Best eBike Deals in Canada (2026): 12 Picks from $1,199 to $4,019
Zeus eBikes Canada · 2026 Deals Guide · Photo by Playcut.ai
A deal is not the cheapest price — it is the widest gap between what you pay and what you get. The 12 eBikes in this guide were selected because each one delivers specs that belong on a higher-priced machine. Eight of the 12 are currently on sale at Zeus eBikes Canada, with discounts ranging from $100 to $2,181 off the regular price. Every spec was pulled directly from the Zeus product pages on March 2, 2026. Every price is current. Every bike is in stock and ships free across Canada.
$2,181 off — Eunorau Specter-S 3.0: $6,200 → $4,019 + free $810 bundle
$800 off — Movin' Tempo Max: $2,399 → $1,599 (33% off)
$500 off — Samebike XD26-II: $1,699 → $1,199 (29% off)
$471 off — Eunorau ONE-TRIKE 2.0: $2,900 → $2,429 (16% off)
$450 off — Eunorau Meta275 500W: $2,429 → $1,979 + free 2nd battery
$400 off — Movin' Pulse: from $2,399 → $1,999 (17% off)
$149 off — Freesky Wild Cat Pro: $2,077 → $1,928
$100 off — Velotric Fold 1 Plus: $2,099 → $1,999
Total combined savings across all 8 sales: $5,051. Prices verified March 2, 2026.
In This Guide
What Makes an eBike a "Deal" in 2026
The Canadian eBike market is growing at 11.18% CAGR (Mordor Intelligence, 2025). That growth has done something important for buyers: it has pushed component quality down the price ladder. A $2,000 eBike in 2026 ships with specs that cost $3,000 or more in 2024 — hydraulic disc brakes, torque sensors, Samsung or LG battery cells, and full suspension are no longer premium-only features.
A genuine deal in 2026 meets three criteria. First, the spec-to-price ratio exceeds what the market normally delivers at that price point — a torque sensor under $2,000, AWD under $2,400, or a Bafang mid-drive under $4,100. Second, the components are ones you will not need to replace in the first year — hydraulic brakes, branded battery cells, and sealed motor bearings. Third, the bike fits a specific Canadian use case — winter commuting, delivery work, trail riding, or accessibility — rather than trying to be everything at once.
Eight of the 12 picks below are currently discounted. The remaining four earn their spot on spec-to-price ratio alone. No filler. No padding a list with mediocre options to hit a round number.
How to Choose the Right Deal for You
The best deal is the bike that fits your actual riding life — not the one with the biggest discount sticker. Use this decision framework before scrolling to the picks.
By Budget
- Under $1,500: Samebike XD26-II ($1,199) — the only full-suspension option at this price
- $1,500–$2,000: Six picks compete here — Meta275, Tempo Max, Wild Cat Pro, Fold 1 Plus, Movin' Pulse
- $2,000–$2,500: FAT-AWD 3.0, Tesway X9, ONE-TRIKE
- $2,500+: Himiway D5 2.0, Nomad 2X, Specter-S 3.0
By Riding Style
- Daily commuter: Movin' Tempo Max — Canadian-designed, 80–90 km range, 960 Wh Samsung battery · browse all commuter eBikes
- Condo / transit rider: Velotric Fold 1 Plus — folds to 96 × 50 × 85 cm, Apple Find My, torque sensor · browse all folding eBikes
- Delivery / gig work: Movin' Pulse — 20" fat tires, up to 2,160 Wh, 50 kg rear rack
- Snow / mud / hills: Eunorau FAT-AWD 3.0 — all-wheel drive, torque sensor, 26 × 4.0" fat tires · browse all mountain eBikes
- Trail / weekend adventurer: Velotric Nomad 2X — DNM air shock, 120mm air fork, 560 lb payload · browse all trail eBikes
- Step-thru / accessibility: Freesky Wild Cat Pro — full suspension, fat tire, 400 lb payload · browse all step-thru eBikes
- Stability / seniors: Eunorau ONE-TRIKE 2.0 — three wheels, 440 lb payload, folding stem · browse all electric trikes
Need help choosing? Browse all eBikes by category at Zeus eBikes Canada — free shipping across all provinces.
