E-Went has a new electric scooter called the Foxy, and the first wave of details focuses on day to day use in Indian cities. On February 27, 2026, ZigWheels and BikeDekho both described it as a practical, tough “multi utility vehicle” style scooter built for commuting and errands, not just short hops.
If you also follow launches outside India, you can compare how brands position new models in other regions in this update on the Xiaomi Electric Scooter 6 series launch in Europe.
What E-Went and early reports say the Foxy targets
ZigWheels says E-Went built the Foxy for “Indian urban conditions” and aims it at riders who want simple, strong performance and long range in one scooter. BikeDekho echoes that and frames the Foxy as a rugged daily commuter with a focus on practicality.
The standout claim is load capacity. Both outlets say the Foxy supports up to 272 kg and can climb inclines up to 12 degrees. Those numbers will matter for riders who commute with a pillion, carry shopping, or ride over flyovers and ramps.
Motor, speed, and acceleration numbers
Both reports list the same motor figures. They say the Foxy uses a BLDC hub motor with 3.2 kW peak power and 2 kW continuous power.
For city speed, they claim a 60 km/h top speed and a 0 to 40 km/h run in 4 seconds. Those figures place it in the “keep up with traffic” zone for many Indian urban roads, but independent road tests will decide how consistent it feels with a heavy load and low battery.
Range claims and the battery story so far
Range drives most EV buying decisions, and E-Went pushes two numbers here. ZigWheels and BikeDekho both report an IDC range of up to 160 km and an E-Went tested real world range of up to 140 km.
They also say the scooter supports a portable lithium battery with an IP67 rating. A portable battery usually helps apartment owners since they can charge indoors, but I cannot confirm battery capacity in kWh or charging time from E-Went’s official site right now.
Both outlets also say the Foxy includes three ride modes: Eco, Ride, and Power.
Brakes, safety features, and water protection ratings
Safety specs look unusually ambitious on paper for a commuter focused scooter. ZigWheels and BikeDekho say the Foxy includes ABS with regenerative braking and disc brakes at both ends. They also list a side stand sensor, park mode, and an anti theft alarm.
For Indian weather, both reports highlight IP ratings across key parts. They claim an IP67 rated motor, an IPX7 rated controller, and an IP67 rated battery. These ratings sound reassuring for rain and splash, but long term reliability still depends on sealing quality, connectors, and service support.
Comfort and daily practicality details
Both outlets keep circling back to one practical point, storage. ZigWheels calls out a large underseat boot and says it adds real everyday value. BikeDekho also highlights the big boot and calls it one of the most usable parts of the package.
On comfort, ZigWheels says the Foxy has a spacious seat, a generous footboard, and suspension tuned to reduce fatigue on daily rides. BikeDekho specifies the hardware and says it uses a telescopic fork up front and dual rear hydraulic shocks.
Lighting also gets a clear mention. Both reports say the Foxy uses full LED lighting and triple lens projector headlamps with a claimed 35 m throw.
Warranty package and what buyers should verify
ZigWheels and BikeDekho list the same warranty breakdown: up to 5 years or 50,000 km on the motor, 3 years on the battery, 3 years on the chassis, 2 years on the controller, and 2 years for rust protection, with terms and conditions.
They also repeat a “warranty claims under 1.5 percent” figure. I cannot confirm that number through audited public reporting, so treat it as a reported brand claim.
Before you put money down, ask the dealer for these items in writing:
- Battery warranty terms, including any capacity retention language
- What the IP ratings cover, including connectors and battery casing
- Service schedule, and which parts count as wear items
- Spare parts availability for brakes, suspension, and body panels
What E-Went’s official site shows right now, and what it does not
On March 1, 2026, E-Went’s official site lists Lightning, Marium, Rabbitor, SSUP, JV, and Maki in its product menu. It does not list the Foxy on that same menu. Because of that, I cannot confirm official pricing, variant names, battery capacity, or charging time from E-Went’s own published specs yet.
That gap does not mean the scooter does not exist. It just means the most detailed public spec list currently comes from these two outlets, not from an official Foxy product page.


