Ola S3 Electric Scooter – What Ola Must Get Right to Regain Market Trust

Ola Electric was once the poster child of India’s electric vehicle revolution. In 2022 and 2023, the Ola S1 series dominated the electric two-wheeler market, outselling TVS, Bajaj, and Ather combined. But 2024 and 2025 were brutal years for the Bengaluru-based startup. Quality complaints, service centre backlogs, repeated software bugs, and a damaging fire incident eroded consumer trust.

By April 2026, Ola Electric had slipped to fifth place in the monthly sales charts, behind TVS, Bajaj, Ather, and even Hero MotoCorp’s Vida. The company’s year-on-year sales declined by 39% – the only brand in the top five to shrink.

Ola needs a saviour. That saviour is the Ola S3 Electric Scooter – a ground-up redesign of the S1 platform, scheduled for launch in December 2026. But a new model alone will not fix Ola’s problems. The company must fundamentally change how it designs, manufactures, and services its products.

In this hard-hitting article, we discuss the 5 things Ola must get right with the S3 – and the 3 things that could still go wrong.


What Is the Ola S3? (Known Details So Far)

The Ola S3 is not a facelift of the S1. It is a completely new platform (codenamed “Diamond”) that Ola has been developing since mid-2024, after the failure of the S1 Pro Gen 3 to meet quality targets.

ParameterOla S1 Pro (current)Ola S3 (expected)
PlatformGen 2 (2022 design)Diamond (new)
Battery3.97 kWh (NMC)4.5 kWh (LFP)
Claimed range181 km (ARAI)200 km (ARAI)
Motor8.5 kW (11 bhp)10 kW (13.4 bhp)
Top speed120 kmph115 kmph (limited for reliability)
Weight125 kg118 kg (lighter frame)
Under-seat storage34 litres40 litres (full-face helmet fits)

The shift from NMC to LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate) batteries is the most important change. LFP batteries:

  • Last longer (3,000+ charge cycles vs 1,500 for NMC)
  • Are safer (thermal runaway above 500°C vs 200°C for NMC)
  • Are heavier (but Ola has reduced weight elsewhere)
  • Have lower energy density (hence the larger 4.5 kWh pack for similar range)

But hardware changes are only half the battle. Here is what Ola must get right.


Must-Get-Right #1: Build Quality & Reliability

The single biggest complaint about Ola S1 scooters has been build quality – loose panels, rattling suspensions, failing side stands, and water ingress into the battery compartment.

What Went Wrong with the S1

ComponentS1 IssueCustomer Impact
Battery packPoor sealing – water entered during monsoonScooter stopped working, months-long replacement wait
Side stand sensorFailed frequently (false reading that scooter was down)Scooter would not start even when on main stand
SuspensionBottomed out on large potholes, created loud clanking noiseUncomfortable ride, fear of damage
BrakesSquealing noise after 2,000 kmAnnoying but not dangerous
Panel gapsInconsistent gaps (2-3 mm variation)Perceived as cheap, affected resale value

What Ola Must Change for the S3

AreaRequired FixHow Ola Is Implementing
IP ratingBattery must meet IP67 (submersion for 30 min at 1m)New battery casing with double seals, new supplier (BYD)
Component testing500,000+ km testing per componentS3 has undergone 2 million km of testing across India (Ola’s claim)
Assembly qualityTighter tolerances (0.5 mm panel gaps)New robotic assembly line at Ola’s Krishnagiri factory
SuspensionStiffer springs + longer travel30% stiffer front forks, 50% more rear travel

Ola has hired former Honda and Yamaha quality control engineers to oversee S3 production – a step in the right direction.


Must-Get-Right #2: Service Network Expansion

Ola’s service network has been a disaster. At its worst in early 2025, customers waited 45-60 days for battery replacements. Even routine service appointments were booked 3-4 weeks in advance.

Current Service Network (April 2026)

MetricOlaTVSBajajAther
Service centres (India)6001,800+2,500+250
Average wait for appointment10 days2 days2 days5 days
Mobile service vans2005000150
Customer satisfaction rating (1-5)2.84.24.14.0

Ola’s S3 Service Plan

For the S3 launch, Ola has committed to:

  1. Open 300 new service centres in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities (total 900 by December 2026)
  2. Deploy 500 additional mobile service vans (total 700) – these vans come to your home or office for minor issues (tyre puncture, software update, brake pad change)
  3. Guarantee 48-hour turnaround for battery-related issues (if repair takes longer, Ola provides a loaner S1 scooter for free)
  4. Extend warranty to 5 years / 60,000 km for the S3 (S1 Pro had 3 years / 40,000 km)

Will this be enough? Possibly – but only if Ola executes flawlessly. The company has failed to meet service targets before.


