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Is This New American EV Bike Just an Indian in Disguise?

Wednesday, June 10, 2026 | 3:59 PM (GMT-04.00) Last Updated 2026-06-10T20:05:34Z
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A New Era for Zero Motorcycles


Behind the latest electric motorcycle from Zero, the Lompico Concept, there might be the fingerprints of Hero MotoCorp. This partnership could be more significant than the bike itself.

When Zero Motorcycles first introduced the Lompico Concept a few months ago, most people focused on its specifications. An 8.8-kWh battery, around 40 horsepower, compact dimensions, and a design that seems to bridge the gap between an urban commuter and a lightweight naked bike. That's what manufacturers usually want you to notice first.

However, after spending some time looking at the photos, something else caught my attention. Is this actually a Zero? Or is it the first real glimpse of what happens when Hero MotoCorp and Zero start sharing their knowledge?

On paper, the Lompico doesn't look like the kind of machine that built Zero's reputation. It isn't a high-performance naked or touring bike. It doesn't aim to break acceleration records or showcase massive battery numbers. Instead, it targets the same market as many popular gasoline-powered 400cc motorcycles. In today's motorcycle landscape, that's a very deliberate move.


For years, one of Zero's biggest challenges has been pricing. The company has created impressive electric motorcycles, but many riders struggled to justify spending premium money on a bike that still required compromises in charging infrastructure and long-distance usability. The Lompico looks like an acknowledgment that the next battle won't be fought at the top of the market. It will be fought where normal people actually buy motorcycles.

That's where Hero comes into the picture. Because Hero isn't just some random investor that occasionally appears in corporate press releases. The Indian giant has invested millions of dollars into Zero over the years, and the two companies have been working together on smaller electric motorcycle platforms intended for global markets. Hero gains access to Zero's EV expertise. Zero, in turn, gets access to manufacturing scale, supply chains, and production experience that few companies on Earth can match.

Earlier this year, Hero's electric mobility division, Vida, revealed the VxZ, a motorcycle whose name literally stands for Vida x Zero. At first glance, it looked like another step in Hero's expansion beyond electric scooters. Now that patent drawings of the production-bound VxZ and Zero's Lompico have surfaced, the similarities are getting harder to ignore.

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Look past the bodywork and the two bikes appear to share a surprising amount of hardware. The trellis frame looks nearly identical, the wheels match, and the braking components appear to be the same. Both bikes use upside-down forks, a rear monoshock, a similarly shaped swingarm, a TFT display, and even a swingarm-mounted license plate holder. At some point, the conversation shifts from coincidence to shared DNA.

And that actually reinforces why this new electric motorcycle makes so much sense.

The bike's performance numbers sit right in the sweet spot for developing markets, A2-license riders in Europe, and urban commuters in the US. The design is pretty cool, too. It actually looks like a motorcycle instead of a futuristic concept render. That's important because most riders don't actually want their bike to resemble a prop from a movie set. They just want something practical, fun, affordable, and decent to look at.

Then there's the software angle. Zero spent a lot of time talking about its new Cypher 4 operating system, complete with connectivity features, predictive diagnostics, charging management, and deeper customization. That's probably the biggest clue that we're still looking at a genuine Zero product. The hardware may eventually be shared across multiple brands, but the software ecosystem is where Zero brings much of its value to the partnership.



Photos by: Zero Motorcycles

A Shared Vision

So is the Lompico secretly a Hero? Well, yes and no. Yes, because Zero and Hero have been working together for some time now. And no, because this isn't necessarily Zero just copying Hero's homework. A better comparison might actually be the automotive world, where multiple brands share platforms, engines, and technology while delivering very different products.

What's fascinating is that this may be the first time Zero has shown us a motorcycle that's more important for what it represents than what it actually is. The Lompico isn't just another electric motorcycle concept. It could be an early preview of a future where Hero builds the hardware, Zero builds the experience, and both companies benefit from each other's strengths.


And if that's the plan, this little concept might end up being one of the most important motorcycles Zero has unveiled in years.

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