12 Best eBike Deals in Canada (March 2026)
1. Eunorau Meta275 500W — Best Overall Value
$1,979 (regular $2,429 — save $450)
The Meta275 is the best deal on this list because of one detail: Eunorau ships a free secondary 14Ah battery with every purchase. That gives you 1,296 Wh total — the kind of battery capacity that normally requires a $2,500+ bike. Combined with a torque sensor and Shimano 9-speed gearing, this is a $3,000 spec sheet sold for $1,979.
The 500W hub motor produces 65 Nm of torque, and the torque sensor makes pedal assist feel natural rather than binary. The 27.5 × 2.6-inch Chaoyang tires are wide enough for light gravel but fast enough on pavement — a versatile choice for riders who commute on weekdays and explore rail trails on weekends. Hydraulic disc brakes with 180mm rotors handle the 31 kg bike weight with confidence.
The trade-off: No full suspension. The front fork is not listed as a suspension fork on the product page. If you need suspension for rough terrain, look at Pick #2 or #4. The 130 kg (286 lb) payload is also on the lower side — heavier riders should check the heavy rider guide.
View the Eunorau Meta275 500W at Zeus eBikes
2. Samebike XD26-II — Budget King
$1,199 (regular $1,699 — save $500)
The XD26-II is the cheapest full-suspension eBike in the Zeus catalogue, and at $1,199, it is the entry door into electric cycling for budget-conscious Canadian riders. The 500W hub motor peaks at 750W with 70 Nm of torque, the 48V 15Ah battery delivers 720 Wh, and range is listed at 55–110 km depending on assist level and terrain.
Hydraulic disc brakes with 160mm rotors are standard — a meaningful upgrade over the mechanical brakes you typically find at this price point. The Shimano 7-speed drivetrain is reliable if unexciting. The 26 × 2.1-inch all-terrain tires are narrower than fat tires, which means lower rolling resistance on pavement but less grip in snow.
The trade-off: Cadence sensor rather than torque sensor — pedal assist is less refined. The 12-month warranty is half what most competitors offer. And at 25.5 kg (56 lbs), it is the lightest bike on this list, which is a positive for anyone who needs to carry it up stairs. The 180 kg (397 lb) payload capacity is generous for the price.
View the Samebike XD26-II at Zeus eBikes
3. Movin' Tempo Max — Canadian Commuter
$1,599 (regular $2,399 — save $800)
Movin' is a Canadian-designed eBike brand, and the Tempo Max is their commuter flagship — currently 33% off at $1,599. The Samsung 48V 20Ah battery (960 Wh) is the largest single battery in the under-$2,000 tier on this list, delivering an 80–90 km range that covers most Canadian commuters' weekly needs on a single charge.
The Tektro HD E3520 hydraulic disc brakes are a branded component you would expect on a $2,000+ bike. The Selle Royal Gel "Essenza Plus" saddle with elastomer is designed for comfort on rides over 20 km. The adjustable-angle Promax stem (35–145 degrees) lets you dial in your riding position. Fenders, rear rack, and integrated lighting are included — ready to commute out of the box.
The trade-off: Cadence sensor, not torque. The 26 × 2.1-inch CST tires are puncture-resistant but not fat tires — fine for urban riding, less ideal for snow. The 136 kg (300 lb) payload is the lowest on this list. Speed is factory-limited to 32 km/h.
View the Movin' Tempo Max at Zeus eBikes
4. Freesky Wild Cat Pro A-340 — Step-Thru Steal
$1,928 (regular $2,077 — save $149)
Two years ago, a full-suspension step-thru eBike with 26 × 4.0-inch fat tires and 4-piston hydraulic brakes under $2,000 did not exist. The Wild Cat Pro A-340 changes that. The step-through frame makes mounting and dismounting easy for riders of all ages and mobility levels, and the fat tires provide year-round traction on snow, gravel, and potholed Canadian roads.
The Samsung 48V 25Ah battery is one of the largest on this list — paired with the hub motor, range is listed at 97–169 km. The 181 kg (400 lb) payload capacity accommodates heavier riders and cargo. Integrated turn signals are a welcome safety feature for urban riding.
The trade-off: Speed sensor rather than torque sensor — pedal assist is less responsive. The bike weighs approximately 38 kg (83 lbs), which is heavy for a step-thru. Shimano 7-speed is adequate but not premium.
View the Freesky Wild Cat Pro A-340 at Zeus eBikes
5. Velotric Fold 1 Plus — Best Folder
$1,999 (regular $2,099 — save $100)
The Fold 1 Plus is the only folding eBike under $2,000 at Zeus with a torque sensor — and not just any torque sensor. Velotric's SensorSwap technology lets you toggle between torque and cadence modes from the 3.5-inch TFT display, so you get natural pedal feel on commutes and effortless cruise on longer rides. That alone puts it in a different class from every other folder at this price.
