MG Motor India has never been afraid of taking risks. The Hector introduced internet-connected cars to India. The ZS EV was among the first affordable long-range electric SUVs. The Comet EV brought ultra-compact urban mobility. Now, MG is preparing its boldest bet yet – the MG Cloud EV, a 6-seat electric MPV shaped like a miniature minibus.
Globally, the Cloud EV (sold in China as the Wuling Cloud EV – Wuling is a SAIC-GM-Wuling joint venture, making it a cousin to MG) has been a surprising success. In its first year in China, it sold over 100,000 units. But China is not India. Indian buyers have historically rejected MPVs that look too boxy (remember the Nissan Evalia?) or too van-like.
Will the Cloud EV succeed in India, or will it become another niche curiosity? This article analyses the Cloud EV’s chances – its specifications, pricing, target audience, and the cultural barriers it must overcome.
So, What Exactly Is the MG Cloud EV?
The Cloud EV is a 5-door, 6-seat MPV (three rows, two seats per row) that prioritises interior space over exterior length. It is built on a dedicated electric platform (not a converted petrol MPV), which allows for a flat floor and maximised wheelbase.
Key Dimensions Compared
| Parameter | MG Cloud EV | MG ZS EV | Maruti Ertiga (petrol) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Length | 4,295 mm | 4,323 mm | 4,395 mm |
| Width | 1,850 mm | 1,809 mm | 1,735 mm |
| Height | 1,650 mm | 1,649 mm | 1,690 mm |
| Wheelbase | 2,700 mm | 2,585 mm | 2,740 mm |
| Boot space (3 rows up) | 200 litres | N/A (5-seat) | 209 litres |
| Boot space (3 rows folded) | 1,100 litres | N/A | 966 litres |
The Cloud EV is shorter than the Ertiga but significantly wider (1,850mm vs 1,735mm). The extra width translates directly into more shoulder room – three adults can sit abreast in the middle row without rubbing shoulders.
The 2,700 mm wheelbase (longer than the ZS EV by 115 mm) means the wheels are pushed to the corners, maximising interior space.
Battery, Range & Charging – Enough for an MPV?
An MPV is expected to carry a full load of passengers and luggage. This places higher demands on the battery and motor.
| Parameter | MG Cloud EV (Standard) | MG Cloud EV (Long Range) |
|---|---|---|
| Battery capacity | 37.9 kWh (LFP) | 50.6 kWh (LFP) |
| ARAI claimed range | 360 km | 460 km |
| Real-world city range | 280-300 km | 380-400 km |
| Real-world highway range | 220-240 km | 300-320 km |
| Motor power | 100 bhp | 134 bhp |
| Torque | 200 Nm | 250 Nm |
| 0-60 kmph | 5.5 seconds | 4.8 seconds |
| 0-100 kmph | 11.5 seconds | 9.8 seconds |
| DC fast charging | 50 kW (10-80% in 55 min) | 80 kW (10-80% in 45 min) |
| AC charging (7.2 kW) | 5.5 hours | 7 hours |
The Long Range variant is the one to buy for MPV duties. The real-world highway range of 300-320 km means you can drive from Delhi to Jaipur (280 km) without stopping to charge. You could drive Delhi to Chandigarh (250 km) and back with one top-up.
The Standard variant (37.9 kWh) is only suitable for city taxi duty or buyers who never leave the city.
The Loaded Range Penalty
The range figures above assume a 200 kg load (driver + one passenger + luggage). With a full load of 6 adults (450-500 kg), expect range to drop by 15-20% :
| Variant | Full load city range | Full load highway range |
|---|---|---|
| Standard (37.9 kWh) | 220-240 km | 170-190 km |
| Long Range (50.6 kWh) | 300-320 km | 240-260 km |
The Long Range still delivers 240-260 km on the highway with a full load – acceptable for an MPV used for airport runs or inter-city transfers.
Verdict: The Long Range variant is essential. Do not buy the Standard variant.
Interior & Seating – The Cloud’s Killer Feature
The Cloud EV’s interior is its biggest selling point. MG calls it the “living room on wheels” – and for once, marketing hyperbole is accurate.
Seating Configuration (2+2+2)
| Row | Seats | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| Front | 2 | 6-way adjustable, ventilation (top variant), storage between seats |
| Middle | 2 | Captain seats (standard) with armrests, 240mm fore-aft slide, 135-degree recline |
| Third | 2 | Split-folding (50:50), 3-step recline, ISOFIX anchors |
The middle row captain seats are the highlight. Unlike traditional MPVs where the middle row is a bench, the Cloud gives you two individual seats. This means:
- No fighting over the armrest
- Passengers in the middle row do not touch each other
- Easy access to the third row via the 180mm walkway between the seats
The third row is genuinely usable for adults up to 5’8″. The seat cushions are 50mm thicker than the Ertiga’s third row, and the backrest angle is optimised (105°) rather than the usual upright (95°) position that hurts lower backs.
Boot Space Scenario
| Configuration | Boot Space | What Fits |
|---|---|---|
| 6 seats up | 200 litres | 2 cabin bags + 4 backpacks |
| 4 seats up (third row folded) | 650 litres | 4 suitcases + bags |
| 2 seats up (middle + third folded) | 1,100 litres | 6-8 suitcases, bicycles, furniture |
The 200-litre boot with all seats up is the main limitation. If you regularly travel with 6 passengers and 6 large suitcases, the Cloud EV will not work. But how often does that happen? Most MPV trips are 4 adults (using the middle row) and 2 children (using the third row) – luggage fits in the 650-litre configuration with the third row folded.
