India’s electric mobility sector raised $1.4 billion in 2025 year-to-date (YTD), marking a 27% increase over the $1.1 billion mobilised in 2024, reflecting renewed investor confidence in mature and scalable EV businesses, an industry report said on Friday.According to the EV in India Annual Funding Report 2025, released by private market intelligence platform Tracxn, the capital inflow was spread across 65 funding rounds, sharply lower than 135 rounds recorded last year, signalling a clear shift towards investor discipline and selective capital deployment.“Overall funding was dominated by EV manufacturers, which raised $1.2 billion, with Delhi emerging as the leading city, accounting for $1.1 billion of total funding,” the report said. Pune followed with $120 million, while Bengaluru attracted $105 million during the period.
A key highlight of the report was the sharp rise in late-stage investments. Late-stage funding surged 105% year-on-year, climbing from $536 million in 2024 to $1.1 billion in 2025 YTD, underscoring growing confidence in scale-ready and performance-led startups. In contrast, early-stage funding declined 49.3%, falling to $226 million from $446 million a year earlier. Seed-stage funding also dropped significantly to $61.2 million across 32 rounds, compared with $129 million across 77 rounds in 2024.“The strong surge in late-stage capital, driven by a billion-dollar round supporting manufacturing and charging infrastructure, signifies that India’s EV ecosystem has moved beyond early experimentation and entered a phase of measurable, scaled maturity,” stated Neha Singh, Co-Founder, Tracxn.
Investor participation narrowed during the period, with the number of active investors falling to 70 in 2025 YTD from 150 in 2024. First-time investors also declined to 32, down from 63 last year, pointing to increased reliance on existing backers.On the consolidation front, acquisitions rose to three in 2025 YTD, compared with just one in 2024. Notable transactions included Remsons’ acquisition of Astro Motors and Yuma Energy’s acquisition of Grinntech Motors & Services. The sector also witnessed four IPOs, led by Ather Energy’s $1.4-billion listing in May 2025, the largest EV IPO to date.India’s EV market fundamentals continue to strengthen. The sector, valued at $2.36 billion in 2024, is projected to grow to $164.42 billion by 2033, clocking a 57.23% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), according to data from the Indian Brand Equity Foundation (IBEF). The EV battery market is expected to expand from $2.22 billion in 2024 to $13.89 billion by 2033, at a 22.6% CAGR.Operational indicators also point to steady momentum. EV sales rose 16.9% in FY25 to 1.97 million units, while the public charging network expanded to 29,277 stations as of July 2025.“It’s a clear signal that global and domestic investors now view electric mobility not merely as a climate-driven theme, but as a commercially viable, long-horizon opportunity,” Singh added.
Newsinc24 Team





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