How to Buy a Used Electric Car in India
Buying a used electric car in India is a great way to get into an EV for less — but a used EV needs different checks than a petrol car. The battery is up to 40% of the car’s value and ages on its own, yet India has no mandatory battery-health disclosure. This checklist covers exactly what to verify before you buy.
1. Check the battery — State of Health (SoH) is everything
SoH is the single most important number in a used-EV deal — it’s the battery’s equivalent of an engine compression test.
- Above 85% — healthy.
- 80–85% — fine, but use it to negotiate.
- Below 80% — factor in a future battery replacement.
- Get an official battery health scan at a brand service centre (~20 min, ₹300–500), or do a range test: real range within ~15% of the claim is healthy; 25%+ below is a red flag.
2. Verify the battery warranty transfers to you
- Most EVs carry an 8-year / 160,000 km battery warranty.
- Confirm it is active and transferable to the second owner — call the manufacturer with the car’s VIN, don’t take the seller’s word.
- A transferable warranty on a car with high SoH is the best possible position to buy from.
3. Look at charging & range history
- Frequent DC fast charging ages a battery faster than home AC charging — ask how the car was usually charged.
- Compare the car’s real-world range today against its original claimed range.
- Ask for the service history — software/OTA updates and any battery service should be recorded.
4. Documents & ownership transfer
- RC (registration) and NOC if the car is from another state or was financed.
- Insurance transfer and FASTag reassignment.
- Full service records and both sets of keys/charging cables.
5. Red flags — walk away if…
- The seller won’t share an SoH report or allow a service-centre check.
- There’s no documented service history.
- The seller won’t allow a test drive.
- The price is based only on age and km with no mention of battery health (see the tip below).
Pro tip: use battery health to negotiate
Most sellers still price used EVs on age and kilometres alone — ignoring battery health. That’s your leverage: a car with 78% SoH priced like one at 90% is overpriced once you account for a possible battery replacement. An SoH report is the strongest bargaining tool you have.
Used EV buying — FAQs
What is a good battery State of Health (SoH) for a used EV?+−
Above 85% SoH is healthy; between 80–85% is usable but negotiate on price; below 80% means you should budget for an eventual battery replacement. SoH tells you how much of the original battery capacity remains.
How do I check the battery health of a used electric car?+−
Ask a brand-authorised service centre (Tata, MG, Mahindra, Hyundai, etc.) to run a battery health scan — it takes ~20 minutes and usually costs ₹300–500. As a rough DIY check, charge to 100% and drive in mixed conditions: if real range is within ~15% of the claimed figure it’s healthy; 25%+ below claim is a red flag.
Does the EV battery warranty transfer to the second owner?+−
Usually yes — most makers offer 8 years / 160,000 km on the battery and it typically transfers to the next owner, but confirm it directly with the manufacturer using the car’s VIN. Don’t rely on the seller’s word; ask if the battery warranty is active and transferable without fees.
Are used EVs cheaper to run than used petrol cars?+−
Yes — the running-cost advantage (cheap electricity vs petrol) applies to used EVs too. Use our EV vs Petrol calculator to estimate the savings for the specific model you’re considering.
Selling your EV instead?
List it on EV First and reach EV-ready buyers.