Vélos et trottinettes électriques fièrement expédiés du Canada 🇨🇦

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juillet 02, 2026 3 lire la lecture

By Street Rides Research Team | July 2026 | 5 min read

Two questions stop Canadian buyers from committing to an electric scooter: "Is it even legal where I live?" and "Will it actually save me money?" This page answers both with interactive tools. The Legal Status Checker tells you whether a specific scooter meets your province's rules. The Break-Even Calculator shows exactly how many months until the scooter pays for itself.

CANADIAN E-SCOOTER LEGALITY: THE SHORT VERSION

Every province caps motor power at 500W. Ontario limits qualifying scooters to 24 km/h. BC and Quebec cap qualifying devices at 25 km/h. Nova Scotia and New Brunswick allow up to 32 km/h. Helmets are required everywhere. Minimum age is 14 in Quebec and 16 in most other current frameworks. Municipal bylaws and local pilot rules still matter, so treat this tool as a screening layer and verify locally before riding.

Check Your Scooter's Legal Status

Select your province and scooter below. The tool checks the motor wattage and top speed against your province's limits and tells you whether the scooter is legal for public roads.

Calculate Your Break-Even Point

Enter your scooter price and commute details. The calculator compares the cost per kilometre of your current transport (driving, transit, or rideshare) against the near-zero cost of an electric scooter to show when you recover your investment.

Provincial Rules at a Glance

Province Max Motor Max Speed Helmet Min Age
Ontario 500W 24 km/h Yes 16
British Columbia 500W 25 km/h Yes 16
Quebec 500W 25 km/h Yes 14
Alberta 500W 24 km/h Yes 16
Manitoba 500W 24 km/h Yes 16
Saskatchewan 500W 24 km/h Yes 16
Nova Scotia 500W 32 km/h Yes 16
New Brunswick 500W 32 km/h Yes 16
PEI 500W 24 km/h Yes 16
Newfoundland 500W 24 km/h Yes 16
IMPORTANT: These rules can change. Municipal bylaws may add further restrictions. Always check your city's current bylaws before riding. This tool is for general guidance, not legal advice.

How Much Does an E-Scooter Cost to Run?

The operating cost of an electric scooter is almost nothing. Here is the math:

  • Electricity cost: About $0.01 per km in Canada (based on $0.13/kWh average rate and ~13 Wh per km consumption)
  • Maintenance: $50 to $100 per year (tires, brake pads, occasional bearing replacement)
  • Insurance: Not required in most provinces for e-scooters under 500W

Compare that to:

  • Car: $0.58/km (CAA 2025 average including gas, insurance, maintenance, depreciation)
  • Transit: $0.15 to $0.25/km (monthly pass divided by typical commute km)
  • Rideshare: $1.50 to $3.00/km (Uber/Lyft in Canadian cities)
THE MATH: A $700 scooter used for a 10 km daily commute, 5 days a week for 7 months, saves approximately $1,100 per year vs driving. It pays for itself in 4.7 months.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens if I ride an illegal scooter on public roads?

Penalties vary by province. In Ontario, riding a non-compliant e-scooter on public roads can result in fines up to $500 and vehicle seizure. In BC, fines range from $100 to $500. Police enforcement varies by municipality.

Can I ride an e-scooter in winter?

Technically yes, but we do not recommend it below 0°C. Cold reduces battery range by 25% or more. Icy roads are dangerous on two wheels. Most Canadian riders treat e-scooters as a 6 to 8 month transport solution (April through October).

Does the break-even calculation include maintenance?

No. Maintenance adds roughly $50 to $100 per year, which slightly extends the break-even period. Even with maintenance, most commuter scooters pay for themselves within the first year of regular use.

Related Tools

Disclaimer: Legal information is for general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. E-scooter regulations change frequently. Always verify current rules with your provincial and municipal government before riding. Break-even calculations are estimates based on average Canadian costs.


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