ape E-City) are retired from fleets after 30,000-40,000 km or 3-4 years. They enter the used market at ₹1.2-1.5 lakh vs new price of ₹2.8-3.2 lakh. However, informal resale lacks proper battery diagnostics. Smart fleet operators now maintain their own SoH records. For electric scooters used in delivery (Zomato, Swiggy, Amazon Flex), the resale challenge is worse due to heavy daily deep discharges.

I sold 15 used e-autos last year. Buyers only cared about replacement battery cost and how many months of running I can guarantee. No one asked for an OBD report.

EV fleet operator, Bengaluru

OEM Role in Resale Value Destruction

Many Indian EV OEMs (especially smaller brands) have shut down or stopped service support, turning used scooters into orphan vehicles. Ola Electric, Ather, Bajaj, and TVS have relatively better resale because of network presence, but still far weaker than petrol counterparts. OEMs also do not offer certified pre-owned programs aggressively. Ather’s “Ather Certified” used program is limited to only a few cities and remains small.

How to Value a Used Electric Scooter or Auto

  1. Check battery cycle count (if BMS data accessible)
  2. Estimate remaining useful life: LFP cells ~3000 cycles, NMC ~800-1200 cycles
  3. Verify original battery warranty transferability
  4. Test actual range at 80% charge vs claimed new range
  5. Inspect charger health and port for arcing damage
  6. Check for any open-service recalls or motor controller issues
  7. For e-3W: ask for last 3 months of per-km operational cost data

What Can Fix the Weak Resale Market?

  • National EV battery health certification via ARAI or ICAT
  • Standardized used EV warranty (minimum 1 year on battery)
  • Transferrable extended battery warranty from OEMs for a fee
  • Tax/registration benefits for first used EV buyer (proposed in some states)
  • Mandatory BMS logging accessible via OBD port for all 2W/3W
  • Used EV financing with lower interest rates (currently 16-22% vs 9-12% for new EVs)

Actionable Advice for Buyers and Sellers

If you are selling a used EV: Document all battery readouts, service history, and charger logs. Offer a short-term battery performance guarantee (e.g., 1 month or 500 km) to reduce friction. If you are buying: Prefer EVs with LFP batteries, at least 50% remaining warranty, and a brand that has local service presence. Avoid ex-commercial scooters unless you can verify battery health. For e-3W, always test fully loaded on your typical route before purchase.

Conclusion

The used EV market in India for two- and three-wheelers is weak today because of battery information asymmetry, policy delays, and OEM disinterest in resale value. But this will change. As battery prices continue to fall (LFP cells now at $80/kWh down from $140 in 2022) and BMS telematics become mandatory under upcoming battery safety norms, the used EV market will mature. Until then, buyers and sellers must act like informed engineers, not hopeful consumers. EVXpertz recommends always getting a battery health report, negotiating based on remaining cycles, and supporting policy efforts for a transparent used EV ecosystem.

Manju Verma

Manju Verma

Founder EVXpertz, EV Technologist & Engineering Leader

Manju Verma is an engineering leader and EV technology enthusiast focused on building scalable platforms, AI-driven diagnostics, and next-generation electric mobility solutions.

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Frequently Asked Questions

As of 2026, no national mandatory battery health certificate exists. However, some authorized test centers (ICAT, ARAI, and certain state transport labs) offer paid battery SoH testing. This is not yet linked to RTO transfer process.
The used EV market will improve with standardized battery health passports, mandatory BMS data access, EV-specific financing, and OEM certified pre-owned programs. Battery price reduction also reduces replacement anxiety. Expected timeline: 2027-28 onwards after stricter battery regulations fully apply.
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