Where Can You
Ride an E-Bike?

Built for urban riders who refuse to compromise. No emissions, no licence, no excuses.

Where you can ride

Because an EAPC is legally a bicycle, the rule is refreshingly simple: anywhere a normal push-bike can legally go, so can your EAPC.

  • Public roads: Yes
  • Cycle lanes: Yes
  • Cycle paths: Yes
  • Anywhere pedal bikes are allowed: Yes

If a normal push-bike can legally go there, so can your EAPC. That is the whole principle.

Where you cannot ride

Riding on the pavement is not allowed for e-bikes — the same restriction that applies to ordinary cycles. Pavements are for pedestrians; bikes belong on the road or in dedicated cycle infrastructure.

Off-road and private land

Trails, bridleways and private land have their own access rules that apply to all cycles, e-bike or not. On private land you will generally need the landowner's permission. This is also the only place an under-14 rider can legally use an e-bike.

Operator and local restrictions

Even though the national rule is simple, individual operators and authorities can add their own restrictions — often driven by fire-safety concerns around poor-quality batteries:

  • Transport for London (TfL): As of March 2025, non-folding e-bikes have been restricted from parts of the TfL network (such as the Tube and certain rail and bus services). Folding e-bikes are generally treated more leniently. If you commute via TfL, check the current policy before relying on taking your bike on board.
  • Trains and other transport: Rail operators set their own rules for carrying e-bikes — check before you travel.

These are carriage and access restrictions, not riding bans: they affect taking the bike onto a service, not your right to ride it on the road.

What about illegal e-bikes?

If a bike is not a compliant EAPC, the location rules change completely — as a moped or motorcycle it can only be used on roads (not cycle lanes or paths) and only when registered, taxed, insured and ridden by a licensed rider. See illegal e-bikes and penalties.

Back to the complete guide to UK e-bike laws

Informational only, not legal advice. Verify the current rules on GOV.UK before riding.

Common questions

Frequently asked questions.

  • No. E-bikes cannot be ridden on pavements — the same rule that applies to ordinary bicycles.

  • Yes. An EAPC can use cycle paths and cycle lanes, just like a normal bike.

  • Yes. EAPCs are allowed on public roads anywhere bicycles are permitted.

  • Non-folding e-bikes have been restricted on parts of the TfL network since March 2025. Check TfL's current policy, as folding e-bikes are usually treated differently.

Road-legal, wherever bikes go

Ride wherever
bikes are welcome.

The Eskuta SX-250 is EAPC-compliant — roads, cycle lanes and paths, no licence needed.