May 05, 2026 7 min read

Electric dirt bikes are off-road electric motorcycles designed for trail riding, property use, and recreational off-roading without gas engines or exhaust noise. They represent one of the fastest-growing segments in Canadian e-mobility. And the supply side has not caught up.

Every month, 12,100 Canadians search for "electric dirt bike." Amazon.ca has only 55 listings to meet that demand. That is 220 searchers competing for every single product. No other e-bike category shows a gap this extreme.

We analyzed every electric dirt bike listed on Amazon.ca in May 2026. This data comes from the Street Rides market study of 738 e-mobility listings across all categories. We tracked prices, brands, wattage claims, and availability. We cross-referenced search volume data from Street Rides keyword research to measure real Canadian demand.

The findings reveal a market where buyers outnumber products by a staggering margin. Brands have not moved fast enough. Over half the listings carry no brand name at all. Wattage claims inflate real performance by 2x or more. And pricing ranges from $300 youth models to $3,300 adult machines with a thin middle.

KEY FINDINGS
  • 55 electric dirt bike listings on Amazon.ca at a $1,099 median price.
  • 12,100 monthly Canadian searches vs. 55 listings = massive demand gap.
  • 55% of dirt bike listings are completely unbranded.
  • Razor leads branded listings with 7 models starting at $254.
  • Title wattage averages 2,136W but actual continuous output runs 500-1,000W.
  • Price splits evenly: 40% under $800, 20% mid-range, 40% over $1,500.

How Big Is the Electric Dirt Bike Market in Canada?

Electric dirt bikes account for 55 of the 738 total e-bike listings on Amazon.ca. That is 7.5% of the market by product count. A small slice. But search demand tells a completely different story.

12,100monthly Canadian searches for "electric dirt bike" (Street Rides keyword research, May 2026)

That is one of the highest demand-to-supply ratios in the entire e-bike market. Compare this to fat tire electric bikes. Fat tire listings make up 36.9% of all Amazon.ca e-bike products. Electric dirt bikes hold just 7.5%. Yet dirt bikes generate outsized search volume relative to their shelf space. Buyers are looking. Sellers are not showing up.

The Canadian landscape explains part of this demand. The country has vast rural land, cottage country stretching across Ontario and Quebec, and thousands of kilometers of provincial park trails. These are ideal conditions for off-road electric riding.

Parents drive a large share of the search volume. Gas dirt bikes are loud. They produce exhaust fumes. Neighbors complain. Electric dirt bikes solve all three problems. A parent searching for a quieter alternative for their teenager lands on this category fast.

Property owners represent the other major buyer group. Farms, ranches, and large rural acreages need a vehicle for quick trips across the land. A gas ATV costs more to maintain. An electric dirt bike charges from a standard outlet and requires almost zero upkeep.

The math is simple. Divide 12,100 monthly searchers by 55 available products. Each listing receives roughly 220 potential buyers per month. Most e-bike categories see 30-50 searchers per listing. Electric dirt bikes see 4x that rate. Supply has not responded to demand.

TAKEAWAY: Electric dirt bikes are the most undersupplied category in the Canadian e-bike market. A 7.5% share of listings attracts a search volume that rivals categories with 5x the product count. Brands and retailers that fill this gap now will capture buyers who have very few options.

What Do Electric Dirt Bikes Cost in Canada?

Electric dirt bikes in Canada range from $300 to $3,300. The median price sits at $1,099. The average comes in slightly higher at $1,251. You can find a model at almost any budget.

$1,099Median price for electric dirt bikes on Amazon.ca (May 2026)

We found 55 listings and sorted them into three price tiers. The results surprised us.

The first tier sits under $800. It holds 40% of all listings (22 units). These are kids and teens models with lower wattage motors. Parents shopping for a first off-road bike will land here. Expect 250W to 500W motors and top speeds around 15-25 km/h.

The mid-range tier covers $800 to $1,500. It holds just 20% of listings (11 units). These bikes target adult beginners who want real off-road capability. Motors jump to 500W-1,000W continuous output. Build quality improves with better suspension and disc brakes.

The premium tier runs above $1,500. It holds 40% of listings (22 units). These are high-performance adult models with powerful motors and full-size frames. You get features like hydraulic brakes, long-travel suspension, and larger battery packs.

This even three-way split is unusual. Most e-bike categories cluster heavily in one price tier. Electric dirt bikes spread across budget and premium with a thin middle. That gap creates an opportunity for brands willing to own the $800 to $1,500 space.

TAKEAWAY: Budget and premium models dominate the market equally. The mid-range segment is underserved. Buyers either spend under $800 for a kids bike or over $1,500 for a serious adult machine.

Which Brands Sell Electric Dirt Bikes in Canada?

