eBike Shops in Belleville, ON: 4 Verified Storefronts

eBike shops in Belleville ON directory — Zeus eBikes Canadian eBike Directory 2026
4Verified shops
$110E-bike sidewalk fine
500WON PAB limit
Jun 2026Verified
Quick Answer Belleville has 4 verified eBike-selling or eBike-servicing storefronts as of June 2026 — from a dedicated electric-bike-and-scooter store inside the Quinte Mall to a downtown bike-and-coffee shop with a full-service repair bench. The local rule that surprises new owners is the price of getting it wrong: under By-law 2025-195, riding an e-bike on a sidewalk or downtown sidewalk in Belleville carries a $110 fine — and a second $110 fine applies to pedalling one on a sidewalk — versus $65 for a regular bicycle. Ontario regulates e-bikes under the federal PAB framework (500W, 32 km/h, working pedals); you must be 16 or older and helmets are mandatory for every rider, all ages. For the full provincial picture, see our Ontario eBike laws guide, and before you buy anywhere, read how to spot a legit eBike store.
How We Verified This Directory Each storefront was cross-referenced across the shop's own current website, Google Maps, the Trek and Gazelle official dealer locators, yellowpages.ca, the Quinte Mall directory, and Belleville business directories (June 2026), and listed only when at least two independent sources confirmed it operates in Belleville and either sells or services electric bikes. Where a claim could not be reproduced, we say so plainly: The Brake Room's own website (thebrakeroom.com) was unreachable during this audit, and we could not independently confirm that it sells e-bikes, so it is listed honestly as a general bike-and-coffee shop with a full-service repair bench — service, not asserted retail. EZ Rides' Belleville address is reported two ways (its own site lists K8P 3C9; the Quinte Mall it sits inside is K8P 3E1) and we flag both. We deliberately excluded Pedego Prince Edward County, which is in Bloomfield (not Belleville), and Spokes 'N' Pedals, which is in Peterborough. Every bylaw statement is tied to a named primary source: ontario.ca's "Riding an e-bike" page, the City of Belleville Active Transportation page, and City of Belleville By-law 2025-195. Where the City's bylaw PDF is a scanned image, set-fine amounts are taken from the City's civicweb document record and Schedule "A" set-fine table and labelled as reported. This directory is re-verified every six months.

Belleville's e-bike retail scene is small but real — four genuine places to buy or service an electric bike, anchored by EZ Rides, a store built specifically around e-bikes, e-scooters and mobility vehicles inside the Quinte Mall, and by Doug's Bicycle, a College Street fixture that has been selling bikes since 1978 and now stocks one of the broadest name-brand e-bike line-ups in the Quinte area. The harder part in Belleville isn't finding a bike; it's knowing what it costs to ride it in the wrong place. The city took an unusually firm line on sidewalks in its 2025 traffic bylaw: an e-bike on a sidewalk — ridden or pedalled — draws a $110 set fine, well above the $65 a regular cyclist faces. This directory lists every verified shop first, then walks through exactly where you can and can't ride before you hand over your money.

The 4 Verified eBike Shops in Belleville

Belleville has four verified electric-bike storefronts as of June 2026: EZ Rides Belleville (390 N Front St, Quinte Mall), Doug's Bicycle Sales and Service (159 College St W), Ideal Bike (225 Front St), and The Brake Room (34 Dundas St E). One is a dedicated e-mobility store; the rest are full bike shops that sell or service e-bikes.

EZ Rides Belleville — 390 North Front Street (Quinte Mall)

Address: 390 N Front St, Belleville, ON K8P 3C9 (inside Quinte Mall; the mall's own postal code is K8P 3E1)
Phone: (343) 600-9894
Email: belleville@ezrides.ca
Website: ezrides.ca
Brands / products: A multi-brand electric-mobility retailer — electric bicycles (fat-tire, mountain/off-road, folding, step-through and cruiser styles), plus e-scooters, e-motorcycles, mopeds and mobility scooters
Hours: Mall-based; typically aligned with Quinte Mall hours (roughly 9:30 am-9 pm weekdays). Confirm by phone before a special trip
Focus: Belleville's dedicated electric-mobility storefront. If you want to compare several e-bike styles side by side in one room — and look at e-scooters or mobility options at the same time — this is the spot. Because it carries a rotating multi-brand inventory, call ahead to confirm a specific model is in stock and to confirm its current unit inside the mall.