Apple Find My is built in and works even when the bike is powered off — a genuine theft deterrent, not a marketing checkbox. The 750W motor (1,100W peak) with 75 Nm torque handles hills that would stall smaller motors. UL 2849, UL 2271, and ISO 4210 certifications cover the entire bike, not just the battery. The 450 lb (204 kg) payload capacity is the second-highest on this list.
Folded dimensions are 96 × 50 × 85 cm — compact enough for a car trunk, subway, or apartment closet. Rider height range of 4'9" to 6'5" is the widest of any folder in the catalogue.
The trade-off: The 624 Wh battery is the smallest on this list. Range is up to 109 km on pedal assist, which is strong, but if you plan rides over 80 km routinely, consider a bike with a larger battery. The 20 × 3.0-inch tires are good all-rounders but not true fat tires.
View the Velotric Fold 1 Plus at Zeus eBikes
6. Movin' Pulse — Delivery / Gig Rider
From $1,999 (regular from $2,399 — save $400)
The Movin' Pulse is designed for one thing: earning money on your bike. The low-stand 6061 aluminium frame with internal cable routing lets you mount and dismount with a backpack or insulated bag without catching cables. The 20 × 4.0-inch CST puncture-resistant fat tires handle curbs, potholes, streetcar tracks, and Canadian winter roads without flats ending your shift.
Three battery configurations cover every delivery range. The base single-battery model (48V 20Ah / 960 Wh) starts at $1,999. The dual-battery 20+15Ah version (1,680 Wh) is $2,199. The maximum dual-battery 20+25Ah configuration (2,160 Wh) is $2,499 — enough for a full day of deliveries without recharging. The rear rack is rated for 50 kg (110 lbs).
Tektro hydraulic disc brakes with 180mm rotors and an RST Guide adjustable fork with lockout are the kind of components you ride hard without worrying about failure at the worst possible moment. This is a Canadian-designed bike built for the Canadian gig economy.
The trade-off: Total bike weight and max rider payload are not listed on the product page. The 500W hub motor is adequate for flat urban riding but may struggle on steep hills with a full cargo load. The colour display is functional but not as refined as the Velotric TFT.
View the Movin' Pulse at Zeus eBikes
Delivering for Skip, Uber Eats, or DoorDash? See our full 10-pick delivery eBike guide for gig-specific recommendations.
7. Eunorau FAT-AWD 3.0 — Best AWD
$2,390
All-wheel drive under $2,400. In 2024, AWD eBikes started above $3,000. The FAT-AWD 3.0 puts a 500W motor on each wheel — front and rear — with 110 Nm of combined torque and a torque sensor that distributes power based on your pedal input. On snowy hills, muddy trails, or loose gravel, the front motor pulls while the rear motor pushes. On dry pavement, you can run rear-only for efficiency.
The step-thru frame accommodates riders from 5'3" to 6'1". The Kenda Krusade Sport 26 × 4.0-inch fat tires provide the contact patch needed for Canadian winter conditions. The LG 48V 15Ah battery supports an optional second 15Ah pack for up to 129 km range with dual batteries. RST Guide front fork with 95mm travel handles trail roots and frost-heaved pavement.
The trade-off: 36 kg (79 lbs) is heavy — the dual motors add weight. No rear suspension. The Shimano 7-speed drivetrain is functional but basic for a bike at this price. The 170 kg (375 lb) payload capacity is lower than some single-motor competitors.
View the Eunorau FAT-AWD 3.0 at Zeus eBikes
8. Tesway X9 AWD 4000W — Dual Motor Beast
$2,399
The X9 is the most powerful eBike on this list: 4,000W peak across two hub motors with 240 Nm of combined torque. For context, a Toyota Corolla produces 170 Nm. The Samsung 48V 30Ah battery (1,440 Wh) is the largest single battery on this list, and range is listed at 97–193 km — enough for multi-day trips without recharging. Listed in four Zeus collections (commuter, mountain, hunting, dual motor), which tells you how versatile this platform is.
Downhill full suspension, 4-piston hydraulic disc brakes with 180mm rotors, and 26 × 4.0-inch all-terrain fat tires handle anything Canada throws at you. The half-twist throttle provides instant power without pedalling — useful for intersection starts on icy roads.
