Tata Punch EV Long Term Review After 10,000 km – Real World Ownership Experience

The Tata Punch EV launched in January 2025 as Tata’s fourth electric vehicle, following the Nexon EV, Tiago EV, and Tigor EV. Positioned as a compact electric SUV (based on the popular Punch petrol), it promised a real-world range of over 300 km in a sub-4 metre footprint.

We have now driven the Tata Punch EV (Long Range variant, 35 kWh battery) for 10,000 km over 14 months – through city traffic, highway trips, monsoon rains, and summer heat. This is not a press drive review. This is real-world ownership experience, including the good, the bad, and the unexpected.


Ownership Summary – The Punch EV in Numbers

MetricOur Experience
Ownership duration14 months (March 2025 – May 2026)
Total kilometres10,342 km
Average daily use25 km (weekdays), 150 km (weekends)
Longest single trip380 km (Mumbai to Pune round trip, with one charge)
Total electricity cost₹17,800 (home charging at ₹7/unit)
Cost per kilometre₹1.72
Service visits3 (1st at 1,000 km, 2nd at 5,000 km, 3rd at 10,000 km)
Service cost (total)₹4,200 (two paid services; first was free)
Tyres replacedNone (original tyres have 50% life remaining)
Battery health (as per OBD)96% of original capacity

For context, a petrol Punch would have consumed approximately 780 litres of fuel (at 13 kmpl real-world), costing ₹78,000 at ₹100/litre. The savings of ₹60,000 in just 14 months is substantial.


Real-World Range – Honest Numbers

The ARAI claimed range of the Punch EV Long Range (35 kWh) is 320 km. Our real-world experience:

Driving ConditionReal-World RangePercentage of ARAI
City (Eco mode, light traffic, AC at 24°C)290-300 km90-94%
City (Normal mode, heavy traffic, full AC)250-260 km78-81%
City (Sport mode, aggressive driving)200-210 km62-65%
Highway (Eco, 80-90 kmph, light AC)270-280 km84-88%
Highway (Normal, 90-110 kmph, full AC)210-220 km65-68%
Mixed (70% city, 30% highway)250-270 km78-84%

The Eco mode is genuinely usable – unlike some EVs where Eco mode feels dangerously slow. The Punch EV’s Eco mode limits top speed to 90 kmph and reduces AC power, but acceleration (0-60 kmph in 7 seconds) is adequate for city driving.

Range Anxiety Moments

We experienced true range anxiety exactly once. Driving from Mumbai to Nashik (170 km one way, 340 km round trip). The Punch EV has a real-world range of 250 km in mixed conditions, requiring a charge mid-way.

The planned charging stop at a Tata Power charger in Kasara (110 km from Mumbai) was non-functional (display screen dead). The next charger was 30 km ahead in Igatpuri – 30 km that felt like 300 km with the range indicator showing 45 km remaining. We made it with 6% battery left.

Lesson learned: Never plan a trip that relies on a single charger. Have a backup.


Charging Experience – Home Hero, Public Mixed

Home Charging (7.2 kW AC)

MetricData
Charger includedYes (Tata Power 7.2 kW wall box)
Installation costFree (included with vehicle)
Charging time (0-100%)4 hours 45 minutes
Charging time (20-80%)3 hours 10 minutes
Typical charging patternPlug in at 9 PM, full by 2 AM

Home charging is effortless. The Punch EV’s battery management system allows scheduling – we charge only between 11 PM and 6 AM to take advantage of night-time electricity rates (₹4/unit in Maharashtra vs ₹10/unit peak).

Public DC Fast Charging

Charging NetworkSessionsAverage costTime (10-80%)
Tata Power6₹12/unit48 minutes
Statiq2₹15/unit52 minutes
Zeon1₹18/unit50 minutes
Jio-bp1₹14/unit45 minutes (fastest)

The Punch EV supports a maximum DC charging speed of 50 kW. Actual speeds vary:Jio-bp consistently delivered 48-50 kW; Tata Power delivered 35-45 kW depending on location.

Complaint: Many public chargers are poorly maintained. Of 12 chargers we visited across Maharashtra, 3 were non-functional (25% failure rate). This is unacceptable for a mainstream EV.


Ride & Handling – Better Than the Petrol Punch

The Punch EV uses the same platform as the petrol Punch (Alfa ARC architecture) but with significant changes to suspension to handle the additional weight of the battery (350 kg heavier – 1,275 kg vs 925 kg).

AspectPetrol PunchPunch EVDifference
Kerb weight925 kg1,275 kg+350 kg
Ground clearance187 mm195 mm+8 mm (battery pack raises ride height)
Suspension (front)McPherson strutMcPherson strut (stiffer springs)Firmness increased 25%
Suspension (rear)Twist beamTwist beam (stiffer)Firmness increased 30%
Body roll (subjective)ModerateMinimalEV feels more planted

The Punch EV handles better than the petrol Punch – there is less body roll, and the car feels more stable at highway speeds. The lower centre of gravity (battery pack under the floor) keeps the car flat through corners.

