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Kia Opens Bookings for Carens EV, Its First India-Tailored Electric Vehicle

A sub-₹25 lakh, three-row electric car is finally hitting Indian roads — and Kia wants to make it a family EV benchmark.

Kia has opened bookings for the Carens EV (locally branded as the Clavis EV), its first electric model designed specifically for the Indian market. Starting July 22, buyers can reserve the vehicle for ₹25,000 (~$300). Deliveries will begin in August 2025.

Price, variants, and range

The Carens EV is available in three variants, priced between:

  • ₹17.99 lakh ($21,600)
  • ₹24.49 lakh ($29,400)

Buyers can choose between two battery options:

  • 42kWh
  • 51.4kWh (claimed range: 300+ km)

This places the Carens EV squarely in the mid-range, multi-passenger EV segment, which remains underserved in India. It’s also one of the most affordable seven-seater EVs available at scale.

Targeting India’s middle market

Kia’s strategy is clear: bring EVs to Indian households without pricing them out. The Carens EV sits between compact hatchbacks and premium SUVs, offering a family-friendly electric option below the ₹25 lakh mark, a price point with strong demand but limited EV supply.

For many buyers, this marks the first time a multi-row electric vehicle feels practical rather than aspirational.

Charging and support infrastructure

Kia is backing the launch with a nationwide support plan:

  • 250+ EV-ready service centers across India
  • 100+ Kia dealerships with DC fast charging
  • Integration with the K-Charge app for locating chargers and handling payments

These steps aim to address real concerns: service availability, charging access, and after-sales reliability, especially beyond Tier-1 cities.

Strategic implications

The Carens EV represents a shift in how global OEMs approach the Indian EV market. Kia is moving from compliance-driven imports to locally tuned, mass-market EVs designed for family use and real-world conditions.

Key signals:

  • Focus on value-based electrification, not just luxury
  • Investment in charging networks via dealerships
  • Localized product development to fit usage patterns

What it means for the Indian EV market

The timing is critical. Domestic brands like Tata and Mahindra currently lead the affordable EV space, especially under ₹15 lakh. With Kia entering the family segment with a dedicated platform and support ecosystem, the market is shifting from early adoption to broader utility.

This launch could set a new benchmark for global players trying to win Indian EV buyers beyond metro cities — and beyond small hatchbacks.

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Filip Bubalo
Filip Bubalo

Researcher & writer for Charging Stack. Marketing manager at PROTOTYP where I help mobility companies tell better stories. Writing about the shift to electric vehicles, micromobility, and how cities are changing — with a mix of data, storytelling, and curiosity. My goal? Cut through the hype, make things clearer, and spotlight what actually works.

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