Doug's Bicycle Sales and Service — 159 College Street West

Address: 159 College St W, Belleville, ON K8P 2G7
Phone: (613) 966-9161
Website: dougsbikes.com
Brands: Specialized (Turbo Como, Vado, Tero, Levo lines), Giant (AnyTour X E+, Explore E+, Talon E+), Gazelle (Arroyo, Medeo, Ultimate), Norco, Salsa, Liv, Santa Cruz, and Urban Arrow electric cargo
Hours: Tue-Wed 10 am-5 pm · Thu-Fri 10 am-6 pm · Sat 10 am-3 pm · Sun-Mon closed
Focus: A locally owned full-service bike shop on the scene since 1978, and the deepest traditional e-bike bench in town — commuter, trail and cargo electrics from major manufacturers, an official Gazelle dealer, with sales, service and a stated three years of free tune-ups on bikes bought there. If you want a name-brand pedal-assist commuter or an e-cargo bike with a real service department behind it, start here.

Ideal Bike — 225 Front Street

Address: 225 Front St, Belleville, ON K8N 2Z4
Phone: (613) 779-6979
Website: idealbike.com
Brands: Trek and Electra e-bikes (an official Trek dealer); also road, mountain, BMX and fat bikes, with Shimano, Giro and Velo Orange components
Hours: Tue-Sat (afternoon-weighted; one source lists Tue-Fri 12-6 pm, Sat 10 am-5 pm, another lists 10 am-5 pm Tue-Sat) · Sun-Mon closed — confirm by phone
Focus: A highly rated downtown shop and Trek/Electra dealer that sells and services bicycles of all kinds and runs a rental program across Belleville, the Quinte area and Prince Edward County. Electra's Townie Go! and Trek's commuter e-bikes give you upright, beginner-friendly pedal-assist options, and the rental fleet lets you try before you commit.

The Brake Room — 34 Dundas Street East

Address: 34 Dundas St E, Belleville, ON
Phone: (613) 900-0767
Website: The shop's own site was unreachable during our June 2026 audit; the active channel is its Facebook page (facebook.com/TheBrakeRoom.Belleville)
Brands: Not published; described as Quinte's first hybrid bike-and-coffee shop that sells new bikes and runs a full-service repair shop
Hours: Not consistently published online — confirm by phone or Facebook
Focus: A downtown café-bike-shop hybrid with a full-service repair bench. We could not independently confirm that The Brake Room sells e-bikes, so we list it honestly as a service-and-new-bike shop rather than an e-bike retailer — its repair shop is the relevant draw for e-bike owners needing a tune-up, a brake bleed or a flat fixed downtown. Call first to confirm whether they service your specific e-bike system before you ride over.

Belleville Shop Takeaway For a dedicated electric-bike-and-scooter store with several styles under one roof, start with EZ Rides (390 N Front St, Quinte Mall). For the widest name-brand e-bike line-up and a real service department, Doug's Bicycle (159 College St W). For Trek/Electra e-bikes plus rentals so you can try before you buy, Ideal Bike (225 Front St). For downtown repairs and tune-ups, The Brake Room (34 Dundas St E). Call ahead everywhere — stock and hours shift.

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Sidewalks & Downtown — Belleville's $110 eBike Rule

By-law 2025-195: e-bikes off sidewalks, full stop Belleville's traffic bylaw treats e-bikes more strictly than regular bicycles on sidewalks. Under By-law 2025-195's Schedule "A" set-fine table, operating an e-bike on a sidewalk or downtown sidewalk carries a $110 fine, and a separate $110 fine applies to pedalling an e-bike on a sidewalk or downtown sidewalk — compared with a $65 fine for operating a regular bicycle on a sidewalk while over the age of 14. Ontario's provincial framework separately prohibits riding a power-assisted bicycle on any sidewalk, so the rules align. The City's bylaw PDF is a scanned image, so we present the set-fine amounts as reported from the City's civicweb document record rather than as verbatim legislative text. Source: City of Belleville By-law 2025-195.
Sidewalk Takeaway In Belleville, the sidewalk is the single most expensive place to put an e-bike — $110 a ticket, and a second $110 if you're caught pedalling rather than throttling. Use the road, the bike lane or a multi-use path instead. The downtown core is explicitly named in the bylaw, so don't treat Front Street's wider sidewalks as fair game.