The trade-off: 47.6 kg (105 lbs) is heavy. You are not carrying this upstairs. Cadence sensor rather than torque sensor. The power output far exceeds what is street-legal in any Canadian province — this bike is built for private property, trails, and rural riding. Check your provincial eBike regulations before riding on public roads.
View the Tesway X9 AWD 4000W at Zeus eBikes
9. Eunorau ONE-TRIKE 2.0 — Trike on Sale
$2,429 (regular $2,900 — save $471)
Three wheels change the equation entirely. The ONE-TRIKE 2.0 eliminates the balance requirement that keeps many Canadians — particularly seniors, those recovering from injuries, or anyone with mobility concerns — off two-wheeled eBikes. The 200 kg (440 lb) payload capacity is the highest on this list, and the folding stem makes storage practical in a garage or apartment.
The 500W rear-drive motor with 80 Nm torque handles moderate hills. The 48V 14.5Ah battery provides roughly 80 km of range. Hydraulic disc brakes with 180mm rotors and motor cutoff offer safe stopping power for a vehicle that weighs 39 kg (86 lbs) before adding a rider. The 20 × 2.6-inch tires are not fat tires, but they are wide enough for stability on uneven surfaces.
The trade-off: Single-speed drivetrain — no gear shifting. This limits hill-climbing ability compared to geared bikes. The 40mm fork travel is minimal. The trike is best suited to relatively flat terrain with gradual inclines. For a more capable trike, see the full electric trike guide.
View the Eunorau ONE-TRIKE 2.0 at Zeus eBikes
10. Himiway D5 2.0 — Best Full-Suspension Fat Tire
$2,799
The D5 2.0 packs a feature set that reads like a $3,500+ spec sheet. The 750W hub motor (1,100W peak) delivers 90 Nm of torque. Front suspension offers 100mm of coil-spring travel with preload adjustment. Rear suspension provides 130mm of multi-link coil travel with lockout. The combination smooths out everything from potholed urban roads to rocky singletrack.
The 3.5-inch colour TFT display with Wi-Fi and OTA firmware updates is a feature typically found on bikes costing $1,000 more. Switchable torque/cadence sensor modes let you choose your pedal assist behaviour. The 720 Wh Samsung/LG battery (UL 2271 certified) charges in roughly 5 hours. Compact 20-inch wheels with 4.0-inch fat tires deliver a low standover height (17 inches) while maintaining off-road capability.
The trade-off: The 20-inch wheels roll over obstacles less smoothly than 26-inch alternatives — they are more manoeuvrable but less momentum-friendly on rough trails. At approximately 42 kg (92 lbs), this is a heavy bike. The 181 kg (400 lb) payload is adequate but not generous.
View the Himiway D5 2.0 at Zeus eBikes
11. Eunorau Specter-S 3.0 (Hunter X9) — Best Mid-Drive
$4,019 (regular $6,200 — save $2,181)
This is the largest discount on this list: $2,181 off. But the Specter-S 3.0 is not here because of the discount alone — it is here because the Bafang M620 mid-drive motor is the benchmark for eBike powertrains. At 1,000W with 160 Nm of torque, the M620 multiplies force through the SRAM NX 11-speed drivetrain. On a steep hill, that torque multiplication means the Specter-S climbs grades that would stall a hub motor with twice the wattage.
The 140mm inverted front fork is the longest-travel fork on this list. Full suspension with 26 × 4.0-inch fat tires handles serious trail riding — this is a hunting and mountain bike, not a commuter. 4-piston hydraulic brakes with 180mm rotors provide the stopping power to match the motor output. The 48V 17.5Ah LG battery supports an optional secondary 48V 15Ah pack.
The current promotion adds a free gift bundle worth approximately $810: a 27.5 × 3-inch wheel set, a secondary battery, and a cassette conversion kit. Combined with the $2,181 price reduction, the total value proposition is over $2,900 in savings.
The trade-off: The Zeus product page does not list weight, range, or top speed. Based on the Bafang M620 platform and similar builds, expect approximately 36 kg (80 lbs) and 80–120 km range depending on terrain and assist level. At $4,019, this is the most expensive pick on the list — but it was $6,200 yesterday.