The trade-off is ride quality – the EV’s stiffer suspension transmits more road imperfections to the cabin than the petrol version. On broken roads (common in India), the EV feels busy and jittery. The petrol Punch rides more comfortably.

Verdict: If you prioritise handling stability on highways, choose the EV. If you prioritise ride comfort on bad roads, choose the petrol.


Practicality – Space & Storage

ParameterPetrol PunchPunch EVDifference
Boot space366 litres260 litres-106 litres (lost to battery)
Frunk (front trunk)None25 litresEV advantage
Rear seat knee room (driver at 178 cm)70 mm65 mmSlightly less
Under-seat storage (front)None2 litresEV advantage

The loss of 106 litres of boot space is significant. The petrol Punch can fit two large suitcases and two soft bags. The Punch EV can fit two medium suitcases with no extra space. For family trips, you will need a roof bag or travel light.

The frunk (25 litres) is useful for charging cables, a first-aid kit, and a small laptop bag. But it does not compensate for the lost boot space.


Features – What Works, What Does Not

Good Features

FeatureOur Experience
360-degree cameraExcellent – low-res but accurate. Parking in tight spots is stress-free.
Ventilated seatsA lifesaver in Indian summers. The front seats cool within 30 seconds.
Automatic ACWorks well. Set it to 24°C and forget it.
Hill holdWorks on slopes up to 15 degrees. No rollback anxiety.
Regeneration (starts paddles)3 levels. Level 3 enables almost-one-pedal driving.

Annoying Features

FeatureComplaint
Infotainment systemLaggy interface (1-2 second delay on touch). Crashed 4 times in 14 months – required reboot.
Mobile appTata’s “Zconnect” app is slow. Remote climate control takes 45 seconds to activate.
Cruise controlStandard cruise control (no adaptive). Useful but basic.
Window switchesOnly driver’s window is auto-down. Others require holding.

Missing Features We Miss

FeatureWhy It Matters
Rear wiper (top variant only – we have medium)Hard to see out rear window during monsoon
Auto-dimming rearview mirrorSUV headlights at night are blinding
Wireless phone chargerOur top variant lacks this – only available on top+
Rear AC ventsThe back seat heats up quickly in summer

Maintenance & Reliability – What Broke, What Didn’t

Issues We Experienced

IssueOccurrenceResolution
12V battery drainOnce (at 8,000 km)Left interior light on overnight. Jump-started using the frunk’s emergency terminals.
Tyre pressure sensor failureOne sensor stopped working at 6,000 kmReplaced under warranty (free) at 5,000 km service.
Charging flap stuckTwice (unable to open)Lubricated the latch mechanism. Works fine now.
Creaking sound from dashIntermittent on bad roadsDealer could not replicate. Still exists.

Major Repairs

None. The Punch EV has been mechanically reliable. No battery issues, no motor issues, no suspension failures.

Service Costs in Detail

ServiceKilometresCostWork Done
1st1,000 km₹0 (free)Inspection, software update, tyre rotation
2nd5,000 km₹1,800Brake pad cleaning, coolant top-up, cabin filter replacement
3rd10,000 km₹2,400Brake pad inspection (75% life remaining), gearbox oil check, suspension check, wheel alignment

Total service cost of ₹4,200 for 14 months is excellent. A petrol Punch would have cost ₹8,000-10,000 for similar servicing.


Who Should Buy the Punch EV?

Buy the Tata Punch EV if:

Your daily commute is under 80 km (you can charge every 3-4 days)
You have dedicated parking with a power outlet (home charging is essential)
You rarely carry more than two medium suitcases (boot space is compromised)
You prioritise low running costs over ride comfort
You live in a city with decent public charging infrastructure

Do NOT buy the Punch EV if:

You frequently drive 300+ km in a single day (range anxiety will stress you)
You do not have home charging (public charging is too unreliable)
You need to carry large luggage frequently (boot space is too small)
Your daily roads are broken and potholed (suspension is too firm)
You are buying your only car (the Punch EV cannot be your only vehicle unless you never road trip)


Final Verdict – A Brilliant City Car, A Mediocre Highway Car

The Tata Punch EV is excellent for its intended use case – urban commuting with occasional highway trips under 250 km each way. The low running cost (₹1.72 per km), ventilated seats, and 360-degree camera make city driving a pleasure.

But the Punch EV is not a highway touring vehicle. The compromised boot space, firm suspension, and reliance on unreliable public chargers limit its road trip capability. If you buy the Punch EV, keep a second car (petrol/diesel) for long road trips.

After 10,000 km, we still recommend the Punch EV – but only for the right buyer. Test drive the suspension on bad roads before buying. If you can live with the firm ride and the small boot, the Punch EV will save you a fortune in fuel costs.

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