Buyers guide: sub-£1000 e-Bikes

 

Can you buy a decent electric bike for less than £1000?

A brand-new pedelec needn’t cost you a fortune. Sure, a European-made bike with a Bosch or Panasonic drive system will cost at least £1500 (and you can spend a great deal more), but you can still buy something decent for less than £1000.

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But beware, there are still some cheap and not very nice bikes out there, and in pedelecs as everything else, you get what you pay for. A few minutes on the interweb revealed an electric folding bike reduced from £449 to £184! I’d steer well clear of anything that cheap, or with such a radical discount.

As ever with electrics, it’s best to look for an established name that has been around a few years (all the ones mentioned on this page have). And as ever, the warranty, and in particular the battery warranty, is your holy grail. Replacement batteries cost £250 upwards, and you don’t want to find yourself buying a new one after just six months. In this sub-£1000 price bracket, nearly all warranties are limited to 12 months, though Freego and the new Emu offer two years.

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At this price, you won’t get good quality components – expect basic Shimano 6-7-speed derailleur gears for the most part, and unbranded V-brakes. Don’t expect luxuries like hydraulic disc brakes, a speedo or hub gears, but the more practical bikes should have mudguards, rack and basic LED lights as part of the package. As for the battery, lithium-ion is almost universal now, and 360Wh should give you a decent range.

So what’s available? What follows is just a few examples from brands that we know have been around a few years. Powacycle offers its entry-level Milan step-through from £599, which makes it the cheapest of our selection (though there’s only a six-month warranty on the 288Wh battery). Woosh used to sell the dead cheap Angell (complete with lead-acid battery at £299) but now its entry-level bike is the Petite, with smaller 24in wheels, at £675.

We’ve mentioned Cyclotricity in T&G before, and tested their 1000w Stealth a few issues ago. At 31mph, that one is too fast to be classed as a pedelec, but they also do a range of road-legal 250w bikes, such as the mountain bike style Revolver from £649, and the step-through Sahara from £699. They’re now assembled in Britain as well, hooray! If mountain bikes are your thing but you can’t quite stretch to £2000+ for a KTM or Haibike, Kudos do the Cobra at £895, with 21 gears and mechanical disc brakes.

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Juicy have been around for several years, and used to sell electric scooters as well, though they’re now clear of the lowest price bracket, with the Classic Lite at £899. As for folding bikes, Woosh offer the Gellego at £669, while Batribike’s V’Lec is just the latest to go on sale.

So there it is. You shouldn’t need to spend a fortune to buy a decent electric bike. If you can afford to spend more on an EU-made bike, it’s money well spent, but the bikes here should still offer reliable rides.

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Words: Pete Henshaw

Images: A to B


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