A few years ago, Ola Electric looked like the company that had already won India's EV two-wheeler race before anyone else had finished setting up. At its peak, it held nearly half the market. It had the boldest story, the biggest gigafactory ambitions, and a founder who made every other competitor seem incremental by comparison.

Today, TVS is India's top electric scooter brand. Bajaj is breathing down its neck. Ather is quietly growing faster than almost anyone predicted. And Ola is fighting its way back from one of the sharpest market share collapses in Indian startup history.

India's EV market is genuinely booming — roughly one in every ten scooters sold today runs on electricity. The race, however, has entered a completely new phase. This is no longer about who can grow the fastest. It is about who can build a business that actually makes money.

THE MARKET: GROWING FASTER THAN THE FORECASTS

Retail sales in India reached around 14 lakh electric two-wheelers in FY26 — a 21.81% jump from the previous year. In May 2026 alone, about 1.7 lakh scooters were registered, rising more than 8% after a small dip in April.

The growth drivers are structural, not speculative. Electric scooters are dramatically cheaper to run than petrol alternatives for daily commuters. Charging infrastructure is improving steadily. PM E-DRIVE scheme support is reducing costs. And product quality — range, features, build — has improved so dramatically over the past three years that range anxiety is no longer the deterrent it once was.

This is a growing market. The real fight is over who captures that growth profitably.

TVS AND BAJAJ: THE OLD GUARD RUNNING THE NEW RACE

In May 2026, TVS Motor was India's top electric scooter brand with 42,376 units and a 24.9% market share. Bajaj Auto, through Chetak, was close behind at 39,104 units and a 22.9% share — up more than 13% month-on-month. Together, they control nearly half the EV market. The financial foundation beneath these numbers is what makes them so durable. TVS and Bajaj are not burning investor cash to fund their EV sales. Their EV businesses sit inside large, healthy, profitable petrol vehicle companies. TVS reported an operating EBITDA margin of 13.1% and its highest-ever quarterly revenue of ₹12,808 crore in Q4 FY26. That gives them an advantage that no pure-play EV startup can easily replicate — the ability to keep investing in EVs regardless of whether the EV segment itself is profitable today.

Hero MotoCorp is also showing up strongly. Its EV brand, Vida, grew 196% in FY26 and nearly tripled sales to 1.44 lakh units. The traditional two-wheeler industry is not sitting this out. They are entering at scale, using the distribution, service networks, and brand trust that took them decades to build.

ATHER: THE SMARTEST PURE-PLAY IN THE RACE

While TVS and Bajaj grabbed headlines, Ather Energy quietly built what may be the most disciplined pure-EV business in India. Most people still think of it as a Bengaluru premium startup. That picture is outdated.

In May 2026, Ather held 16.5% market share with 28,190 units. Its FY26 sales grew 82.3% year-on-year to 2.39 lakh units — one of the fastest growth rates among established players.

The strategy behind that growth was deliberately two-pronged. First, Ather launched Rizta — a more comfortable family scooter — to open markets beyond its core sporty urban buyer. Second, it doubled its experience centres from 351 to 700 in a single year, making the brand accessible in geographies where it had barely existed before.

The results show this working. Ather's production cost per scooter fell 9% year-on-year. Its loss narrowed from ₹812 crore in FY25 to ₹517 crore in FY26. In Q4 FY26, EBITDA margin improved to -2.5% — which means Ather is very close to breaking even at the operating level.

The next milestone to watch is Ather's EL Platform launch — its first product targeting the ₹1–1.25 lakh mass-market segment where it currently has no presence. If the EL01 scooter lands well, Ather's addressable market expands dramatically overnight.

