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Indian motorcycles are having a moment in Latin America. The cue came from an unexpected place this morning when Rahul Gandhi, Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha, posted a photo beside a Bajaj Pulsar in Colombia and wrote that Bajaj, Hero and TVS are winning on “innovation, not cronyism.” The post is a small snapshot of a larger shift that has been years in the making.
Behind the selfie is a clear export story. Indian two-wheeler makers now sell widely across the Andean nations, the Southern Cone and Central America. The big three mass-market names Bajaj, Hero MotoCorp and TVS Motor have planted dealers, CKD lines and assembly partners across the region, while Royal Enfield has built a premium niche with mid-size motorcycles.
Colombia sits at the center of the map. Bajaj has a deep footprint here, fronted by distributor Grupo UMA and a country website listing sales and support. The brand’s Boxer, Pulsar and Dominar families are common sights, helped by local assembly and a parts network that keeps ownership costs predictable.
Hero picked Colombia early for a manufacturing base to serve northern South America and parts of Central America. That Villa Rica plant has anchored Hero’s Americas push and set up the brand for broader moves in the region. The company is also preparing a Brazil unit to localise for the continent’s biggest market.
TVS, meanwhile, has gone wide rather than deep. It has formal country presence in Peru and a dealer web across the main coastal cities. In practice, TVS’ Latin roster now stretches from Mexico and Central America down to Peru and Argentina, mixing Apache performance bikes with commuter models.
Brazil is the hard test for every newcomer because Honda and Yamaha dominate. Even so, the pieces are moving. Hero has publicly set plans for a local manufacturing unit to build and distribute in Brazil, a signal that the company wants to play long innings rather than remain an importer. Royal Enfield has been adding dealers and lifted international sales sharply this year, with Latin America among the bright spots. Expect Bajaj and TVS to keep pressing through partnerships and selective model launches tuned to Brazil’s licensing and tax structure.
Three factors recur across markets:
More local assembly, more finance tie-ups and more mid-displacement models. Royal Enfield’s export surge hints at a broader leisure segment forming, while Bajaj, Hero and TVS chase scale with commuters and delivery-friendly machines. If Rahul Gandhi’s quick nod in Bogotá captured anything, it is that Indian bikes are no longer just visiting Latin America. They are settling in.