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India on Feb. 5, 2026 launched Bharat Taxi, a government-backed, cooperative-led ride-hailing platform designed to challenge private players such as Uber and Ola.
Inaugurated in New Delhi by Union Home and Cooperation Minister Amit Shah, the service is operated by Sahakar Taxi Cooperative Ltd and backed by major cooperative institutions.
Drivers, branded “Sarathis,” are member-owners who pay a flat access fee (widely reported as around ₹30) rather than per-ride commissions; the platform advertises zero commission and no surge pricing.
The cooperative model includes welfare measures such as health and accident insurance, retirement provisions and a shareholding structure for drivers.
The app — piloted from late 2025 across Delhi-NCR and parts of Gujarat with several hundred to several thousand rides daily — includes safety features, an SOS helpline and partnerships with police (including dedicated assistance booths). Government statements claim hundreds of thousands of registered drivers and rapid expansion plans to reach metro and rural areas over coming years.
The platform offers multiple vehicle categories and aims to redistribute platform revenue to drivers while undercutting incumbent fares by up to about 30 percent, according to official estimates.

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