Proudly Canadian‑Shipped 🇨🇦 E‑Bikes & Scooters
Proudly Canadian‑Shipped 🇨🇦 E‑Bikes & Scooters
July 02, 2026 11 min read
Best electric bikes in Canada for 2026: use our fit finder and 738-listing market data to choose faster.
By Street Rides Research Team | Updated July 2026 | 12 min read
An electric bike is a bicycle with a battery-powered motor that assists the rider. In Canada, most riders shop for a low-speed power-assisted bicycle. If you searched for the best electric bikes in Canada, start with step-through, folding, commuter, or fat tire models. Most strong options sit between $800 and $1,800 CAD. Street Rides Research analyzed 738 listings in our Canadian retail product dataset in May 2026. The average listing costs $1,473 CAD. The median sits at $1,110. We identified 67 brands and found that 50% of listings were unbranded white-label products.
The best electric bike in Canada depends on storage, terrain, comfort, and how strict you need to be about 500W and 32 km/h compliance. Based on our marketplace data and the Street Rides SR Score model, most buyers should start with one of four paths: step-through for comfort, folding for storage, commuter or urban for daily paved riding, and fat tire for rough surfaces or mixed terrain.
Use the Fit Finder to rank e-bikes by budget, ride distance, terrain, portability, and legal preference.
Open the Fit FinderIf after-sales support matters most, start with our brand-by-brand ranking instead of raw marketplace noise.
Best E-Bike Brands in CanadaComfort riders usually want step-through frames. Apartment riders usually want folding frames. Rough-road riders usually want fat tire bikes.
Step-through buyer guideDo not buy on wattage headlines alone. Check the rules first if federal or provincial compliance matters to you.
E-Bike Laws in CanadaThese four starting picks map to the four buyer paths we see most often in Canadian e-bike questions: comfort, storage, commuting, and rough-surface riding.
| Street Rides starting pick | Why it stands out | Price | Canadian fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best step-through: Freesky Nova | A comfort-first pick for riders who ask for easy mounting, longer range, and clean legal-fit specs. | $1,899 | 100/100 |
| Best folding: Gyrocopters iCaddy | A storage-first pick for apartment and mixed-transit buyers who care more about portability than speed theater. | $800 | 100/100 |
| Best everyday commuter: EMMO Urban T2 | A commuter-first pick for paved daily riding, simple legal fit, and buyers who want fewer tradeoffs. | $800 | 100/100 |
| Best fat tire value: Jasion EB5 MAX | A rough-surface value pick for riders who ask for fat tires without jumping straight into off-road-only power claims. | $899 | 100/100 |
These are starting picks, not universal winners. If you have stairs, a long round trip, steep hills, or a strict legal requirement, use the Fit Finder before you buy.
The interactive tool below combines our 5-dimension SR Score with your specific needs. Answer 6 questions about your use case, budget, distance, terrain, legal preference, and portability. See your top 5 e-bike matches ranked from 120 Canadian models.
Answer 6 questions. Get your top 5 e-bikes ranked from 120 SR-Scored Canadian models.
90 seconds. No email required. All calculation in your browser.
How the ranking works: Each e-bike scores across Utility (30%), Value (20%), Ownership (20%), Sentiment (15%), and Canadian Fit (15%). Your final rank blends personal fit (55%) with SR Score (45%). Every result links to the current product page. Legal badges: green means federal PAB (500W/32 km/h), orange is grey area (750W or higher), red is off-road only.
The Canadian e-bike market is large enough to support dozens of competing brands, but it is still structurally fragmented. Our marketplace snapshot found 738 listings priced above $250. That is not a census of every Canadian retailer. It is a buyer-facing view of what a shopper is likely to see in a major online marketplace.
Street Rides keyword research also shows more than 50,000 monthly Canadian searches across e-mobility product and brand terms. That demand supports 67 identified brands in our dataset. Yet almost no one has built durable category leadership.
That matters because brand accountability affects service, replacement parts, battery traceability, and warranty response. In practical terms, the market is not just crowded. It is noisy. Buyers see many similar products with weak support signals and inflated spec language.
