MG Joshi Cars - Vijaypur
Plot No 7K/3, NH - 50, Imbrahimpur Ring Road, Opp Shri Sangameshwar Hospital, Bijapur, Karnataka 586109
joshicarsmg@gmail.com
Last Updated on: 08 Jul 2026
MG ZS EV price in Bijapur
The MG ZS EV prices start from ₹17.99 lakh for the Executive and goes all the way up to ₹20.50 lakh for the fully-loaded Essence model. In the city of Bijapur, on-road prices of the ZS EV ranges between ₹19.08 lakh and ₹21.84 lakh
Check the on-road prices of ZS EV in your city for all variants and find the one that suits your requirements and budget. Here's a detailed list of the MG EV's on-road prices:
The MG ZS EV prices start from ₹17.99 lakh for the Executive and goes all the way up to ₹20.50 lakh for the fully-loaded Essence model. In the city of Bijapur, on-road prices of the ZS EV ranges between ₹19.08 lakh and ₹21.84 lakh
Check the on-road prices of ZS EV in your city for all variants and find the one that suits your requirements and budget. Here's a detailed list of the MG EV's on-road prices:
* Estimated on-road price. Final amount may vary.
My Electric Car Love Story: Smooth, Silent, Powerful… and Then Reality Hit the AC Button I have been using an MG ZS EV 2022 model, powered by a 50.3 kWh battery, for the last four years. Like most electric car owners, I entered the EV world with a lot of excitement, hope, and maybe a little bit of overconfidence. After all, the promise was beautiful: silent driving, instant power, low running cost, fewer moving parts, futuristic technology, and a certified range of 465 km. In real life, my experience has been a mix of all that — plus a few surprises that no brochure, YouTube review, or showroom executive prepared me for. The Good Part: The MG ZS EV Is Truly a Lovely Car to Drive Let me start with the positives, because there are many. The MG ZS EV is a very smooth, powerful, and silent car. The moment you press the accelerator, the car responds instantly. There is no engine noise, no gear shifts, no vibration, and no drama. It just moves. For city driving, highway cruising, and daily use, it feels premium and effortless. Once you get used to an electric car, going back to a regular petrol or diesel vehicle feels like going from a smartphone to a landline phone. The car is comfortable, refined, and easy to drive. In four years, my vehicle has run only around 52,000 km, which is not very high. I have used it carefully and responsibly. Until recently, there were no serious problems with the car. So far, so good. The Range: 465 km on Paper, Around 300 km in Real Life Now let us talk about the first reality check: range. The claimed or certified range of the MG ZS EV is around 465 km. But in my practical usage, I usually get around 300 km. Is 300 km bad? Not really. For most daily driving, 300 km is more than enough. But the problem is not the 300 km range. The problem is the gap between the advertised figure and what a normal user actually experiences. EV range depends on many things: driving speed, AC usage, terrain, tyre pressure, traffic, battery condition, driving style, and even weather. So yes, I understand that certified range and real-world range will never be exactly the same. But when a customer sees 465 km, pays premium money, and then gets around 300 km, the expectation gap is quite large. This is where EV buyers need to be careful. Don’t buy based only on the certified range. Ask real owners. Watch long-term reviews. Check what range people are actually getting after two, three, and four years. The Price: ₹28.5 Lakhs for a Premium Electric SUV I paid around ₹28.5 lakhs for this vehicle. That is not a small amount. At this price point, customers expect not just a good car, but also strong after-sales support, good resale value, and quick service resolution. A premium electric SUV is not just a car. It is also a technology product. And when technology fails, the service network becomes extremely important. That is where my recent problem started. The AC Failure: When Silence Became Heat Until last month, the car was mostly trouble-free. Then suddenly, the AC stopped working. In Kerala weather, an AC failure is not a small inconvenience. It is not like saying, “Okay, I will open the window and manage.” In an EV, especially in our climate, AC is not a luxury. It is survival equipment. I took the vehicle to the local MG dealer service centre. They inspected it and told me that the 2022 model AC system uses a specific type of cooling gas and setup. From the label on the car, the AC system mentions: Refrigerant: R1234yf Quantity: 540 ± 20 g Oil specification: SP-A2 Coolant marking: O.A.T + H₂O In simple terms, this is not the old-style AC gas that every roadside AC workshop can refill casually. It needs proper equipment, the correct refrigerant, trained technicians, and the right parts. The service centre informed me that the vehicle had to be taken to the Kochi service centre for rectification. I was also told that the cooling coil needed replacement, and that the part would take around a week to arrive. One week sounded manageable. But now it has been almost 20 days since I left the vehicle at the service centre. The issue is still not rectified, and I am still waiting for delivery. That is when the ownership experience started feeling less like “future mobility” and more like “future delivery date unknown.” The Bigger Problem: EV Service Is Still Not Fully Mature This experience