• Renault is winding down the short-lived Mobilize brand.
  • Duo quadricycle killed just one year after its 2024 debut.
  • EV charging services will continue under Renault’s umbrella.

Renault’s chapter in electric micro-mobility might have started with big dreams, but it is ending rather quietly. The French automaker has pulled the plug on the Mobilize Beyond Automotive sub-brand, effectively killing off the Duo and Bento urban EVs before they had a real shot at proving themselves in the market.

Mobilize was set up in 2021 as a way for Renault to explore “opportunities beyond automotive manufacturing.” The division introduced the EZ-1 concept that same year, which later developed into the Duo and Bento in 2022. These designs eventually became production-ready in 2024.

More: Mobilize Duo And Bento Are Renault Group’s New Subscription-Based Urban EVs

The fully electric heavy quadricycle and its commercial counterpart shared much of their design language, character, and dimensions with the discontinued Renault Twizy, which came before rivals like the Citroën Ami, Opel Rocks Electric, and Fiat Topolino.

The key difference was that the Mobilize-branded models weren’t meant to be sold outright, but instead offered exclusively through subscription-based programs.

End of the Experiment

 Renault’s Smallest And Quirkiest EV Is Dead
The Moblize Bento (left) and Duo (right).

Just a year after the production versions were revealed, and before they even reached the UK market, Renault pulled the plug not only on the vehicles themselves but on the entire Mobilize brand. The company has now confirmed that Mobilize is “no longer a standalone entity.”

This decision also brings an end to Mobilize’s car-sharing services in Milan, with Madrid’s program to be phased out by 2026. According to Renault, these discontinued activities either lack long-term profitability or don’t align with the group’s strategic direction.

More: Renault Group’s Mobilize Limo Is A High-Riding Electric Sedan Designed For Fleet Use

Even so, not all traces of Mobilize are being erased. Renault still sees clear value in EV charging infrastructure, describing it as a core element for customer satisfaction and loyalty. The company believes these services help drive EV adoption, and they’re not going anywhere.

What Remains of Mobilize?

 Renault’s Smallest And Quirkiest EV Is Dead

To that end, Mobilize’s energy-related services will be folded into Renault Group’s commercial portfolio and overseen by Chief Growth Officer Fabrice Cambolive. The goal is to integrate them more closely with the company’s broader electrification strategy.

Among the tangible results of Mobilize’s efforts are access to over a million charging points across Europe for Renault Group drivers, a target of 100 ultra-fast charging hubs in France and another 100 in Italy by the end of 2026, around 90,000 active Charge Pass users, and the introduction of a bi-directional charging service (V2G) for commercial customers.

Despite the wind-down, Renault insists that Mobilize served its purpose, as a space to test new ideas and expand the company’s capabilities in unfamiliar territory. The brand helped surface opportunities with real potential, while clearing the deck of concepts that no longer made strategic sense.