Is My E-Bike
Legal?
The EAPC compliance checklist
Work through each item. If you cannot honestly tick one, your bike may not be a legal EAPC.
- Motor power is 250W or less. Check the motor's continuous rated power — on the motor casing, a frame plate, or in the spec sheet. It must be 250W or under. Be wary of "500W" or "1000W" marketing. → Speed and power limits
- Assistance cuts out at 15.5 mph. Confirm the motor stops adding power at 15.5 mph (25 km/h). If it keeps pulling beyond that, it is not legal. → Speed and power limits
- It has working pedals. The bike must have pedals capable of propelling it. A throttle-only machine with no usable pedals cannot be an EAPC. → What is an EAPC
- The throttle behaves legally. For a bike placed on the market from 2016, a throttle may only move it without pedalling up to 6 km/h (walking pace). → Throttle laws
- It has not been tampered with or derestricted. No removed speed limiter, no aftermarket derestriction kit. Any of these turns a legal bike illegal — and voids insurance and warranty. → Illegal e-bikes
- It has the required markings. Look for the manufacturer's name, the motor's power output (250W), and either the battery voltage (on a plate) or the motor's maximum speed (on the frame). → Lights and safety law
- Lights and reflectors are fitted (for after dark). For sunset-to-sunrise riding: white front light, red rear light, red rear reflector, amber pedal reflectors. → Lights and safety law
- Brakes work and meet the standard. Two independent brakes, in efficient working order, meeting the relevant British or European standard.
- The rider is 14 or over. EAPCs can only be ridden on public roads by someone aged 14 or over. → Age limit
- You ride it in the right places. Roads, cycle lanes and cycle paths — never pavements. → Where you can ride
What if it fails the checklist?
If your bike misses an item, you have three options:
- Correct it where possible (fit lights, restore the limiter, add reflectors).
- Stop riding it on public roads if it is over-powered or derestricted — it is not a legal bicycle.
- Register it properly as a moped or motorcycle if that is what it actually is — see e-bike vs moped vs motorcycle.
The easiest way to pass: buy compliant
If all of this feels like a lot, the simplest route to a guaranteed pass is to buy from a manufacturer that supplies bikes to EAPC spec. The Eskuta SX-250 is built and supplied to meet UK EAPC requirements — so it ticks the core legal boxes straight from the box.
Frequently asked questions.
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Confirm it has a 250W or less motor, cuts assistance at 15.5 mph, has working pedals, a compliant throttle, the required markings, and lights for night riding — and the rider is 14 or over.
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Check the motor casing, a frame plate, or the original spec sheet. It should state the continuous rated power.
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No. Removing the 15.5 mph limiter makes it an illegal, unregistered motor vehicle.
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Fix what you can (lights, limiter), stop using over-powered bikes on public roads, or register the machine properly as a moped or motorcycle.
Guaranteed compliant
Want a guaranteed
pass from the box?
The Eskuta SX-250 is supplied to meet UK EAPC requirements — road-legal and licence-free, no checklist anxiety needed.