made me realise something important. Electric cars may be mechanically simpler than petrol or diesel cars, but when something does go wrong, the solution is not always simple. Not every service centre may be equipped to handle every issue. Not every part may be readily available. Not every technician may be trained for every EV-specific system. In a petrol or diesel car, if the AC fails, most workshops can at least diagnose or repair it quickly. But in an EV, especially a premium EV, even an AC problem can become a specialised service issue. This is not just about MG. This is a larger EV ecosystem issue in India. We are buying advanced electric vehicles, but the support network is still catching up. The Exchange Thought: Enter the Mahindra XEV 9S Because of this delay, I started thinking seriously about replacing the MG ZS EV. I decided to check out the Mahindra XEV 9S. I test drove it, and honestly, it was impressive. It felt like a proper modern electric SUV, loaded with almost all necessary and unnecessary features. These new EVs are becoming like smartphones on wheels. Big screens, connected features, premium interiors, advanced driving aids, futuristic design — everything is there. The test drive was excellent. The car felt exciting. For a moment, I thought maybe it was time to move on. Then came the shocking part. The Resale Shock: ₹28.5 Lakhs to ₹8 Lakhs The Mahindra team evaluated my four-year-old MG ZS EV, which has run around 52,000 km, at only ₹8 lakhs. That was a real shock. A vehicle bought for around ₹28.5 lakhs being valued at around ₹8 lakhs in four years means a massive drop in value. That is approximately a loss of ₹20.5 lakhs in four years. In simple terms, the car has lost most of its value even though it is not very old and has not run very high kilometres. This means the value is reducing by roughly 20% or more every year. At this rate, after five or six years, the resale value of a premium EV may become painfully low. And that raises a very serious question: Are premium EV buyers calculating depreciation correctly? Most people talk about saving money on petrol or diesel. But if you save a few lakhs on fuel and lose twenty lakhs in depreciation, what exactly did you save? That is the question every premium EV buyer must ask. The EV Cost Equation Is Not Just Electricity vs Petrol When people talk about EV savings, they usually say: “No petrol cost.” “Low running cost.” “Less maintenance.” “Charge at home.” “Environment friendly.” All of this may be true. But the full cost equation should include: Purchase price Real-world range Insurance cost Battery warranty Service network quality Parts availability Downtime during repairs Resale value Technology obsolescence Battery health perception in used-car market The last point is very important. Even if the battery is working fine, used-car buyers are often scared of EV batteries. They worry about replacement cost, range degradation, software issues, and long-term reliability. Because of this fear, resale value suffers. So while EVs are wonderful to drive, they may not yet be wonderful to resell. My Verdict: Don’t Fall Blindly for Premium EV Hype After four years with the MG ZS EV, my verdict is mixed. As a car, I like it. It is powerful, smooth, silent, and enjoyable. As an ownership experience, it has taught me some expensive lessons. The range is much lower than the certified figure. The service system for specialised EV issues still needs improvement. Parts availability can create long delays. Resale value can be brutally disappointing. Premium EV depreciation is a real risk. So here is my honest advice: Do not buy a premium electric SUV purely because of features, claimed range, and showroom excitement. Buy it only after understanding the full picture. Ask yourself: Can I live with the real-world range? Is the service centre nearby fully capable of handling EV issues? Are important parts readily available? What is the expected resale value after four or five years? Am I buying for long-term use or planning to upgrade soon? Will the fuel savings compensate for depreciation? Because in the EV world, the most expensive shock may not come from the battery. It may come from the resale value. Final Thoughts I still believe electric cars are the future. They are clean, smooth, silent, and technologically advanced. But the premium EV market in India still has some growing up to do. Manufacturers must be more transparent about real-world range. Service centres must be better equipped. Parts availability must improve. And most importantly, customers must be educated about depreciation and resale value before making a purchase decision. My MG ZS EV gave me four years of smooth and silent driving. But now, with the AC failure, long service delay, and shocking resale valuation, I have become more cautious. The lesson is simple: An electric car may be silent on the road, but its depreciation can be very loud. So before buying a premium EV, don’t just test drive the car. Test drive the ownership cost.
Read moreI brought a MG ZS EV after considering Tata and Mahindra. Best decision I feel. ZS feels more premium with a little extra budget.
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Planning to buy ZS EV? Here are a few dealers in Bijapur
Plot No 7K/3, NH - 50, Imbrahimpur Ring Road, Opp Shri Sangameshwar Hospital, Bijapur, Karnataka 586109
joshicarsmg@gmail.com



