By Niveshvani Desk
In the age of online startups, where convenience is marketed at the click of a button, a new car washing app called Hoora is drawing attention — not for its services, but for what users allege is a scam.
Too Good to Be True Offer
One user recently shared his ordeal after receiving a call from an executive of the Hoora App, a car washing startup that promised a monthly car wash at ₹26 and premium packages at ₹102. The offer was irresistibly cheap — a car wash for the price of a bottle of mineral water.
Lured by the affordability, the user booked a wash. But on the scheduled day, no one arrived. Worse, the executive who made the call stopped answering, and the number eventually went out of service.
Silence From the Company
Attempts to contact Hoora App’s customer care also failed. The helpline numbers went unanswered, and the official email address sent only generic automated responses — suspected to be AI-generated.
Frustrated, the user searched online and discovered multiple similar complaints against Hoora App. Customers across cities had reported the same pattern: attractive offers, no service delivery, and vanishing customer support.
The Bigger Question
This is not an isolated case. India’s startup ecosystem has seen several instances where companies launch aggressive promotional campaigns, lure customers with unsustainable pricing, and eventually collapse or, worse, turn into outright scams.
A simple question arises: How viable is a ₹26 car wash when a bottle of water itself costs ₹20? Such offers raise red flags from the start, yet regulatory gaps allow these ventures to operate unchecked until consumers fall prey.
Need for Guidelines
Industry experts say that car wash services typically cost anywhere between ₹200–₹500 depending on the city and quality. Anything priced far below market rates is either heavily subsidized by investor money (as was seen in the food delivery wars) or outright unsustainable.
The real issue is the absence of strong government guidelines for online service startups. While e-commerce and fintech are monitored by regulators, app-based services in categories like car washing, home cleaning, or repair often escape scrutiny.
Until clear consumer protection rules are enforced, startups like Hoora may continue to exploit loopholes, leaving customers in the lurch.
Consumer Alert
For now, users are advised to stay alert. If an online service sounds “too good to be true,” it probably is. Always check reviews, verify authenticity, and avoid upfront payments without credibility checks.
The Hoora case is a reminder that India’s startup dream can also hide nightmares — and until accountability becomes the norm, scams will keep finding new forms.







