Scooter tool

See what an electric scooter could cost you to run.

Use your own electricity price, petrol price, and yearly distance. This estimate focuses on energy spend so you can compare options quickly without pretending the same ownership pattern fits every city.

Model your local ownership pattern.

All money fields are INR. The scooter selector shows the current India electric scooter catalog.

Bounce Infinity E1

Plus

Bounce Infinity E1 stays cheaper to run than a 45 km/l petrol scooter at these prices.

Annual energy cost
Annual difference
21,231
1,769/month
Ownership horizon
71,193
Energy ₹63,693 + maint. ₹7,500
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I’d save ₹21,231 per year with Bounce Infinity E1 Plus over a petrol scooter at these prices.

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Bounce Infinity E1

Plus

The Infinity E1 Plus makes the most sense as a low-speed city scooter with a removable battery. It is more practical than a pure swap-only product, but the weaker brand scale and limited network still make it a cautious buy.

How to read this tool

Use this estimate as a running-cost check, not the whole ownership story.

What this estimate uses

The result uses your electricity price, petrol price, yearly distance, and the selected scooter. For fixed-battery scooters, the tool estimates electricity use from battery size and real-world range. For swap-battery scooters, it uses a conservative proxy because the local plan matters more than the pack size alone.

What this estimate does not cover

This is a running-cost check, not a full ownership-cost model. It does not include insurance, finance, registration, tyre wear, or city-specific swap-plan pricing. Use it to compare energy spend first, then check charging fit and service confidence before you decide.

Questions buyers ask

What to know before you treat the number as your answer.

Is an electric scooter always cheaper to run than a petrol scooter?

Usually, but not automatically. The result depends on your home electricity price, yearly distance, and the petrol benchmark you compare against. The gap is often larger when you ride more and can charge cheaply at home.

Why does a swap-battery scooter use a proxy instead of a precise energy cost?

Because the local swap plan and network terms can change the real ownership case more than the battery size alone. The tool gives you a cautious energy-use estimate, but you should still verify the actual city plan before treating it as final.

Should I decide based on running cost alone?

No. Running cost is only one part of the decision. You should also check whether your charging setup works in real life and compare the scooter against nearby alternatives before you shortlist it.