The biggest lesson is simple. This category still rewards guidance. New shoppers do not need more choice. They need help understanding what is real, what is legal, and what is serviceable in Canada.
Fat tire e-bikes lead the dataset at 36% of listings. Folding e-bikes rank second at 21%. Together, those two categories make up 57% of the marketplace snapshot we analyzed.

This pattern makes sense for Canadian buying conditions. Fat tire bikes appeal to riders who want gravel, trail, winter, or cottage-road capability. Folding bikes solve apartment storage and mixed transit problems. Trikes and dirt bikes sit at smaller shares, but they matter because they command distinct budgets and buyer intent.
| Category | Count | Share | Avg Price | Median Price | Avg Wattage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fat Tire | 272 | 36% | $1,764 | $1,599 | 2,462W |
| Folding | 160 | 21% | $1,108 | $730 | 1,058W |
| Trike | 57 | 7% | $2,086 | $1,867 | 695W |
| Dirt Bike | 55 | 7% | $1,251 | $1,099 | 2,136W |
| Scooter | 52 | 7% | $1,159 | $761 | 1,666W |
| Mountain | 49 | 6% | $1,218 | $926 | 1,837W |
| Commuter | 28 | 3% | $1,077 | $909 | 1,044W |
| Step-Thru | 12 | 1% | $850 | $700 | 1,020W |
Two categories deserve extra attention. Trikes command the highest average price at $2,086 because stability, cargo room, and accessibility features cost more to build. Dirt bikes draw a similar 7% share and also attract strong search demand, which shows how often Canadian buyers compare traditional e-bikes against higher-power adjacent products.
The average listing in this dataset costs $1,473, but the median is only $1,110. That 33% spread shows how strongly premium models pull the average upward.

For buyers, that means the average price can mislead. The marketplace has three practical pricing bands. Under $1,000 is the entry layer. It is crowded with folding bikes, basic commuters, and value-driven fat tire models. Between $1,000 and $2,000 is the buyer sweet spot. This is where batteries, brakes, and frame quality improve without moving into niche premium territory. Above $2,000, the category shifts toward trikes, cargo, long-range, and high-power builds.
Category matters as much as price. Folding e-bikes hold the lowest median at $730. Fat tire bikes sit at $1,599. Trikes top the list at $1,867. Those gaps reflect different jobs, not just different brands.
No brand dominates the dataset. We identified 67 brands, and the largest listing share belongs to Jasion at just 4.1%. That is not a winner-take-all market. It is a fragmented marketplace where visibility is spread across many weakly differentiated sellers.
| Brand | Listings | Avg Price |
|---|---|---|
| Jasion | 30 | $1,039 |
| eAhora | 26 | $2,867 |
| FREESKY | 20 | $2,284 |
| Gyrocopters | 19 | $682 |
| Razor | 18 | $691 |
| isinwheel | 16 | $935 |
| Gotrax | 14 | $679 |
| Funhang | 14 | $778 |
| BIGNIU | 11 | $2,339 |
| iScooter | 9 | $694 |
The important pattern is not just who leads. It is how little separation exists. The top five brands hold only a small share of the total dataset. Meanwhile, half the listings are still unbranded. That weakens trust and makes after-sales support harder for buyers to judge.
It also means Canadian retailers still have room to build authority. The marketplace is full of supply, but not full of confidence.
The biggest buyer risk in this dataset is not that choice is limited. It is that choice is poorly signposted. Many listings look competitive on paper but give weak clues about who supports the product after the sale, how easy parts are to source, and whether the published wattage is honest.
That is why the safest reading of this dataset is not "buy the cheapest bike." It is "buy the clearest support story." A recognizable brand with transparent specs, a reachable seller, and parts access usually creates less friction than a cheaper white-label listing with inflated claims.
If you want a brand-first view instead of a market snapshot, read our Best E-Bike Brands in Canada guide. If you want a category-first decision, compare the detailed buyer guides for folding e-bikes and fat tire e-bikes.
