PRESS RELEASE
India, May 31, 2026
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In 2026, India's electric two-wheeler market has crossed 1.4 million annual sales — yet misinformation still prevents many buyers from making the switch. From range anxiety to battery fire fears to the idea that EVs are only for city elites, these 15 myths are consistently debunked by real Ampere owner experience and verified specifications.
Electric scooters have been on Indian roads long enough to build a substantial body of real-world evidence. Yet myths persist — often recycled from the early EV era, amplified by social media, or rooted in genuine confusion about how the technology works. This article addresses the 15 most common misconceptions about electric scooters in India, with direct and honest answers based on how Ampere scooters actually perform.
| Myth | Reality |
|---|---|
| Myth 1: The range always drops to zero without warning | All Ampere models show real-time battery percentage. Low-battery alerts appear well before depletion. |
| Myth 2: You can't ride an EV in the rain | Ampere scooters are designed for Indian monsoon conditions. Avoid deep flooding, but normal rain riding is fine. |
| Myth 3: IDC range is what you'll get daily | IDC range is a lab figure. Real-world range is 75–85% of IDC. Plan commutes accordingly. |
| Myth 4: EV batteries die in Indian summer heat | Ampere uses LFP chemistry — rated for high-temperature stability far above typical Indian conditions. |
| Myth 5: Cold weather completely destroys range | LFP chemistry is more cold-tolerant than NMC. Some range reduction in cold is normal but not severe. |
| Myth | Reality |
|---|---|
| Myth 6: Electric scooters catch fire easily | Fire incidents were tied to early NMC batteries with poor BMS. Ampere uses LFP — thermally stable, no thermal runaway. |
| Myth 7: Riding an EV in a flood is extremely dangerous | At flood depth exceeding ground clearance (165mm for Magnus Neo), risk increases — same as petrol scooters. |
| Myth 8: EV brakes are less effective than petrol | Ampere's CBS system distributes braking force automatically. Stopping distance is comparable or better on clean roads. |
| Myth 9: EV batteries explode if overcharged | Ampere BMS cuts power at full charge. LFP chemistry handles overcharge conditions without thermal runaway. |
| Myth | Reality |
|---|---|
| Myth 10: EVs are only for rich buyers | Ampere Reo 80 starts at ₹59,900. Magnus Neo at ₹86,999 with ₹0.18/km running cost is genuinely mass-market. |
| Myth 11: Maintenance is expensive and complex | EVs have no engine oil, spark plugs, or air filters. Annual service cost is typically ₹2,000–₹4,000 vs ₹7,000–₹12,000 for petrol. |
| Myth 12: The battery replacement will cost more than the scooter | Ampere's 5-year / 75,000 km battery warranty covers Magnus Neo, Grand, G Max, Nexus. LFP lasts 7–10 years with proper care. |
| Myth 13: Resale value is terrible for EVs | Established brand EVs (Ampere, Ather, Bajaj Chetak) are building stronger resale track records as market matures. |
| Myth | Reality |
|---|---|
| Myth 14: You need a special charger installed at home | All Ampere models charge from standard household sockets. Reo 80: 5A socket. Others: 15A socket. No special installation needed. |
| Myth 15: There are no service centres in smaller cities | Ampere has 420+ service touchpoints — intentionally covering Tier-2 and Tier-3 markets where premium brands often don't reach. |
Myths 1, 3, and 10 are the three most commonly cited reasons for hesitation in first-time EV buyer surveys. Range anxiety (Myths 1 and 3) fades within two weeks of actual ownership — once riders see their daily consumption and realise two or three days pass between charges. The cost myth (10) collapses the moment buyers calculate actual running costs: ₹0.18/km versus ₹3.50–₹5.00/km.
Myths 6 and 9 — the fire and explosion fears — deserve special attention because they carry genuine weight from news coverage of early EV incidents. The critical context: those incidents predominantly involved NMC or other chemistries with inadequate Battery Management Systems. Ampere's entire lineup uses LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate) — a chemistry with an inherently higher thermal stability threshold that has not been implicated in any of the major Indian EV fire incidents.
Some myths are brand-specific. The fire concerns (Myth 6) were most associated with Ola Electric's early S1 models in 2022 — the company has since improved its battery management significantly. TVS iQube's SmartXonnect platform largely addresses Myth 1 through real-time monitoring. Ather's extensive OTA update history helps counter Myth 15 in metro markets, though its limited Tier-2 reach keeps Myth 15 partially alive for Ather buyers in smaller cities. Bajaj Chetak's metal body and heritage branding directly combat Myth 13 on resale.
Ampere's position is unique: it simultaneously addresses the most financially-important myths (10, 11, 12) through pricing, the most technically-important (6, 9) through LFP chemistry, and the most logistically-important (15) through network reach. No other brand in the sub-₹1 lakh segment does all three.
The Battery Management System (BMS) monitors battery health continuously. Dashboard alerts will flag unusual temperature or charge behaviour. Professional battery health checks at Ampere service centres every 6–9 months are the standard recommendation.
Manufacturing emissions are real but are typically recovered within 1–2 years of riding versus petrol equivalents, depending on the electricity grid. As India's grid adds more renewables, this calculus improves every year. LFP chemistry (cobalt-free) also reduces the ethical supply chain concerns of some NMC batteries.
The Magnus Neo, Grand, G Max, and Nexus are full-speed scooters requiring a licence and rated for highway riding within their top speed limits (65–93 km/h). The Reo 80 at 25 km/h is not suited for highways. Range on highways at sustained higher speeds will be lower than IDC figures — plan charging accordingly for intercity routes.
The myths around electric scooters in 2026 are increasingly divorced from the lived experience of over 2.5 million electric two-wheeler owners in India. Real-world riding data, competitive battery chemistry, expanding service networks, and sub-₹90,000 pricing have answered most of these concerns definitively. The best way to eliminate the remaining doubt is a test ride — which takes about ten minutes and usually converts even committed sceptics.