OLA ELECTRIC: THE MOST DRAMATIC CRASH — AND A GENUINE COMEBACK

No Indian startup story in recent memory has been as dramatic as Ola Electric's fall and partial recovery. At its peak, it held nearly 50% market share. By February 2026, that had collapsed to just 3,968 monthly units and a 4.6% share. The stock fell from ₹157 at listing to ₹22.25 — an 85% crash. ICRA downgraded the company, and a prominent brokerage issued a sell call with a ₹20 target, pointing to survival concerns. The diagnosis was straightforward: Ola scaled too fast without building the service infrastructure to match. Repair waits stretched to nine days. Spare parts were unavailable. Customers moved to TVS and Bajaj because the experience was simply more reliable. Trust, once lost, is expensive to rebuild.

The recovery is real and operationally measurable. Ola cut operating expenses to focus on services. Average repair time came down from 9 days to 1 day. Its Gen 3 scooter platform received PLI certification, which saves approximately ₹40,000–45,000 per vehicle. It began developing an in-house LFP battery cell to reduce expensive import dependence.

The result: Ola bounced from 3,973 units in February 2026 to 15,139 units in May 2026 — a near-4x recovery in three months. Operating cash flow turned positive in Q4 FY26 for the first time. The stock rallied 60% from its lows.

The critical question for Ola is volume. At around 20,000–25,000 scooters per month, Ola believes it can reach EBITDA breakeven. May's 15,139 units means it is still below that threshold — close, but not there. The next three months will determine whether this is a genuine structural recovery or a temporary bounce.

THE PROFIT REALITY: WHO ACTUALLY MAKES MONEY?

Sales rankings are exciting. But the number that determines the long-term outcome is profitability.

Ather's gross margin stands at 25% with EBITDA margin at -2.5% — very close to operational breakeven. Ola's gross margin is a striking 38.5% — actually higher than Ather's — but EBITDA margin of -123% in Q4 reflects the fixed-cost burden of a company running well below its optimal volume. The full-year FY26 operating EBITDA margin of approximately -53.4% is the more representative figure as volumes rebuild.

The Ola number requires context. Q4 FY26 was a deliberate reset quarter — Ola sold only 20,256 units while carrying the fixed costs of a much larger operation. At higher volumes, the operating leverage works significantly in Ola's favour. The 38.5% gross margin is genuine product strength. The loss is a volume problem, not a structural one — which means it is fixable.

TVS and Bajaj do not disclose separate EV margins, but their overall profitability — 13%+ EBITDA margins at the company level — means they can sustain EV investment indefinitely without existential financial pressure.

THE VALUATION PICTURE

Ather trades at around 10x Price-to-Sales, Ola at approximately 7.7x, while TVS trades near 2.8x. That premium signals the market expects strong future growth from both pure-plays — leaving little room for operational execution mistakes.

The valuation gap between TVS and the pure-play EV companies reflects both risk and optionality. TVS is cheap because its EV upside is embedded in a large petrol business. Ather and Ola are expensive because they represent a pure bet on EV adoption — with no safety net if volumes disappoint.

WHAT TO WATCH NEXT

Three specific data points will define the next chapter of India's EV scooter race.

Ola's monthly registration numbers. Breakeven is estimated at 20,000–25,000 units. May's 15,139 is close but not there. Watch whether June and July continue the upward trajectory or reveal the February recovery as a temporary spike.

Ather's EL01 launch. A credible mass-market product from India's most operationally disciplined pure-play EV company would be the most significant competitive development in the sector since Rizta launched.

Capacity war dynamics. Ather's new 10-lakh-unit-per-year Factory 3.0 starts from Q3 FY27. TVS, Bajaj, Hero, and Ola are all adding capacity simultaneously. If supply expands faster than demand, price pressure will compress margins across the entire industry — hurting loss-making players most severely.

India is selling 14 lakh electric scooters a year. It will sell considerably more by 2030. The question is not whether the market grows. It is who builds the service infrastructure, the manufacturing cost efficiency, and the product range to turn that growth into durable, sustainable profit.

Right now, TVS and Bajaj are winning on both dimensions. Ather is winning on execution discipline. Ola is winning on product economics but losing on volume recovery. The race has entered its most interesting phase yet.