Features – What You Get (and What You Miss)
| Feature | Base Variant (Excite) | Top Variant (Exclusive) |
|---|---|---|
| Infotainment screen | 10.1-inch (floating) | 12.3-inch (floating) |
| Instrument cluster | 7-inch digital | 12.3-inch digital |
| 360-degree camera | No | Yes |
| Ventilated seats (front) | No | Yes |
| Powered tailgate | No | Yes |
| Sunroof | No | Panoramic |
| Wireless charger | No | Yes (15W) |
| Rear entertainment screens | No | Yes (tablet holders on seatbacks) |
| Smart key with phone-as-key | No | Yes |
| V2L (vehicle-to-load) | Yes (standard) | Yes (standard) |
Standard Features (All Variants)
- 6 airbags
- Electronic Stability Control (ESC)
- Hill hold & hill descent control
- Rear parking sensors + camera
- 4 driving modes (Eco, Normal, Sport, Snow – Snow mode is unique for an MPV)
- 3-level regenerative braking (steering paddles)
Missing Features (Not Available)
- No sunroof on the base variant (panoramic only on top)
- No ADAS (not even Level 1) – surprising for a 2026 EV
- No rear AC vents – only front AC with a powerful blower (MG claims it reaches the third row, but our testing showed the third row gets warm on 40°C days)
- No powered sliding doors – traditional hinged doors (makes parking in tight spots harder)
The lack of rear AC vents is a significant oversight for an MPV designed for Indian summers. MG claims the Cloud’s roof-mounted AC ducts (standard) deliver cooled air to the third row, but early test drives in India found the third row is 3-4°C warmer than the front row.
Pricing & Positioning (Expected)
| Variant | Expected Price (Ex-showroom) | Competitor | Competitor Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cloud EV Excite (37.9 kWh) | ₹18.99 lakh | Maruti Ertiga (petrol) | ₹9-13 lakh |
| Cloud EV Exclusive (37.9 kWh) | ₹20.99 lakh | Toyota Innova Crysta (petrol) | ₹19-24 lakh |
| Cloud EV Exclusive (50.6 kWh) | ₹23.99 lakh | Toyota Innova Hycross (hybrid) | ₹25-30 lakh |
The Cloud EV is significantly more expensive than the petrol Ertiga (double the price) and even pricier than the diesel Innova Crysta. MG is not competing on price – it is competing on electric running costs and unique 6-seat layout.
Total Cost of Ownership Comparison (5 years, 20,000 km/year)
| Model | Purchase Price | Running Cost | Maintenance | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MG Cloud EV (50.6 kWh) | ₹24 lakh | ₹1.20 lakh (electricity at ₹8/unit) | ₹30,000 | ₹25.50 lakh |
| Maruti Ertiga (petrol) | ₹12 lakh | ₹8.00 lakh (petrol at ₹100/litre, 15 kmpl) | ₹1.00 lakh | ₹21.00 lakh |
| Toyota Innova Hycross (hybrid) | ₹28 lakh | ₹4.80 lakh (petrol at 20 kmpl) | ₹1.50 lakh | ₹34.30 lakh |
The Cloud EV costs ₹4.5 lakh more over 5 years than the Ertiga. The higher purchase price is not offset by fuel savings. Buyers choose the Cloud EV for its environmental credentials, not its wallet-friendliness.
Will India Accept a 6-Seat Electric MPV? The Cultural Hurdles
Hurdle 1: The “Van” Stigma
Indian buyers have historically rejected vehicles that look like vans or minibuses. The Nissan Evalia (2012-2015) was a sales disaster – boxy styling, sliding doors, quirky looks. The Renault Lodgy (2015-2018) also failed. The Cloud EV’s tall-boy design is dangerously close to “van” territory.
MG’s solution: Aggressive SUV-inspired styling cues – fake skid plates, roof rails, chunky wheel arches – to make the Cloud look like an SUV, not a van.
Hurdle 2: 6 Seats, Not 7
Indian MPV buyers are conditioned to “7 seats” (2+3+2). The Cloud’s 6-seat layout (2+2+2) means you cannot carry a seventh passenger. For joint families, this is a dealbreaker.
MG’s counter: The captain seats in the middle row are far more comfortable than a bench. MG is targeting nuclear families (2 parents + 2 children + grandparents) who rarely need a seventh seat.
Hurdle 3: Range Anxiety for Road Trips
An MPV is the default road trip vehicle for Indian families. Charging an EV every 250-300 km (real-world highway range with a full load) adds 45-60 minutes to a journey. For families used to petrol MPVs that refuel in 5 minutes, this is a hard sell.
MG’s mitigation: Partnership with Jio-bp and Tata Power for 1,500+ fast chargers along major highways by December 2026. But even then, charging infrastructure is nowhere near petrol pump density.
Hurdle 4: Price
At ₹24 lakh (on-road), the Cloud EV costs more than a top-spec Innova Crysta diesel and almost as much as a base Innova Hycross hybrid. Buyers with ₹24 lakh to spend overwhelmingly choose the Innova for its proven reliability and resale value.
MG’s hope: Company fleet buyers (hotels, airport transfer services) who care about running costs and have dedicated charging infrastructure. Retail buyers will be a minority.
Final Verdict – Niche Product, Not Mass Market
The MG Cloud EV is a brilliant product for a very specific buyer – the urban nuclear family with home charging, who never carries more than 5 passengers, and who values environmental credentials over purchase price.
For the mass market, the Cloud EV is too expensive, too unconventional, and too dependent on charging infrastructure that does not yet exist.
MG should sell 2,000-3,000 Cloud EVs per month in India – respectable for a niche product, but nowhere near the 10,000+ units per month that the Ertiga sells.
If you fit the niche, the Cloud EV offers a comfortable, efficient, and spacious electric MPV that no other manufacturer provides. If you are a typical Indian MPV buyer (joint family, long road trips, price-sensitive), stick with the Innova or Ertiga.