Hero Motocorp Quietly Became The Biggest Gainer In Electric Two-Wheelers In FY26
Shatrughan Jha published this on April 5, 2026.
Updated: April 5, 2026 at 04:35 PM
Hero MotoCorp’s electric two-wheeler brand Vida ended FY26 with a market share of 10.3 percent, making it the single largest year-on-year market share gainer in the electric two-wheeler segment. At the start of FY26, Vida’s share was around 2 to 3 percent. The 10.3 percent figure by March 2026 represents a near-fourfold increase in share within a single financial year, the biggest swing of any brand in the segment.
In March 2026, TVS Motor led the electric two-wheeler market with 31,107 units, followed by Bajaj’s Chetak at 21,263 units. Ather came in third, Vida fourth, and Ola Electric fell to fifth with 10,117 units, down from its earlier position of market leader. Hero Vida’s March volume of approximately 18,000 units placed it firmly in the top five and within striking distance of the podium.
The numbers highlight how dramatic that shift has been:
- A 7.8 percentage point increase within one financial year, more than a fourfold expansion.
- In March, Vida’s volume of around 18,000 units is only 3,263 units behind Bajaj Chetak.
What Drove the Vida Surge?
The volume behind Vida’s share gain came primarily from the Vida V2 and the more affordable Vida Z series, which Hero launched at sub-Rs 1 lakh price points to compete directly in the mass market segment. The Vida Z starts at Rs 84,490, making it one of the cheapest electric scooters from a mainstream OEM in the market. This price positioning opened a buyer segment that was previously going to either Ola or TVS iQube, both of which had been the dominant players below Rs 1 lakh.
This starting price is crucial because mass-market electric scooters have become a pricing game as much as a technology game. Once a product drops below the Rs 1 lakh threshold, it enters a much larger consideration set. Vida Z at Rs 84,490 sits more than Rs 15,000 below that line, and this difference can cover registration, accessories, insurance, or financing cost for many buyers, particularly in smaller cities where total ownership cost matters most. Hero understood that the next wave of EV growth was unlikely to come only from early adopters in larger cities.