View the Eunorau Specter-S 3.0 at Zeus eBikes
12. Velotric Nomad 2X — Best Trail All-Rounder
$3,399
The Nomad 2X is the most refined eBike on this list. The DNM air shock rear suspension, 120mm air fork with lockout and adjustable rebound, and Kenda 26 × 4.0-inch puncture-resistant fat tires create a ride quality that absorbs everything from tree roots to washboard gravel without rattling your teeth. The 750W hub motor (1,400W peak) produces 105 Nm of torque — enough for steep Canadian trails.
The spec sheet reads like a purpose-built adventure machine. The 801.6 Wh Samsung/LG battery (UL 2271, UL 2580 certified) delivers up to 120 km on pedal assist. Tektro hydraulic disc brakes use 203mm front and 180mm rear rotors — the largest braking surface of any bike on this list. The 254 kg (560 lb) total payload capacity is the highest of any two-wheeler here. The rear rack supports 55 kg (120 lbs). Towing capacity is rated at 454 kg (1,000 lbs).
SensorSwap toggles between torque and cadence modes. The 3.5-inch Bluetooth colour display with USB-C charging keeps your phone alive on long rides. Step-thru and step-over frame options accommodate different riding preferences. UL 2849 and ISO 4210 certifications cover the entire bike.
The trade-off: At 36 kg (80 lbs), this is a heavy trail bike. The hub motor is excellent but a mid-drive would deliver even better hill performance at this price point. No current sale — the $3,399 price is everyday pricing.
View the Velotric Nomad 2X at Zeus eBikes
All 12 Picks Compared
| Pick | Price | Motor | Battery | Brakes | Suspension | Sensor | Weight | Payload |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eunorau Meta275 | $1,979 | 500W hub, 65 Nm | 1,296 Wh (dual) | Hydraulic 180mm | None listed | Torque | 31 kg | 130 kg |
| Samebike XD26-II | $1,199 | 500W hub, 70 Nm | 720 Wh | Hydraulic 160mm | Full | Cadence | 25.5 kg | 180 kg |
| Movin' Tempo Max | $1,599 | 500W hub | 960 Wh | Tektro hydraulic 160mm | Front (Suntour) | Cadence | 27.2 kg | 136 kg |
| Freesky Wild Cat Pro | $1,928 | 1,800W peak hub, 130 Nm | Samsung 48V 25Ah | 4-piston hydraulic 180mm | Full | Speed | ~38 kg | 181 kg |
| Velotric Fold 1 Plus | $1,999 | 750W hub, 75 Nm | 624 Wh | Hydraulic 180mm | Front 60mm hydraulic | SensorSwap | 30.6 kg | 204 kg |
| Movin' Pulse | From $1,999 | 500W hub | 960–2,160 Wh | Tektro hydraulic 180mm | Front (RST Guide) | Not listed | Not listed | Not listed |
| Eunorau FAT-AWD 3.0 | $2,390 | Dual 500W AWD, 110 Nm | LG 48V 15Ah (+opt. 2nd) | Hydraulic 180mm | Front 95mm (RST) | Torque | 36 kg | 170 kg |
| Tesway X9 AWD | $2,399 | Dual 2,000W AWD, 240 Nm | Samsung 1,440 Wh | 4-piston hydraulic 180mm | Full (downhill) | Cadence | 47.6 kg | 181 kg |
| Eunorau ONE-TRIKE | $2,429 | 500W rear, 80 Nm | 48V 14.5Ah | Hydraulic 180mm | Front 40mm | Not listed | 39 kg | 200 kg |
| Himiway D5 2.0 | $2,799 | 750W hub, 90 Nm | 720 Wh (Samsung/LG) | Hydraulic 180mm | Full (100mm + 130mm) | Torque/Cadence | ~42 kg | 181 kg |
| Specter-S 3.0 | $4,019 | 1,000W Bafang M620 mid, 160 Nm | LG 48V 17.5Ah (+opt. 2nd) | 4-piston hydraulic 180mm | Full (140mm inverted) | Torque | ~36 kg | Not listed |
| Velotric Nomad 2X | $3,399 | 750W hub, 105 Nm | 801.6 Wh (Samsung/LG) | Tektro hydraulic 203/180mm | Full (120mm air + DNM) | SensorSwap | 36 kg | 254 kg |
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Cold Weather Range: What to Actually Expect
Every range number in the comparison table above is the manufacturer's rated range — tested in warm weather, flat terrain, moderate assist. In Canadian winter conditions, expect less. Lithium-ion batteries lose capacity in cold. Bosch eBike Systems estimates up to 30% range reduction below 0°C. Battery University data shows approximately 50% capacity at -18°C.
