All India EVAll India EVAll India EV
Notification
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • EV News
  • EV Launch
  • Market Insights
  • Investments & Funding
  • Guest Articles
  • EV Engineering
  • Contact
Reading: Why BEAM Mobility Is Betting on India’s Overlooked Short-Distance Market
Share
All India EVAll India EV
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • EV News
  • EV Launch
  • Market Insights
  • Guest Articles
  • EV Engineering
  • Contact
Search
Follow US
BEAM Mobility
Home » Blog » Why BEAM Mobility Is Betting on India’s Overlooked Short-Distance Market
Guest Articles

Why BEAM Mobility Is Betting on India’s Overlooked Short-Distance Market

Ankit Sharma
By
Ankit Sharma
ByAnkit Sharma
Follow:
Last updated: 21 April 2026
Share
10 Min Read
SHARE
BEAM Mobility

While the industry chases highway-capable scooters and premium urban commuters, BEAM Mobility has quietly built an entire product philosophy around 5-km trips, license-free riders, and the 400 million Indians that conventional EVs were never really designed for. We spoke to founder Mainak Chanda to understand why.

Contents
  • The Market Gap
  • The 25 km/h Strategy
  • Connected Intelligence in a Low-Speed Vehicle
  • All India EV Perspective
  • Physical Retail in an EV World
  • The Longer Game

All India EV Editorial Desk
In conversation with Mainak Chanda, Founder, BEAM Mobility

Mainak Chanda – Founder, BEAM Mobility
Building India’s certified low-speed electric 2W platform — BL1.O, BL2.O, BL3.O — targeting neighbourhood mobility, rural women, campus commutes, and student-age riders across Tier-2 and Tier-3 India.

The EV industry loves a big number. Range. Top speed. Charging time. Horsepower. Every press release, every product launch, every media conversation in the Indian electric two-wheeler space is built around performance metrics borrowed from the ICE world, scaled up and electrified.

But Mainak Chanda, founder of BEAM Mobility, starts with a completely different number. One that doesn’t appear in any competitor’s brochure. 45%.

That is the share of daily trips in India that are under five kilometres. The morning school run. The local market dash. The inter-department shuttle on a hospital campus. The evening errand inside a gated community. These are not fringe use cases. They are the dominant pattern of mobility across semi-urban India, and according to Chanda, they remain almost entirely unaddressed by the existing EV product lineup.


The Market Gap

“Most vehicles in the market are designed for high-speed commuting,” Chanda told All India EV. “They are expensive, complex, and frankly unnecessary for short-distance travel. The person making a five-kilometre round trip every day doesn’t need a 90 km/h scooter with a 100-km range and a ₹1.5 lakh price tag. They need something simple, safe, and affordable — and nobody was really building that.”

A 70-km range covers 2–3 days of usage for most of our riders. That reduces range anxiety and charging frequency in a way that a 100-km range on a high-speed scooter never will — because those riders are still anxious about the daily recharge routine.”

— Mainak Chanda, Founder, BEAM Mobility


The 25 km/h Strategy

The speed cap is where BEAM’s product architecture becomes genuinely interesting. Under Indian EV regulation — specifically Clause 2 of GSR 291(E) dated January 2014, as amended by GSR 823(E) and GSR 838(E) in November 2023 — electric vehicles operating below 25 km/h are exempt from registration and licensing requirements. BEAM has built its entire go-to-market thesis around this provision.

More EV News

Journey of Motorama EV Private Limited
Journey of Motorama EV Private Limited
Trust Doesn’t Ship Overnight: Why Ather Leads, and Ola Lags
Beyond Identity: The Technical Backbone of Battery Aadhaar
How A Plus Charge Is Transforming Northeast India’s EV Charging Ecosystem
Naxatra Labs Raises $3 Million Pre-Series A Led by Rainmatter to Scale Indigenous Motor Technology for EVs and Industrial Applications

“Any member of the family can ride it,” Chanda explains. “No paperwork, no compliance, no waiting. You buy it and you use it immediately.” For a first-time EV buyer in a Tier-2 town — perhaps a school student, a homemaker, a senior citizen, or a campus worker — that friction elimination is not a minor convenience. It is the difference between purchase and no purchase.

The segment targeting is correspondingly precise. BEAM has identified four primary user archetypes through market research: rural and semi-urban women who find conventional two-wheelers heavy and intimidating; students aged 16 and above navigating multiple daily activities without a license; campus and closed-community users in hospitals, universities, and industrial parks; and residents of gated communities making intra-colony trips. Each product in the BL lineup is mapped to one or more of these profiles.


Connected Intelligence in a Low-Speed Vehicle

One of the more counterintuitive aspects of BEAM’s positioning is the emphasis on connected technology in a vehicle category that the industry rarely associates with sophistication. Through the BEAM Connect App, users can remotely switch the vehicle on or off, arm and disarm security functions, receive theft alerts, track the vehicle’s location in real time, and monitor battery state of charge. For campus deployments, the BEAM EYE App adds geo-fencing and fleet immobilization capabilities.

Chanda is emphatic that this is not a feature add-on — it is trust infrastructure. “A vehicle should provide not just mobility but confidence and control to the user,” he said. “Many of our buyers are first-time EV owners. Connected intelligence transforms a simple vehicle into something that feels safe, accountable, and transparent. That matters enormously when you are asking someone to make a technology shift.”


