Vélos et trottinettes électriques fièrement expédiés du Canada 🇨🇦
Vélos et trottinettes électriques fièrement expédiés du Canada 🇨🇦
juin 24, 2026 6 lire la lecture
Kids electric vehicles in Canada include electric dirt bikes, ATVs, go-karts, and ride-ons built for children ages 3 to 16. Prices range from $120 to $2,500 CAD depending on category and power. This guide covers every category, sorted by the age group and speed tier that matches your child.
12 min read
What Parents Tell Us Before Buying
Parents buying kids electric vehicles ask one question above all others: "Is it safe for my child's age?" Based on our customer conversations, the answer depends on three factors: speed, weight of the vehicle, and whether the child can reach the ground with both feet while seated. We hear from parents who bought a model rated for "ages 8 and up" only to find their 8-year-old could not reach the brake lever comfortably. Our manufacturer partners now provide more granular sizing guidelines. This guide matches vehicle types to age groups based on real parent feedback, not just manufacturer age ratings.
This guide is for Canadian parents and gift-givers shopping for a battery-powered ride for a child between ages 3 and 16. If your child is older than 16 or you want a street-legal vehicle, see our electric mopeds guide or e-bike laws by province instead.
| Age Range | Best Category | Speed Range | Price Range (CAD) | Key Safety Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3-5 years | Ride-on toys | 3-5 km/h | $120-$300 | Parental remote control |
| 5-8 years | Mini dirt bikes / small ATVs | 10-20 km/h | $200-$600 | Speed limiter, chain guard |
| 8-12 years | Youth dirt bikes / go-karts | 20-35 km/h | $400-$1,200 | Disc brakes, adjustable speed |
| 12-16 years | Full-size youth dirt bikes | 35-55 km/h | $800-$2,500 | Hydraulic brakes, suspension |
Street Rides analyzed over 500 kids electric vehicle listings available to Canadian buyers in June 2026. We cross-referenced product specifications against Transport Canada guidelines, provincial off-road vehicle regulations, and CSA certification databases. We also reviewed verified buyer feedback from multiple Canadian retail platforms to identify common issues with battery life, build quality, and safety features.
Every vehicle in this guide was evaluated on five criteria: age-appropriate speed, braking system quality, battery runtime, build material durability, and Canadian parts and warranty availability.
Ride-on toys are the entry point. These are low-speed vehicles (3 to 5 km/h) designed for flat surfaces like driveways and sidewalks. Most run on 6V or 12V lead-acid batteries with 30 to 60 minutes of runtime.
What to look for:
Price range: $120 to $300 CAD. Most options ship from Canadian warehouses. Expect 3 to 7 business day delivery.
Common issue: Lead-acid batteries degrade after one winter of storage. Charge the battery every 30 days during off-season or it will not hold a charge by spring.
Electric dirt bikes are the fastest-growing category for kids. Search demand for "kids electric dirt bike Canada" reached 12,100 monthly searches in 2026, yet the supply of quality options remains thin compared to adult e-bikes.
Power tiers:
Safety essentials for dirt bikes: Helmet (CSA certified), gloves, knee pads, and closed-toe boots. No dirt bike should be ridden on public roads in any Canadian province.
Electric ATVs give kids a four-wheeled, more stable platform than dirt bikes. They are popular in rural areas and larger properties.
Key differences from gas ATVs:
What to check: Speed limiter with a physical key or parent-adjustable app. Reverse gear. Foot-operated rear brake. Weight capacity rating. Many listings state "ages 8+" but the actual fit depends on your child's inseam and reach to the handlebars.
Price range: $300 to $1,500 CAD for youth electric ATVs available in Canada.
Go-karts offer the lowest centre of gravity and the most stability of any kids electric vehicle. They are the safest option for speed-seeking kids because roll-over risk is minimal on flat ground.
Types available in Canada:
Canadian note: Go-karts are classified as off-road vehicles in every province. They cannot be used on public roads, bike lanes, or sidewalks.
Razor is the most recognized brand in kids electric vehicles in Canada. Their lineup includes 15+ electric models spanning scooters, dirt bikes, go-karts, and ATVs.
| Model | Type | Age | Top Speed | Battery | Approx. Price (CAD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lil' E | Scooter | 5+ | 11 km/h | Lead-acid | $130-$170 |
| E100 | Scooter | 8+ | 16 km/h | Lead-acid | $170-$220 |
| E300 | Scooter | 13+ | 24 km/h | Lead-acid | $350-$450 |
| MX125 | Dirt Bike | 7+ | 13 km/h | Lead-acid | $250-$350 |
| MX350 | Dirt Bike | 13+ | 22 km/h | Lead-acid | $400-$500 |
| MX650 | Dirt Bike | 16+ | 27 km/h | Lead-acid | $550-$700 |
| Dune Buggy | Go-Kart | 8+ | 14 km/h | Lead-acid | $350-$450 |
| Crazy Cart | Drift Kart | 9+ | 19 km/h | Lead-acid | $450-$600 |
Razor's biggest limitation: Almost every Razor model uses sealed lead-acid (SLA) batteries. These are heavier, slower to charge, and lose capacity faster than lithium-ion. Expect to replace batteries every 12-18 months with regular use. Replacement SLA batteries cost $30-$60 CAD and are widely available.
| Category | Budget ($120-$400) | Mid-Range ($400-$800) | Premium ($800-$2,500) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ride-on toys | Most models | Licensed brands (Mercedes, BMW) | N/A |
| Dirt bikes | 250W chain-drive | 500W hub-motor | 1000W+ hydraulic |
| ATVs | Mini quads (ages 3-6) | Youth quads (ages 8-12) | Full-size youth (ages 12+) |
| Go-karts | Pedal hybrids | Throttle go-karts | Performance drift karts |
We excluded vehicles that had fewer than 10 verified buyer reviews, no identifiable manufacturer, or specifications that did not match the listing photos. We also excluded any product not available for shipping to Canada or with delivery estimates exceeding 30 days. Products with reported safety issues (brake failure, battery overheating, frame cracking) in buyer feedback were excluded regardless of price or popularity.
Most manufacturers recommend age 5 and up for entry-level models (250W, 15 km/h). Children ages 3-4 should stick to ride-on toys with parental remote control. There is no federal minimum age. Provincial off-road vehicle laws vary but none apply to private property use.
No. Electric dirt bikes, ATVs, go-karts, and ride-ons are classified as off-road vehicles in every Canadian province. They cannot be ridden on public roads, bike lanes, or sidewalks. Use them on private property, designated trails, or supervised tracks only.
Lead-acid batteries provide 30-90 minutes per charge and last 12-18 months before needing replacement. Lithium-ion batteries provide 60-120 minutes per charge and last 2-3 years. Charge after every ride and store indoors during winter to maximize battery life.
At minimum: a CSA-certified helmet sized to your child's head, closed-toe shoes, and long pants. For dirt bikes and ATVs above 20 km/h, add gloves, knee pads, and elbow pads. Budget $100-$200 CAD for quality protective gear.
Razor has the widest selection and best parts availability in Canada. For electric dirt bikes specifically, brands like MotoTec, Razor, and Hiboy offer models with Canadian warranty support. Avoid no-name brands with no Canadian return address or warranty contact.
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