No. Listing titles inflate actual motor output by 2x to 3x on average in this dataset. Sellers advertise peak wattage. Buyers read it as continuous output. That mismatch distorts comparisons and confuses the legality question.
A listing titled "1000W e-bike" often points to a 350W to 500W continuous motor in the spec sheet. Peak output matters for short bursts. Continuous output matters for legality, hill performance, and buyer expectations.
This matters because Canadian federal e-bike rules center on 500W continuous power and a 32 km/h assisted speed cap. A title alone does not tell you whether a bike is compliant. You need the rated motor specification, not the headline number.
Canadians buy e-bikes in spring. Search demand peaks from April through July and bottoms out in winter. In our keyword data, May reaches 4.1x the January baseline.
That seasonality matters for both shoppers and merchants. Buyers who shop in February or March often get in before peak demand. Retailers should have inventory, category pages, and comparison content ready by early March to catch the spring research wave.
Street Rides Research analyzed 738 listings collected from our Canadian retail product dataset in May 2026. The dataset spans e-bikes and adjacent electric mobility categories that appear in the same consumer marketplace, including trikes, dirt bikes, and scooters.
Search volume data came from Google Ads keyword datasets for Canada and English. Research tools included custom data collection scripts, approved internal data providers, and AI-assisted analysis. All findings were verified through manual review.
We manually reviewed 67 brand labels, checked price and category anomalies, and cross-referenced wattage claims against spec sheets for the top 60 listings. This report represents approximately 11 hours of research analyzing 738 listings and 37 keyword rows across the Canadian e-mobility market.
Limitations: This is a marketplace snapshot, not a full census of every Canadian retailer. It excludes Walmart.ca, Canadian Tire, and many direct-to-consumer brand websites. Prices fluctuate. Category assignment comes from listing titles and manual cleanup. Market-share statements in this article apply to this dataset only.
Street Rides Research is a Canadian e-mobility research team based in Ontario. We track live retail pricing from 20+ Canadian retailers, verify provincial regulations against official government sources quarterly, and analyze verified buyer reviews.
Our SR Score methodology is fully published on our methodology page. Contact: info@streetrides.ca.
There is no single best electric bike for every Canadian buyer. Most shoppers should start with one of four paths: step-through for comfort, folding for storage, commuter or urban for daily paved riding, and fat tire for rough surfaces. The Street Rides Fit Finder narrows that list by budget, terrain, portability, and legal preference.
The average listing in our dataset costs $1,473 CAD, while the median is $1,110. That spread matters because it shows how much premium listings distort the average. Most buyer-facing listings cluster in the roughly $800 to $1,800 range.
Fat tire e-bikes are the largest category in our marketplace snapshot at 36% of listings. Folding e-bikes rank second at 21%. Together they account for 57% of the sample we analyzed.
Usually not. Listing titles often advertise peak wattage, while the spec sheet reveals the rated or continuous number that matters for comparison and legality. In our dataset, title wattage routinely overstated the real figure by 2x to 3x.
February and March are strong buying months because they sit just ahead of the spring demand spike. Search interest peaks from April through July, so shoppers who move earlier often face less competition and better selection.
Unbranded listings carry higher after-sales risk because service contacts, parts pipelines, and battery traceability are weaker. That does not make every unbranded bike bad, but it raises the importance of seller support, warranty clarity, and spec transparency.
Federal power-assisted bicycle rules center on 500W continuous motor output and a 32 km/h assisted speed cap. Many listings use larger peak-wattage numbers in the title, so always confirm the continuous rating before assuming a bike is compliant.
This report is updated quarterly. Last update: July 2026. Next scheduled refresh: October 2026.
Author bio: Street Rides Research Team studies Canadian e-bike, scooter, and electric mobility data. Our work combines marketplace analysis, keyword demand research, legal-rule tracking, and practical buyer guidance for Canadian riders. Contact the team through our Street Rides contact page.
Disclosure: Street Rides earns a commission on qualifying purchases through affiliate links. That does not change the analysis or the ranking logic used in our e-bike tools and buyer guides.
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