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This Electric Tuk-Tuk Could Be An Urban Gamechanger Where Pollution Is Awful

In the US, transportation often boils down to just a few options: car, motorcycle, or maybe a pickup if you’re hauling stuff, or are after that rugged lifestyle aesthetic. But in much of Asia, mobility has always been more fluid. It’s not uncommon to see vehicles that defy convention—part bike, part car, all utility. At the heart of that middle ground is the autorickshaw, a vehicle born out of necessity, compromise, and creativity.

It’s a simple idea: take a small motorcycle engine, bolt it to a lightweight chassis, give it three wheels, a roof, and space for a few passengers, and you’ve got one of the most iconic forms of transport in India, Thailand, the Philippines, and beyond. For decades, the “tuk-tuk” has ferried people, cargo, groceries, and even livestock through congested cities and narrow alleys. It’s a machine that’s woven into the fabric of daily life.

Now, in 2025, the TVS King EV Max takes that same ethos and gives it a full-electric upgrade. Built by TVS Motor Company, one of India’s biggest motorcycle manufacturers (and the folks behind the BMW G 310 series and the upcoming F 450 GS), the King EV Max is a new-age autorickshaw that trades in its sputtering gas engine for a 51.2-volt lithium-ion battery and a whisper-quiet 11-kilowatt motor.

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The numbers are surprising for such a humble package: 179 kilometers (111 miles) of range on a single charge, 0 to 80 percent in just over two hours, and a top speed of 60 kilometers per hour (about 37 miles per hour). In dense urban traffic, that’s more than enough. There’s also hill-hold assist, regenerative braking, and Bluetooth-based connectivity through TVS SmartXonnect, which lets drivers get navigation updates, vehicle health info, and more on their smartphones.

While it’s clearly aimed at commercial use—fleet operators, ride-hailing services, and delivery drivers—there’s something incredibly appealing about the King EV Max even for private users. It can seat three in the back (plus the driver), has decent weather protection, and runs for pennies per mile. In cities where space is tight and parking is a nightmare, this thing makes all the sense in the world.

Heck, you could even slap on a roof rack to haul even more stuff, all while taking your friends or family along for the ride. 

There’s also something refreshing about how unapologetically utilitarian it is. It’s not pretending to be a car. It doesn’t have luxury trims or oversized touchscreens. What it does have is purpose, and lots of it. It’s the type of machine you know will get the job done—efficiently, reliably, and again and again.

The King EV Max may not turn heads in LA or New York anytime soon, but I honestly think it should. It’s a clever, low-cost, zero-emissions solution born from decades of real-world use. In a world where we often over-engineer everything, this little three-wheeler proves that sometimes, the most compelling innovations come from simply making the most of what you’ve got—and making it electric.

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