India’s electric vehicle (EV) story is often told through speed, range, and charging infrastructure. But beneath the headline numbers lies a quieter truth: for millions of Indians, everyday mobility remains intimidating rather than empowering. Two-wheelers dominate urban transport, yet large sections of the population like women riders, senior citizens, first-time users and those uncomfortable with balance-heavy scooters continue to opt out of independent mobility altogether.
It was this gap that Bengaluru-based iGowise Mobility (iGo) set out to address.
Founded in 2020, iGo is not trying to build just another electric scooter. Instead, it is creating an entirely new category of vehicles, self-balancing, leaning electric trikes designed to make daily commuting safer, more stable and significantly more accessible, without losing the agility of a two-wheeler.
“Urban mobility in India has been exclusionary for far too long,” said Sravan Kumar Appana, cofounder and CEO of iGo Mobility. “We saw people treating daily travel as a source of stress rather than freedom. That’s where the idea of iGo truly began.”
Rethinking Two-Wheelers From The Ground Up
India’s light EV market is among the fastest growing globally, driven by rising fuel costs, policy incentives and increasing environmental awareness. But most electric two-wheelers today are built as engine-to-battery replacements, carrying over the same balance challenges, riding risks and learning curves.
For iGo, that approach felt insufficient.
The founding team Suresh Babu Salla and Sravan Kumar Appana came together with backgrounds spanning hardcore engineering, customer-centric product design and high-technology-driven startups. What united them was a shared conviction that EVs should not merely electrify existing designs, but fundamentally rethink vehicle architecture for Indian roads and riders.
The idea initially began as an exploration into stability-enhanced scooters. But as early prototypes evolved, it became clear that this was not an incremental upgrade, it was a new mobility platform altogether.
“There were no reference designs, no suppliers, and no rulebooks for what we were building in the domestic market,”Sravan said. “We weren’t improving a category — we were creating one.”
Engineering Stability Into Everyday Riding
At the heart of iGo’s innovation lies its proprietary self-balancing and anti-topple technology. Unlike conventional scooters that rely entirely on rider balance, iGo vehicles can actively stabilise themselves at low speeds and standstill at the click of a button, while allowing natural leaning during turns at higher speeds.
In simple terms, the vehicle balances itself when the rider needs it most — at traffic signals, while manoeuvring tight turns, or on uneven roads without the fear of rolling over.
Its flagship product, the BeiGo X4, is India’s first practical self-balancing leaning electric trike built specifically for real-world Indian conditions. The front wheels tilt like a scooter during turns, while the rear wheel architecture provides added stability and unparalleled road-grip— placing it squarely between a two-wheeler and a three-wheeler.
“Even novice riders tell us it feels as easy as riding a bicycle, but as reassuring as sitting in a small car,” Sravan said.
The R&D journey behind the BeiGo X4 spanned over five years, involving physics modelling, mechanical design, control algorithms and extensive road testing. Early prototypes focused on proving the physics of tilting and balance before progressing into manufacturable vehicle architecture, safety systems and long-term durability.
Building Intelligence Into Mobility
Beyond mechanical innovation, iGo vehicles are designed as connected, intelligent platforms. Features such as IoT-enabled diagnostics, GPS tracking, theft alerts, ride analytics and OTA updates allow the company to continuously improve performance even after delivery.
These smart systems also play a role in safety and maintenance, enabling predictive servicing and reducing downtime — a critical factor for daily commuters and commercial riders alike.
Looking ahead, iGo is also working on auto-summoning light vehicle technology, aimed at assisted repositioning, fleet operations and future shared mobility use cases. While still a long-term initiative, it reflects the company’s ambition to move beyond vehicles and build intelligent mobility ecosystems.
Who iGo Is Built For
While urban commuters form a core audience, iGo’s early traction has come from a diverse set of users — women riders, senior citizens, first-time two-wheeler users, and increasingly, rural utility riders & micro-entreprenuers.
The On-demand self-balancing system removes the immense fatigue of balancing the entire vehicle at low speeds, while ergonomic seating, a low step-through design and predictable handling provide the level of comfort and confidence for the rider unimaginable in the scooter space.
“For many riders, confidence to conquer the potholes matters more than top speed,” said. “Once that fear disappears, mobility becomes liberating.”
From Pilots To Pre-Seed Funding
Currently in early commercialisation, iGo has focused on controlled deployments, pilot programs and pre-orders, rather than aggressive volume ramp-ups. Initial adoption has been strongest in South and West India, regions with high two-wheeler dependence.
As of September 2025, the startup raised INR 92 million (₹9.2 crore) so far in angel and pre-seed funding, led by ISB Angels, 888VC and Guptaji VC. The capital has been deployed towards advanced R&D, regulatory certifications, proto tooling, supplier development, customer support infrastructure for initial scale.
The company plans to raise a larger seed round in 2026 to support mass production tooling, service & dealer network expansion, and next-generation products.
Manufacturing currently follows a lean, semi-in-house model, supported by a fully indigineous scalable vendor partnerships allowing modular growth aligned with demand.
Positioning In A Crowded EV Landscape
Rather than competing head-on with conventional two-wheeler OEMs, iGo operates in a new category between two-wheelers and three-wheelers. Its differentiation lies not in speed or styling, but in stability, safety and accessibility.
The company also actively engages with B2B partners, particularly in last-mile delivery and utility operations where rider fatigue, uptime and safety directly impact productivity. While demand from big eCommerce players like Tata BigBasket, Porter, Hala Mobility and Elektric Express signal growing interest from commercial ecosystems, iGo is focusing on specific niche logistics such as Neera sip, health drink supplier, laundry service, toys delivery, pharma delivery and courier service.
“Our competition isn’t another scooter brand,” Sravan noted. “It’s the idea that personal mobility has to be difficult or intimidating.”
The Road Ahead
India’s EV market is gradually shifting from subsidy-driven adoption to value-led purchasing, with increasing emphasis on safety, durability and total cost of ownership. In that transition, stability-enhanced vehicles could become a natural evolution rather than a niche.
Over the next 1–2 years, iGo plans to scale BeiGo X4 deployments, strengthen dealership and service networks, and launch additional variants for family, shared and light commercial mobility.
Longer term, the company aims to establish itself as a global reference for safe personal mobility platforms, expanding into multiple intelligent mobility categories and international markets.
“By 2030, our goal is to move millions every day,” Sravan said. “Not just by building more vehicles, but by building platforms that make confident mobility accessible to everyone.”
As urban density rises and rider demographics diversify, iGo’s bet on safety-first engineering may well redefine how India thinks about everyday movement — not as a test of balance, but as a basic right.