All India EV Perspective

BEAM’s connected tech approach is worth examining beyond the feature list. In the low-speed EV category — which has historically struggled with consumer trust due to quality concerns from unbranded manufacturers — app-based oversight gives buyers a verifiable, real-time window into their vehicle. This is not smartphone integration for its own sake. It is a trust-building mechanism targeted squarely at first-generation EV adopters who have limited reference points for what “a reliable EV” should feel like.

The addition of the BEAM Connect App as a service channel — with owner’s manuals, technician connectivity, and YouTube tutorials built in — also signals a mature understanding of after-sales economics in Tier-2 and Tier-3 markets, where physical service touchpoints are sparse and digital-first support can be a genuine differentiator.


Physical Retail in an EV World

At a time when several EV companies have doubled down on direct-to-consumer digital sales, BEAM is expanding its physical dealership footprint — with a deliberate focus on Tier-2, Tier-3, and taluka markets. Chanda’s reasoning is anchored in consumer psychology rather than operational convenience. “Purchasing an EV is not just a deal for many customers — it represents a shift to completely new technology,” he noted. “Buyers want to see the vehicle, experience the ride quality, ask practical questions about charging, battery life, and post-sales service. That human interaction cannot be replicated by a website.”

For the segments BEAM is targeting — women riders making a first vehicle purchase, students seeking family approval, campus administrators evaluating fleet solutions — the dealer relationship carries disproportionate weight. And Chanda acknowledges that dealer economics matter as much as consumer experience: “Higher-speed vehicles typically offer better dealership economics, including higher ticket sizes and improved service revenue. That is one reason why our roadmap extends beyond the low-speed category — because a strong dealer network needs the economics to sustain itself.”

In Tier-2, Tier-3, and taluka markets, personal interaction and local trust play a very important role in purchase decisions. Our dealers are not just distribution channels — they are the face of BEAM in those communities.”

— Mainak Chanda, Founder, BEAM Mobility


The Longer Game

BEAM’s current positioning as a low-speed EV specialist is, by Chanda’s own admission, a starting point rather than a ceiling. The company has articulated a product roadmap extending into mid-speed and higher-speed electric two-wheelers — not as a pivot away from its core market, but as a natural extension of it. “Many users who begin with low-speed EVs will eventually need higher speed and longer range,” Chanda explained. “We want them to find that upgrade within the BEAM ecosystem, not somewhere else.”

The strategic logic holds. BEAM’s Tier-2 and Tier-3 customer base is precisely the segment that mid-speed EVs are beginning to target aggressively. If BEAM can establish brand trust in those markets through its accessible, license-free entry products, the economics of an upgrade purchase become considerably easier — for the customer and for the dealer.

On the policy front, Chanda prioritised two specific interventions when asked what would most accelerate responsible EV adoption: stronger dealer-level support ecosystems, and platform commonisation across EV products. The latter — standardising key components and architectures across vehicle models — is a supply-side efficiency argument that the Indian EV industry has discussed for years without decisive action. BEAM’s own multi-model lineup gives it a direct stake in making that argument heard.

What is clear from this conversation is that BEAM Mobility is not trying to out-range or out-accelerate the mainstream EV pack. It is working a different problem set entirely — one defined by accessibility, trust, and the unglamorous daily reality of how most Indians actually move through their neighbourhoods. In a market that consistently overvalues speed and undervalues simplicity, that might just be the most defensible position of all.

Read More: Catch up on All India EV’s related coverage on India’s evolving commercial EV subsidies and battery swapping policies at All India EV

Rare-Earth Magnets
Rare-Earth Magnets: The India–China Reality Check
Delhi EV Policy 2026: The Real Gap Is Not in Vision, But in Making EVs Work on the Ground
The Missing Layer — Why Power Electronics Will Define India’s EV Future
One Device, Every Protocol — The Universal Data Logger for Batteries, EVs & Energy Systems
Exponent Energy Enters Retrofit Business; Launches ‘Exponent Oto’ 15-Minute Rapid-Charging Retrofit EV Technology

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
Loading
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Copy Link Print
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow US
XFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
LinkedInFollow
UP EV Charger Subsidy under VGF Step-by-step process
8 July 2026
Revolt Motors unveils RVX electric motorcycle priced at ₹1.24 lakh
Revolt Motors unveils RVX electric motorcycle priced at ₹1.24 lakh
6 July 2026
uantum Energy partners with Hero FinCorp to enable easy financing for electric scooters
Quantum Energy partners with Hero FinCorp to enable easy financing for electric scooters
6 July 2026
All India EV: Edition 51
What all happened in June 2026?
Click Here
All India EV Footer
All India EV
India's EV Industry Desk

All India EV is a media, market research and market intelligence platform tracking the companies, technologies, capital and market shifts shaping India's electric mobility ecosystem.

News Categories

  • EV News
  • EV Launch
  • Market Insights
  • Investments & Funding
  • EV Engineering
  • Guest Articles

Follow the Network

Instagram Follow daily EV updates LinkedIn Join the industry conversation WhatsApp Join the AIEV community

Contact the Desk

Business & Editorial
business@allindiaev.com
Website
www.allindiaev.com
Based In
New Delhi, India

© 2026 All India EV. All rights reserved.

Aware Educate Promote

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?