Ask owners & Autocar experts.
The MG ZS EV on-road prices in Bijapur ranges from ₹19.08 lakh to ₹21.84 lakh.
MG is offering the ZS EV with a 3-year standard warranty, 3-year roadside assistance, and 3 free services. The battery pack is being offered with an 8-year or 1.5 lakh km warranty (whichever is earlier).
The MG ZS EV ex-showroom prices range from ₹17.99 lakh to ₹20.50 lakh.
In the city of Bijapur, the MG ZS EV prices start at ₹19.08 lakh.
In Bijapur, the top-spec Essence of the MG ZS EV has an on road price of 21.84 lakh.
sakthi
I am planning to buy MG ZS EV, especially now that it is being offered at a reduced price. My daily commute is around 50 km, which makes an EV seem like a suitable option for my needs. However, I am confused by reports suggesting that the ZS EV may be discontinued and replaced by a new-generation model. Given this uncertainty, would it still be a good decision to buy the MG ZS EV now, or would it be better to wait for the upcoming replacement? Could you please advise?

autocar.india
The MG ZS EV is still worth buying today, especially at the heavily reduced prices being offered currently. Yes, MG is working on a replacement for both the Astor and ZS EV, but that car is not around the corner. The replacement is expected only around 2027 and will be based on an all-new modular platform with newer technology and powertrain options.For your use case, that shouldn't be a deal breaker. Your daily commute is only 50km, which the ZS EV can handle effortlessly. More importantly, the current discounts significantly improve the value proposition. The money you're saving today will likely offset a large part of the depreciation hit associated with buying a model that is approaching the end of its lifecycle.The ZS EV also remains a very competent EV. It has a proven powertrain, a comfortable ride, good performance and a feature-rich cabin.
Amit gandhi
I want to buy either an electric car or a hybrid car, depending on which one would be more economical to maintain. My weekly running is around 1,250 km, with approximately 85% of that being on highways or expressways. I have not shortlisted any specific models yet, as I often end up confused after reading user reviews, watching videos, and comparing the various pros and cons of different cars. Considering my usage pattern and focus on lower maintenance costs, which type of vehicle and which models would you recommend?

autocar.india
Buy the Toyota Urban Cruiser Hyryder Hybrid or its sister car the Maruti Suzuki Grand Vitara. With 85% highway and 1,250 km a week, you need range and minimal downtime; this hybrid will do around 20 kpl at steady speeds, refuels in minutes, and Toyota’s hybrid system is proven and low on upkeep. Over big mileages, the petrol you save, versus normal petrol and the time you save versus hunting for public chargers, make a bigger difference than the savings with an EV.Here’s the catch you should know: the hybrid’s boot is smaller than the pure petrol’s and maintenance costs would be more than an EV, but not prohibitively so. If you have dedicated parking and can plug in every night, an EV would be cheaper to run and maintain. In that case, skip small batteries. Pick the MG ZS EV for its highway range, or the Tata Nexon EV Long Range if you want a lower price. On home power you’ll spend roughly Rs. 1.5-2 per km. Relying on highway fast chargers pushes costs close to petrol per km and eats time, which is why the Hyryder Hybrid fits your weekly grind best unless home charging is easy.
Krishna
Hi! I currently own a BMW M340i, which is 2 years old. I am considering buying an EV for daily and local commuting. I am looking for good design, a great music system and good battery life. Mahindra is already ruled out, as one of my cousins owns one. So I am considering either BYD or MG. If you could suggest any other ICE cars, that would be fine too. My budget is around Rs 30-40 lakh.

autocar.india
If you are looking for a good EV, the BYD Seal is a great option. It is one of the best electric cars in the Rs. 40 lakh range, offering a lot of tech, equipment, and a spacious interior. Performance, too, is very good, which, being a BMW 340i owner, you will appreciate.The MG ZS EV is a good car, but it's not in the league of the BYD Seal. If the Seal is beyond your budget, the BYD Atto 3, priced between Rs. 27 and 37 lakh, is the next best option. It is not as spacious as the BYD, but it is well-equipped and has a good range.Sadly, there are not many good ICE vehicles in that price bracket anymore, but the best option for your money is the Skoda Kodiaq, which ranges from Rs. 47-56 lakh.
Harshith
Hi, I travel around 3,000 km a month, with 80% on highways at speeds of 100–120 km/h. I am looking to buy an EV and can set up a home charger. The options I have narrowed down to are: MG ZS EV top model – an older car, but is it still worth it? MG Windsor Pro EV top model Tata Nexon EV top model Which of these should I go for?

autocar.india
We’d rule out the MG Windsor Pro EV first. It’s more of a city-focused EV, and its highway manners aren’t ideal. The ride is firm, and there is noticeable road noise, which can be tiring over long distances.The Tata Nexon EV is capable on highways, but its real-world range still falls short of the MG ZS EV’s. An important factor if you cover long distances and occasionally rely on public chargers.The MG ZS EV, though slightly older, remains the best option for your usage. It offers stronger performance, a more comfortable long-distance ride, better range, and a more spacious, premium cabin that feels a class above the others. Since it has been on sale for a while, you should also be able to negotiate a decent discount.