Best Time to Buy an eBike in Canada
January–March is deal season. Retailers clear previous-year inventory before spring stock arrives. Seven of the eight active sales in this guide are live right now — in early March. This is not a coincidence. Spring is when demand spikes and discounts disappear.
April–June is selection season. New models arrive, full colour and size runs are in stock, but prices firm up. If you want choice, buy in spring. If you want savings, buy now.
Black Friday / Boxing Day (November–December) brings the second discount wave, but inventory is thinner. Popular models sell out and do not restock until January. If you see a deal on the bike you want today, waiting nine months to save an extra $50 is a gamble, not a strategy.
The bottom line: the best time to buy is when the bike you want is in stock and on sale. Right now, eight of these 12 are on sale. That window will not last through April.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best eBike deal in Canada right now?
The best overall deal is the Eunorau Meta275 500W at $1,979. It ships with a free secondary battery (1,296 Wh total), a torque sensor, and Shimano 9-speed gearing — specs normally found on bikes priced above $2,500. For budget buyers, the Samebike XD26-II at $1,199 is the cheapest full-suspension eBike in the Zeus catalogue.
Can you buy a good eBike under $2,000 in Canada?
Yes. Six of the 12 picks in this guide are under $2,000 CAD: the Samebike XD26-II ($1,199), Movin' Tempo Max ($1,599), Freesky Wild Cat Pro A-340 ($1,928), Eunorau Meta275 500W ($1,979), Velotric Fold 1 Plus ($1,999), and Movin' Pulse ($1,999). All have hydraulic disc brakes and at least 500W motors. For a deeper dive, see the full under-$2,000 guide.
Is it worth buying a dual-motor eBike in Canada?
Dual-motor (AWD) eBikes help most in snow, mud, steep hills, and heavy cargo loads. The Eunorau FAT-AWD 3.0 ($2,390) offers AWD with a torque sensor for under $2,400. The Tesway X9 ($2,399) delivers 4,000W peak. The trade-off is weight and faster battery drain — if you ride mostly dry, flat roads, a single motor is more efficient.
What is the cheapest full-suspension eBike in Canada?
The Samebike XD26-II at $1,199 (regular $1,699) is the cheapest full-suspension eBike at Zeus eBikes. It has a 500W hub motor (750W peak), 48V 15Ah battery (720 Wh), Shimano 7-speed, and hydraulic disc brakes with 160mm rotors.
Are there Canadian-designed eBikes under $2,000?
Yes. Movin' is a Canadian-designed brand. The Movin' Tempo Max is on sale for $1,599 (regular $2,399) — a 33% discount. It features a Samsung 48V 20Ah battery (960 Wh), Tektro hydraulic disc brakes, and an 80–90 km range. The Movin' Pulse delivery eBike starts at $1,999.
What is the best folding eBike deal in Canada?
The Velotric Fold 1 Plus at $1,999 is the only folder under $2,000 with a torque sensor (SensorSwap), a 3.5-inch TFT colour display, Apple Find My tracking, and UL 2849 certification. It folds to 96 × 50 × 85 cm and supports riders from 4'9" to 6'5" with a 450 lb payload.
What eBike should I buy for food delivery in Canada?
The Movin' Pulse is purpose-built for delivery. It uses 20 × 4.0-inch fat tires, has a 50 kg rear rack, and offers up to three battery configurations — single 960 Wh ($1,999), dual 1,680 Wh ($2,199), or dual 2,160 Wh ($2,499). Canadian-designed for Canadian conditions.
The Bottom Line
If you can pick only one: the Eunorau Meta275 500W at $1,979 delivers the best overall value — dual batteries (1,296 Wh), torque sensor, and Shimano 9-speed for under $2,000. For budget buyers, the Samebike XD26-II at $1,199 is the door into electric cycling. For the biggest single discount, the Eunorau Specter-S 3.0 at $4,019 saves $2,181 off a Bafang M620 mid-drive — plus a free $810 gift bundle.
Every pick on this list is in stock and ships free across Canada from Zeus eBikes. Prices and availability were verified on March 2, 2026. Sale prices can change without notice — if a deal catches your eye, act before it does.
Ready to ride? Browse all eBikes at Zeus eBikes Canada — free shipping, financing available.





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