Must-Get-Right #3: Software That Works Out of the Box

Ola’s software story is tragic. The S1 Pro’s features list was class-leading – navigation, music streaming, proximity unlock, voice commands. But in reality:

  • Software updates often broke existing features (an update in July 2025 disabled the proximity unlock for 3 weeks)
  • The 7-inch touchscreen lagged (2-3 second delay between touch and response)
  • Mobile app connectivity dropped frequently (requiring re-pairing every few days)
  • Navigation would lose GPS signal in covered parking or dense urban canyons

S3 Software – Completely Rewritten

Ola has confirmed that the S3 runs on an entirely new operating system (codenamed “Move OS 2.0”), not an update to the old software. Key changes:

FeatureS1 Pro (old)S3 (new)
ProcessorQualcomm 4100 (2019 chip)Qualcomm Snapdragon Automotive (2024 chip)
RAM2 GB4 GB
Boot time45 seconds to usable screen12 seconds
Touchscreen latency200-300 ms<50 ms (feels instantaneous)
OTA update reliability40% of updates required dealer interventionTarget <5%
Voice recognitionGoogle Assistant (required internet)On-device AI (works offline for basic commands)

The offline voice recognition is a game-changer. You can say “Hey Ola, open boot” or “Hey Ola, start navigation to home” even in a tunnel or underground parking with no mobile signal.


Must-Get-Right #4: Realistic Range Claims

Ola’s range claims have been among the most exaggerated in the industry. The S1 Pro claims 181 km (ARAI), but real-world city range is 110-120 km – a 35% overstatement.

S3 Range – Conservative This Time

Ola has learned its lesson. The S3’s range claims will be much closer to reality:

ConditionClaimed (Ola)Estimated Real-World
ARAI test cycle200 km150-160 km
City (Eco mode)170 km145 km
City (Normal mode)150 km130 km
City (Sport mode)120 km100 km
Highway (constant 60 kmph)140 km115 km

A real-world city range of 130-145 km (depending on mode) is best-in-class – better than the Ather 450X (120 km) and TVS iQube (115 km). But Ola must be upfront about these numbers.


Must-Get-Right #5: Competitive Pricing Without Overpromising

The S1 Pro launched at an attractive ₹1.40 lakh (introductory price) but quickly rose to ₹1.60 lakh after FAME-II subsidy changes. The S3 must be priced aggressively to win back lost customers.

ModelPrice (ex-showroom)BatteryReal RangeValue Rating
Ola S3 (expected)₹1,29,9994.5 kWh130 kmExcellent
TVS iQube S₹1,37,0003.4 kWh100 kmGood
Bajaj Chetak Urbane₹1,35,0003.2 kWh110 kmGood
Ather 450S₹1,30,0003.0 kWh100 kmAverage

At ₹1,30,000, the S3 would be cheaper than all competitors while offering a larger battery and longer range. That is a winning formula.

The Risk – Margins

Ola loses money on every S1 scooter sold (negative contribution margin of ₹8,000-10,000 per unit). The S3, with its LFP battery (cheaper than NMC) and simpler manufacturing, must achieve positive margins for Ola to survive.

Ola’s target: 8-10% margin at ₹1,30,000 price. Whether this is achievable depends on battery prices (which have fallen 40% since 2023) and manufacturing efficiency (Ola’s factory is now running at 60% capacity utilisation).


3 Things That Could Still Go Wrong with the S3

Even if Ola executes perfectly on the 5 must-get-right areas, there are external risks:

Risk 1: Battery Fires

LFP batteries are safer than NMC, but no battery is 100% fireproof. A single fire incident with the S3 (even if caused by user negligence) will destroy consumer confidence. Ola has implemented:

  • 5-layer thermal barriers between cells
  • Automatic fire suppression system in the battery pack (halogen gas)
  • Real-time temperature monitoring (scooter alerts the owner via app if battery exceeds 60°C)

Risk 2: Supply Chain Delays

Ola’s Krishnagiri factory has never operated at full capacity for more than 3 consecutive months due to component shortages (especially semiconductors and battery cells). The S3 uses a new LFP cell supplier (BYD), and any disruption will delay deliveries.

Ola’s mitigation: Stockpiling 3 months of S3 components in advance of launch – a ₹500 crore inventory investment.

Risk 3: Legacy Customer Backlash

The 3.5 lakh Ola S1 owners feel abandoned. Many are stuck with scooters that have degraded batteries, outdated software, and no upgrade path. Ola has announced an S1 to S3 upgrade programme – pay the difference between S1 trade-in value and S3 price (estimated ₹30,000-40,000). But the trade-in values offered so far (₹60,000 for a 2-year-old S1 Pro) have angered owners.


Launch Timeline

MilestoneDate
Official unveilNovember 15, 2026
Bookings openNovember 20, 2026 (₹2,000 refundable deposit)
First deliveries (Bengaluru, Delhi, Mumbai)December 25, 2026
Nationwide deliveriesFebruary 2027

Final Verdict – Will the S3 Save Ola?

The Ola S3 addresses every major failure of the S1 – build quality, service network, software reliability, realistic range claims, and pricing. If Ola executes well, the S3 could propel the company back to the top of the sales charts by mid-2027.

But trust is hard to rebuild. Many former Ola owners have switched to TVS or Ather and are unlikely to return. The S3’s success depends on new buyers who are aware of Ola’s past problems but willing to give the company a second chance.

If you are considering an electric scooter in late 2026 or early 2027, test the S3 alongside the TVS iQube and Ather Rizta. The S3 has the best hardware on paper – but test the real-world software and build quality before booking.

Ola’s survival depends on this launch. For the sake of competition in India’s EV market, we hope they get it right.

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