iCaur Malaysia says it now has 1,800 vehicles on the road here, a figure it presents as proof that the brand is gaining traction in the country’s still-young off-road-flavoured EV space.
The company marked the milestone with a handover event and, just as importantly for brand-building, the launch of the iCaur Malaysia Owners Club.
iCaur said the V23 ranked third among EV brands in Malaysia in February with 179 registrations, while the iCaur 03 ranked seventh among EV models nationwide.
It also said the 03 ended 2025 as Malaysia’s 14th best-selling EV model, with 836 units registered in its first four months on sale.
That helps explain why iCaur is pushing community as hard as product. The new owners club is meant to give buyers more than a car and a keyfob.
According to the company, it will revolve around two main themes: customisation and community-building. In plain terms, that means meet-ups, owner networking and a platform for people to show off modified or personalised cars.
Fact is iCaur wants to be seen as youthful, expressive and a little different from the usual EV crowd.
Its “Born to Play” positioning leans heavily on lifestyle language, which is fine as marketing goes, but the harder question is whether that will still hold up once the novelty wears off and buyers begin judging the brand on aftersales support, durability and resale value.
iCaur clearly wants to build a niche. The iCaur 03, launched in September 2025, and the V23, introduced in November 2025, both tout rugged styling and electric power. For now, that appears to be working well enough to give the marque a visible foothold in Malaysia.