Trails & Bike Lanes — Belleville's Active Transportation Network

Bike lanes and multi-use pathways The City of Belleville's Active Transportation network includes sharrows (shared-road markings), painted bike lanes, multi-use pathways (paved paths shared by people walking, rolling and cycling) and off-road trails, with newer infrastructure connecting Loyalist College toward the revitalised downtown. Belleville was recognised as a Bronze-level Bicycle Friendly Community and received provincial commuter-cycling infrastructure funding. The City classifies bicycles as vehicles under Ontario's Highway Traffic Act, so pedal-assist e-bikes meeting the PAB rules are generally treated as bicycles on bike lanes and multi-use paths. Follow posted signage on each segment. Source: City of Belleville, Active Transportation.
Watch for restricted segments and trail signage By-law 2025-195's set-fine schedule also lists offences for operating a vehicle in a prohibited portion of a bicycle lane ($110) and operating a vehicle on a multi-use trail ($110). These provisions are aimed at vehicles that don't belong on cycling infrastructure, and pedal-assist e-bikes are generally permitted as bicycles — but because the bylaw can restrict specific stretches, the safe move is to obey posted signs on each path and not assume every trail is open end-to-end. Whether a particular segment treats a throttle e-bike differently from a pedal-assist one is not spelled out in the public set-fine table, so confirm restricted sections with the City before riding them. Source: City of Belleville By-law 2025-195.
City parks and waterfront paths Belleville's waterfront and parks — including the Bay of Quinte corridors and riverside paths — carry paved multi-use paths popular with cyclists. The City does not publish a separate e-bike-specific park prohibition in its Active Transportation material, so e-bikes are generally treated as bicycles where bikes are allowed. Posted signage governs each path, and quieter, pedestrian-heavy sections deserve courtesy and reduced speed. Confirm any park-specific rules with the City of Belleville before relying on a given route.
Trail Access Takeaway Belleville's bike lanes and multi-use pathways are your dependable network — pedal-assist e-bikes ride there as bicycles, with signage as the final word. Stay off sidewalks (the most expensive mistake in town), watch for any posted restrictions on specific lane or trail segments, and treat pedestrian-heavy waterfront stretches with reduced speed.

Ontario eBike Laws — What Makes an eBike Legal in Belleville

Ontario — federal Power-Assisted Bicycle (PAB) framework
  • Motor: Maximum 500W
  • Speed cut-off: Motor assist stops at 32 km/h
  • Pedals: Fully operable pedals required
  • Minimum age: Rider must be 16 or older
  • Helmet: Approved bicycle or motorcycle helmet mandatory for ALL ages (stricter than the regular-bicycle rule, which only requires helmets under 18)
  • Licence / registration / insurance: Not required for a compliant PAB
  • Sidewalks: Prohibited province-wide — and in Belleville, a $110 set fine under By-law 2025-195
E-bikes are allowed on most roads and in bike lanes where conventional bicycles are permitted, but not on 400-series highways and not anywhere a municipal bylaw bans them. Ontario.ca confirms municipalities can pass their own e-bike restrictions — which is exactly what Belleville's sidewalk and bicycle-lane provisions do. No municipal age, power or registration rule was found that differs from Ontario's PAB baseline; Belleville adopts the provincial standard and layers its own sidewalk and lane enforcement on top. Sources: ontario.ca "Riding an e-bike"; City of Belleville By-law 2025-195. For the full provincial picture, see our Ontario eBike laws guide, and to shop with confidence read how to spot a legit eBike store.

