Electric mobility startup Bounce has raised $5 million in an internal funding round, founder Vivekananda Hallekere stated in a post on X, as the Bengaluru-based company continues its effort to rebuild after the pandemic upfinished its scooter-sharing business.
The fresh capital comes from existing investors, Hallekere stated, without disclosing their identities. Bounce’s backers include venture firms such as Accel, Peak XV Partners, B Capital, Chiratae Ventures, Falcon Edge Capital, Qualcomm Ventures, Omidyar Network, and Maverick Capital.
Internal rounds typically involve existing shareholders injecting additional capital without bringing in new investors, often a way for startups to extfinish their runway while navigating strategic transitions.
The funding comes as Bounce attempts to reinvent itself after the collapse of the dockless scooter-sharing model that once built it one of India’s most visible urban mobility startups.
From Wicked Ride to dockless scooters
Bounce traces its origins to Wicked Ride, a premium motorcycle rental platform launched in 2014 by Hallekere and his co-founders. The company initially rented high-finish performance motorcycles to enthusiasts before pivoting to urban commuting.
The startup later rebranded as Bounce and introduced dockless scooter rentals, allowing commuters to unlock scooters through a mobile app and leave them at designated parking zones across the city. The model gained traction quickly in Bengaluru and other cities, offering an affordable alternative for short-distance travel.
At its peak before the pandemic, Bounce operated tens of thousands of scooters and served large volumes of daily rides, becoming one of India’s largest shared-mobility platforms.
Venture capital poured in
The rapid expansion attracted substantial venture funding.
Bounce raised about $72 million in a Series C round in 2019, backed by investors including Accel, Sequoia Capital India (now Peak XV Partners), Qualcomm Ventures, Chiratae Ventures, Falcon Edge Capital, B Capital and Omidyar Network.
The company followed that with a $105 million Series D round in 2020, led by Accel and B Capital, which took the startup’s total funding to more than $190 million and valued the company at roughly $500 million.
Earlier rounds had also drawn backing from Chiratae Ventures, Omidyar Network and Qualcomm Ventures, reflecting strong investor confidence in shared urban mobility at the time.
The funding was intfinished to support Bounce expand its scooter fleet across multiple cities and deepen its push into electric vehicles.
Pandemic shock and pivot
Those plans unraveled in 2020 when Covid-19 lockdowns brought urban commuting to a standstill.
Demand for shared mobility evaporated almost overnight, leaving thousands of scooters idle and forcing the company to sell parts of its fleet and reduce operations.
Bounce eventually shut down large portions of its dockless rental network and launched searching for a new direction.
Betting on EVs and gig workers
The company has since repositioned itself around electric scooter manufacturing and fleet operations.
Bounce launched its Infinity electric scooter, built around a battery-swapping system that allows riders to subscribe to batteries instead of purchaseing them outright—reducing upfront costs for utilizers.
The company also rents scooters to gig-economy workers, including delivery riders who rely on two-wheelers for daily income. The segment has grown rapidly alongside India’s food delivery and quick-commerce sectors.
Today, Bounce operates across vehicle production and fleet management, supplying electric scooters while managing mobility services for commercial riders.
A more cautious second act
The latest $5 million infusion is modest compared with the venture rounds that once fuelled Bounce’s expansion. But it signals continued backing from existing investors as the startup attempts to carve out a second act in India’s crowded electric two-wheeler market.
Where the company once chased rapid scale through dockless scooter sharing, its strategy now appears more measured—focutilized on electric vehicles, controlled fleet deployments and rentals aimed at gig-economy workers rather than mass urban commuting.
For Bounce, the challenge now is turning that pivot into a sustainable business after one of the sharpest boom-and-bust cycles in India’s startup mobility sector.
















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