Making the switch to electric in India doesn’t have to cost a fortune. Two affordable electric cars are making the EV dream accessible to mainstream Indian buyers: the Tata Punch EV, India’s best-selling affordable electric SUV, and the Citroen eC3, a budget-focused EV hatchback with a distinct French approach to electric mobility. Both are priced under ₹15 lakh and target first-time EV buyers. But which one delivers better value, range, and ownership satisfaction? We compare them in detail.
Specifications Comparison
| Specification | Tata Punch EV | Citroen eC3 |
|---|---|---|
| Battery Options | 25 kWh / 35 kWh | 29.2 kWh (single option) |
| Motor Power | 82 PS / 122 PS | 57 PS |
| Motor Torque | 114 Nm / 190 Nm | 143 Nm |
| ARAI Range | 315 km / 421 km | 320 km |
| Real-World Range | 200–250 km / 270–320 km | 220–250 km |
| DC Fast Charging | 7.2 kW / 50 kW DC | None (AC only) |
| 0–100 km/h | 11.5 sec / 9.5 sec | ~14 seconds |
| Starting Price | ₹9.99 lakh (ex-showroom) | ₹11.50 lakh (ex-showroom) |
Design & Exterior Comparison
The Tata Punch EV inherits the ICE Punch’s popular micro-SUV silhouette — upright, chunky, with decent ground clearance (190 mm) and robust cladding. The closed-off front grille, illuminated charging port, and blue EV accents distinguish it from the petrol variant. It looks like a genuine SUV despite its compact dimensions, and its visual familiarity reduces the EV intimidation factor for first-time buyers.
The Citroen eC3 follows the regular C3’s distinctive Citroen design language — boxy, with contrasting roof panel options, chevron LED daytime running lights, and the brand’s signature Airbump cladding on the lower body. It’s quirky, polarising, and distinctly French. Smaller than the Punch in footprint, it’s more agile in city traffic but has less visual commanding presence.
Winner: Tata Punch EV — more commanding presence and broader appeal in the Indian market.
Interior & Features Comparison
The Punch EV’s interior features a 10.25-inch touchscreen with Tata’s Arcade.ev connected suite, wireless Android Auto and Apple CarPlay, a digital instrument cluster, multiple drive modes (Eco/City/Sport), Vehicle to Load (V2L) capability on the long-range variant, and 6 airbags on top trims. The cabin is practical with reasonable boot space (366 litres) and good rear legroom.
The Citroen eC3 takes a simpler approach: a 10.2-inch infotainment screen, Citroen’s minimalist interior philosophy with French-inspired seat colours and patterns, and Citroen Advanced Comfort seats that are genuinely excellent. However, it lacks wireless Android Auto/Apple CarPlay, has only a manual AC (no auto climate), and offers fewer technology features than the Punch EV. Boot space is comparable at 310 litres.
Winner: Tata Punch EV — significantly more features, ADAS options, and V2L capability.
Range & Charging Comparison
The Punch EV’s 35 kWh variant delivers a real-world range of 270–320 km, making it genuinely usable for inter-city trips. The 25 kWh base variant’s 200–250 km real-world range is adequate for daily city commuting. Critically, the Punch EV supports DC fast charging at up to 50 kW (on 35 kWh), enabling 0–80% in approximately 56 minutes at a fast charger — using Tata’s extensive Tata Power charging network.
The Citroen eC3’s 320 km ARAI range translates to approximately 220–250 km in real-world conditions. The critical limitation is that the eC3 supports only AC charging (maximum 11 kW home/public AC charger) — there is no DC fast charging capability. This means a full charge from near-empty takes 6–7 hours. For city-only use with home charging, this is manageable; for inter-city travel, it’s a significant constraint.
Winner: Tata Punch EV — DC fast charging support on the 35 kWh variant is a significant advantage.
Performance Comparison
The Punch EV’s long-range variant at 122 PS and 190 Nm delivers genuinely brisk performance — more than adequate for city use and occasional highway runs. The short-range 82 PS variant is calmer but still quicker than a comparable petrol hatchback off the line. Regenerative braking has multiple levels, contributing to real-world range extension in city traffic.