Where to Ride Your eBike in Belleville

  • City streets and bike lanes — permitted; bicycles are classified as vehicles, so ride with traffic, signal turns, and keep right. Watch for any posted restrictions on specific bicycle-lane portions.
  • Multi-use pathways — open to pedal-assist e-bikes as bicycles; follow posted signage on each segment, and slow down around pedestrians.
  • Sidewalks — off-limits; a $110 set fine under By-law 2025-195 for operating or pedalling an e-bike, plus the province-wide PAB sidewalk ban. The downtown core is named explicitly.
  • City parks & waterfront paths — generally open where bikes are allowed; no separate e-bike park ban was published, but signage governs each path. Confirm route-specific rules with the City.
  • 400-series highways — prohibited province-wide; e-bikes are never permitted on controlled-access highways.
Riding in Belleville — Takeaway Streets, bike lanes and the city's multi-use pathways are your reliable network — e-bikes ride there as bicycles, with signage as the final word. The one rule worth tattooing on your handlebars: stay off sidewalks, downtown included, where an e-bike ticket runs $110. When a path posts a restriction, believe it.

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Frequently Asked Questions — Belleville, ON eBikes

How many eBike shops are in Belleville, ON?

Four verified storefronts as of June 2026: EZ Rides Belleville (390 N Front St, inside Quinte Mall, (343) 600-9894 — a dedicated electric-bike, e-scooter and mobility store), Doug's Bicycle Sales and Service (159 College St W, (613) 966-9161 — Specialized, Giant, Gazelle, Norco, Salsa, Liv and Urban Arrow e-bikes, on the scene since 1978), Ideal Bike (225 Front St, (613) 779-6979 — Trek and Electra e-bikes, plus service and rentals), and The Brake Room (34 Dundas St E, (613) 900-0767 — a bike-and-coffee shop with a full-service repair shop). Call ahead to confirm current stock and hours.

Can I ride my eBike on a Belleville sidewalk?

No. Belleville By-law 2025-195 (Schedule "A") sets a $110 fine for operating an e-bike on a sidewalk or downtown sidewalk and a separate $110 fine for pedalling an e-bike on a sidewalk or downtown sidewalk — stiffer than the $65 fine for operating a regular bicycle on a sidewalk while over age 14. Ontario's provincial framework also prohibits operating a power-assisted bicycle on sidewalks, so the rules point the same way. Source: City of Belleville By-law 2025-195.

Can I ride an eBike on Belleville's trails and bike lanes?

Belleville's Active Transportation network includes bike lanes, multi-use pathways and off-road trails, and the City classifies bicycles as vehicles under the Highway Traffic Act. Pedal-assist e-bikes that meet Ontario's PAB rules are generally treated as bicycles on bike lanes and multi-use paths. By-law 2025-195 does set fines for operating a vehicle in a prohibited portion of a bicycle lane and on a multi-use trail, so follow posted signage on each segment and confirm any restricted stretches before riding. Source: City of Belleville Active Transportation page and By-law 2025-195.

What are Ontario's eBike laws?

Ontario regulates e-bikes under the federal Power-Assisted Bicycle framework: a motor not exceeding 500W, motor assist cutting off at 32 km/h, and fully operable pedals. The rider must be 16 or older, and an approved bicycle or motorcycle helmet is mandatory for all ages. No licence, registration or insurance is required for a compliant PAB. E-bikes may use most roads and bike lanes where conventional bicycles are allowed, but not 400-series highways, not on sidewalks, and not anywhere a municipal bylaw bans them. Source: ontario.ca "Riding an e-bike."

Do I need a helmet to ride an eBike in Belleville?

Yes. Under Ontario's Power-Assisted Bicycle rules, every e-bike rider must wear an approved bicycle or motorcycle helmet, regardless of age — the all-ages requirement is stricter than the regular-bicycle rule, where only riders under 18 must wear a helmet. There is no helmet exemption for adult e-bike riders in Ontario. Sources: ontario.ca "Riding an e-bike"; City of Belleville Active Transportation page.

Is there a dedicated electric-bike store in Belleville?

Yes — EZ Rides Belleville (390 N Front St, inside Quinte Mall, (343) 600-9894) is built around electric bikes, e-scooters, mopeds and mobility scooters rather than conventional pedal bikes. For traditional bike-shop e-bike lines, Doug's Bicycle (159 College St W) carries Specialized, Giant, Gazelle, Norco and more, and Ideal Bike (225 Front St) is a Trek and Electra dealer that also offers service and rentals. Confirm current stock by phone before a special trip.

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