Twelve brands sell electric dirt bikes on Amazon.ca. But most listings have no brand at all. We identified 55 total listings across the category.

The unbranded problem here is severe. A full 55% of listings (30 units) carry no recognizable brand name. That is the highest unbranded rate of any e-bike category we studied. For a vehicle designed for high-speed off-road riding, this is concerning.

WARNING: 55% of electric dirt bike listings on Amazon.ca are completely unbranded. These bikes reach speeds of 40-70 km/h on rough terrain. An unbranded bike means no accountability for safety defects, no reliable warranty claims, and no replacement parts pipeline.

Among branded sellers, Razor leads with 7 listings at an average price of $838. Razor targets the kids and teens segment with proven designs. SPARK03 follows with 4 listings averaging $1,099. Wildeway offers 3 budget-friendly listings averaging just $452.

The premium segment features three notable brands. Bootime averages $2,074 per listing. Misodo comes in at $1,800. Venom rounds out the top tier at $1,700. Each brand carries only 1-2 listings on the platform.

No single brand dominates the adult performance segment. Razor owns the kids market but does not compete above $1,000. The premium brands lack the listing volume to build strong review profiles. This fragmentation gives buyers limited options for comparison shopping.

TAKEAWAY: Razor is the only established brand with meaningful volume. If you want a branded adult dirt bike, expect to pay over $1,500 and choose from a small pool of niche sellers.

Are Electric Dirt Bike Wattage Claims Honest?

Most wattage claims in electric dirt bike titles are inflated. The average title wattage across listings is 2,136W. That makes dirt bikes the second highest category after fat tire e-bikes.

2,136WAverage wattage claimed in electric dirt bike listing titles

Title wattage ranges from 250W to a staggering 8,000W. That 8,000W claim is misleading. No consumer electric dirt bike delivers 8,000W of continuous output. Sellers use peak wattage numbers to make listings look more powerful. Actual continuous output for most models falls between 500W and 1,000W.

This matters for Canadian buyers. Federal and provincial regulations cap street-legal e-bikes at 500W continuous output. Any electric dirt bike above that limit is not street legal. You cannot ride it on roads, bike lanes, or public trails in most provinces. These are off-road only vehicles.

We recommend ignoring title wattage entirely. Check the product specifications for continuous (or "rated") wattage instead. That number tells you what the motor actually delivers during normal riding.

TAKEAWAY: Sellers inflate wattage by 2-4x using peak numbers. Look for continuous or rated wattage in product specs. Any model above 500W continuous is off-road only in Canada.

How We Collected This Data

We analyzed a subset of 738 Amazon.ca e-bike listings gathered in May 2026. We classified each listing by category using title keywords. Electric dirt bikes included terms like "dirt bike," "motocross," and "off-road motorcycle."

We filtered out listings priced below $250 to exclude toy-grade models. We also excluded sponsored listings to focus on organic product availability. This left us with 55 dirt bike listings for analysis.

Search volume data comes from Street Rides keyword research, scoped to Canada, pulled in May 2026. All prices are in Canadian dollars as listed on Amazon.ca at the time of collection.

For data across all categories, read our State of the Canadian E-Bike Market 2026 report. For brand analysis, see our Best E-Bike Brands in Canada 2026 article.

Frequently Asked Questions About Electric Dirt Bikes

Are electric dirt bikes legal in Canada?

Electric dirt bikes above 500W continuous output are not street legal in Canada. Federal regulations limit e-bikes to 500W and 32 km/h on public roads. Most electric dirt bikes exceed both limits. You can ride them legally on private land and designated off-road areas.

What age is appropriate for an electric dirt bike?

Most kids electric dirt bikes target ages 6 and up. Models under $800 typically reach 15-25 km/h and suit younger riders. Adult models with speeds above 40 km/h are best for riders 16 and older. Always check the manufacturer weight and age recommendations.

How fast do electric dirt bikes go?

Kids models reach 15 to 25 km/h. Adult entry-level bikes hit 35 to 50 km/h. High-performance models above $1,500 can reach 60 to 70 km/h. Top speed depends on motor wattage, rider weight, and terrain conditions.

How far can an electric dirt bike ride on one charge?

Most electric dirt bikes offer 20 to 60 km of range per charge. Off-road riding drains batteries faster than flat pavement. Hills, soft terrain, and aggressive throttle use reduce range significantly. Budget models with smaller batteries sit closer to the 20 km mark.

Are electric dirt bikes quieter than gas dirt bikes?

Yes. Electric dirt bikes produce roughly 75% less noise than gas-powered models. A gas dirt bike runs at 90 to 100 decibels. An electric model operates between 50 and 70 decibels. This lower noise level opens up riding areas where gas bikes face noise restrictions.


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