The Citroen eC3’s 57 PS motor is the least powerful in this comparison. It’s adequate for city commuting but noticeably strained at highway speeds above 80 km/h. The eC3 was never designed for outright performance — its strength is effortless urban mobility, not thrilling driving dynamics. For buyers who only need urban-focused EV transport, this is sufficient.
Winner: Tata Punch EV — stronger performance across all variants.
Safety Comparison
The Tata Punch EV earned a 5-star Global NCAP rating (the ICE Punch was tested and achieved this; the EV inherits the same body structure with additional battery safety reinforcement). Up to 6 airbags are available on top variants. ADAS with automatic emergency braking is available on the Empowered+ variant.
The Citroen eC3 has not been independently NCAP tested as of 2026. It offers 2 airbags as standard with no ADAS features. The eC3’s structure is based on the C3 platform, which has not achieved the same NCAP results as Tata’s newer safety-focused platform.
Winner: Tata Punch EV — 5-star NCAP, more airbags, and available ADAS.
Running Costs
Both cars cost approximately ₹1.50–1.80 per km in electricity costs at Indian rates (₹8/unit). Annual savings over a comparable petrol car are approximately ₹40,000–60,000 for a typical 40 km/day commuter. The Punch EV’s larger battery means higher per-charge electricity cost but also longer range between charges. eC3 owners with home charging setups enjoy near-zero marginal daily costs.
Winner: Tie — both deliver comparable running cost savings over petrol alternatives.
Price & Value for Money
The Punch EV starts at ₹9.99 lakh (Smart 25 kWh) and goes up to ₹14.99 lakh for the Empowered+ 35 kWh AWD. The eC3 starts at ₹11.50 lakh and has only one battery option at approximately ₹13.50 lakh for the top variant. The Punch EV’s lower entry price, wider variant range, DC fast charging support, and 5-star NCAP safety make it exceptional value.
Winner: Tata Punch EV — significantly better value across every dimension.
Which Should You Buy?
Buy the Tata Punch EV if:
- DC fast charging support for occasional inter-city travel is important
- Safety rating (5-star NCAP) is a non-negotiable
- You want maximum features and technology at the best price
- V2L (powering appliances from your car) is a useful feature
Buy the Citroen eC3 if:
- You exclusively charge at home (AC charging only is not a dealbreaker)
- Citroen’s ride comfort and Advanced Comfort seats are priorities
- You want a compact, easy-to-park urban EV with French personality
- Budget is limited and the eC3’s pricing fits better
Pros & Cons
Tata Punch EV
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| 5-star Global NCAP safety | Smaller cabin vs ICE Punch due to battery packaging |
| DC fast charging (50 kW) | Build quality not as premium as higher Tata EVs |
| Lower entry price (₹9.99 lakh) | Entry variant range (25 kWh) may not satisfy all buyers |
| V2L capability on long-range | Suspension can be stiff on very bad roads |
| 6 airbags + ADAS on top trims | Boot space reduced slightly by battery |
Citroen eC3
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Advanced Comfort seats – best in class | No DC fast charging – AC only |
| Comfortable ride quality (city-focused) | Only 2 airbags standard; no ADAS |
| Distinctive French design | Less powerful motor (57 PS) |
| Simple, minimalist interior | No NCAP rating yet |
| Adequate city range (220–250 km) | No variant flexibility – single battery option |
Final Verdict
In nearly every objective metric, the Tata Punch EV wins this comparison. It’s more powerful, has DC fast charging, a proven 5-star NCAP rating, more features, a lower starting price, and V2L capability. For most Indian buyers considering their first affordable electric car, the Tata Punch EV is the definitive recommendation.
The Citroen eC3 carves out a niche for buyers who exclusively home-charge, don’t need inter-city range, and specifically value Citroen’s superior ride comfort and seat quality for urban use. It’s a good car in the right use case — but for general-purpose EV ownership in India, the Punch EV is the smarter, safer, and more capable choice.