Delhi Mandates Electric Two‑Wheelers From 2028: Inside the New EV Policy 2026
Delhi's EV Policy 2026 comes into effect today, setting a hard deadline for petrol scooters and signalling the biggest shift yet in how India will build, sell, and service its vehicles.
The petrol scooter — for decades the default first vehicle of millions of Indian families — has just been handed an expiry date in the national capital.
Effective today, 1 July 2026, the Delhi government's EV Policy 2026 moves the city decisively from encouraging electric vehicles to mandating them. The headline provision is unambiguous: from 1 April 2028, no new petrol or CNG two‑wheeler can be registered in Delhi. Every new scooter and motorcycle sold in the city from that date will have to be electric.
This is not a distant aspiration buried in a planning document. It is a dated, enforceable rule with a clear runway — and it reshapes the calculus for buyers, manufacturers, service garages, and anyone planning a career in mobility.
What the policy actually says
Announced by Chief Minister Rekha Gupta, the EV Policy 2026 is the second‑generation successor to Delhi's 2020 EV policy. Where the earlier framework leaned almost entirely on voluntary incentives, the new policy pairs incentives with phased, category‑by‑category electrification mandates. It runs until 31 March 2030 and is backed by a planned investment of roughly ₹15,000 crore over four years.
- Two‑wheelers: From 1 April 2028, only electric two‑wheelers can be newly registered. Registration of new petrol and CNG two‑wheelers stops on 31 March 2028.
- Three‑wheelers: From 1 January 2027, only electric three‑wheelers in the L5 category — including autos — are permitted for fresh registration.
- Existing vehicles are unaffected. The mandate applies to new registrations. Petrol two‑wheelers already on the road can continue to be used.
- Purchase incentives for e‑2Ws: Up to ₹30,000 in the first year, ₹20,000 in the second, and ₹10,000 in the third — paid directly to buyers via Direct Benefit Transfer.
- Electric cars: A 100% waiver on road tax and registration fees for electric passenger cars priced up to ₹30 lakh (ex‑showroom), valid until March 2030.
- Charging infrastructure: More than 30,000 public charging points planned across the city, funded through the PM E‑DRIVE scheme and the state budget.
- Scrappage benefits: Incentives ranging from ₹5,000 to ₹1 lakh by category, with an additional ₹10,000 for scrapping an old two‑wheeler.
- Commercial and fleet: Higher incentives for electric three‑wheelers (up to ₹50,000) and N1‑category electric goods vehicles (up to ₹1 lakh), plus phased school‑bus electrification targets reaching 30% by March 2030.
Notably, the final policy dropped proposed incentives for strong hybrids, choosing to focus support exclusively on pure, zero‑emission electric vehicles.
Why two‑wheelers — and why now
The logic behind targeting two‑wheelers first is rooted in hard numbers. Two‑wheelers make up nearly 67% of Delhi's entire vehicle stock, which means no air‑quality strategy that ignores them can succeed.
And air quality is the driver here. Delhi consistently ranks among the most polluted cities in the world, and the transport sector is one of the largest contributors. Vehicular emissions account for an estimated 23% of the city's PM2.5 during the winter months, when air quality routinely collapses to hazardous levels. By converting the single most numerous vehicle category to zero‑tailpipe‑emission electric power, the policy aims at the densest, most distributed source of urban pollution.
The shift to mandates also reflects a hard lesson from the 2020 policy: incentives alone move the needle slowly. Pairing financial support with firm registration cut‑offs gives manufacturers, dealers, and consumers a definite timeline to plan around.
A template for the rest of India
Delhi's announcement carries weight well beyond the city limits. Several states have discussed restrictions on non‑electric vehicle registration, but Delhi's timelines are among the most clearly defined yet. When the capital — a market large and visible enough to influence national product strategy — sets a date, OEMs respond by re‑engineering portfolios, expanding electric line‑ups, and building out service and supply networks that ultimately serve the whole country.
In other words, what begins in Delhi rarely stays in Delhi. For two‑wheeler makers and the ecosystem around them, 2028 is now a planning horizon for India, not just one city.
The part most coverage misses: who will service these vehicles?
Mandating electric two‑wheelers is the easy half of the equation. The harder, less‑discussed half is human:
An EV two‑wheeler has no engine, no gearbox, no oil to change. In their place sit a lithium‑ion battery pack, a battery management system, a motor controller, an electric drivetrain, regenerative braking, and high‑voltage circuits that demand proper safety training to handle. The skills that kept a petrol scooter running for thirty years simply do not transfer.
That creates two parallel realities:
- A reskilling cliff. Delhi alone has thousands of two‑wheeler service garages staffed by mechanics whose expertise is built around internal‑combustion engines. As the new‑vehicle fleet electrifies, that workforce faces obsolescence unless it is retrained for EV diagnostics, battery handling, and electrical safety.
- A wave of new roles. EV service technicians, battery technicians, charging‑station installers and maintenance crews, fleet electrification managers — these are not future jobs. With 30,000‑plus charging points to be installed and maintained, and millions of EVs to be serviced over the policy period, demand is arriving now. Because Delhi is setting a template other states will follow, these skills are nationally portable.
This is the workforce gap that will quietly determine whether the 2028 mandate succeeds on the ground or stalls for want of trained hands. Policy can put electric vehicles on the road; only skilled technicians can keep them there.
Where DIYguru fits in
This is precisely the transition DIYguru has spent more than a decade preparing India for. As the country's largest ASDC‑certified EV skilling organization, DIYguru has trained over 50,000 professionals across a portfolio of certified programs — from EV design and battery technology to EV service and repair and charging infrastructure, the exact skill sets the Delhi mandate now makes essential.
For a working two‑wheeler mechanic, an automotive engineering student, or a career‑changer reading the writing on the wall, the message of EV Policy 2026 is straightforward: the EV workforce just stopped being optional. The professionals who get certified ahead of the 2028 deadline will be the ones the industry comes looking for.
The clock to 2028 has started. The smartest move you can make is to be qualified before the rush — not after it.