eBike Shops in Moncton, NB: 4 Verified Storefronts

eBike shops in Moncton NB directory — Zeus eBikes Canadian eBike Directory 2026
4Verified shops
15 km/hRiverfront Trail limit
500WNB e-bike limit
Jun 2026Verified
Quick Answer Greater Moncton has 4 verified eBike storefronts as of June 2026, spread across the metro's three communities: VELO Bike Ski Trail on Mountain Road (Specialized Turbo, Velec, iGo), Mike's Bike Shop in Dieppe (a Trek/Electra dealer with an electric department), eDrive Powersports in Irishtown (Atlantic Canada's largest all-electric showroom), and La Bikery, a downtown non-profit community workshop for repairs, rentals and refurbished bikes. The local rule new owners miss is the city's 15 km/h speed limit and "wheels yield to heels" etiquette on the shared Riverfront Trail. New Brunswick treats a compliant e-bike as a power-assisted bicycle (500W, 32 km/h, working pedals); you must be 16 or older and an approved helmet is mandatory for every cyclist, all ages. If no local shop has the model you want, several Canadian retailers ship e-bikes free across the country — and our Canada eBike laws guide covers the rules in full.
How We Verified This Directory Each storefront was cross-referenced across the shop's own current website, its Google Business and Facebook listings, regional business directories, and local news coverage (June 2026), and is listed only when at least two independent sources confirmed it sells or services e-bikes. Where municipalities differ inside Greater Moncton, we name each shop's actual community honestly — VELO and La Bikery in Moncton, Mike's in Dieppe, eDrive in Irishtown — rather than implying they all sit inside the city limits. We excluded online-only sellers, big-box chains, the velofix mobile-only service, and the "Pedego Moncton" page, which is a service-area landing page that routes buyers to Pedego's Fredericton store rather than a Moncton storefront. Where sources disagree — eDrive's postal code (E1H 2L4 vs E1H 2L2) and Mike's postal code (E1A 8H3 vs E1A 8K2) — we flag the conflict and tell you to confirm rather than pick one silently. Every rule is tied to a named primary source: the City of Moncton's "Share the Trail" and By-Laws pages, and the Government of New Brunswick's power-assisted-bicycle framework as reported in current New Brunswick e-bike legal summaries. Because New Brunswick's 500W/32 km/h framework lives on a government webpage rather than in the codified Motor Vehicle Act, we say so plainly. This directory is re-verified every six months.

Greater Moncton has four verified e-bike storefronts, from a premium bike-and-ski shop on Mountain Road to the largest all-electric showroom in Atlantic Canada. The Hub City is really three communities — Moncton, Dieppe and Riverview, with Irishtown on its northern edge — so the shop you want may sit a few minutes outside the city line; this directory names each one's actual address rather than rounding everything up to "Moncton." The harder part isn't buying the bike — it's the shared Riverfront Trail, where the city posts a 15 km/h limit and a "wheels yield to heels" rule that surprises new e-bike owners. Below, every verified shop, then exactly what the local trail rules and New Brunswick's provincial framework mean before you ride.

The 4 Verified eBike Shops in Greater Moncton

VELO Bike Ski Trail — 1633 Mountain Road, Moncton

Address: 1633 Mountain Road, Unit 3, Moncton, NB E1G 1A5
Phone: (506) 854-2453
Website: iamvelo.com
Brands: Specialized (including the Specialized Turbo e-bike line), Velec, iGo; also Scott and Santa Cruz pedal bikes
Hours: Mon-Wed 10 am-6 pm · Thu 10 am-7 pm · Fri-Sat 10 am-6 pm · Sun 10 am-5 pm (confirm seasonally)
Focus: North Moncton's full-service bicycle destination, established 2009 — new and used bikes, repairs and maintenance, bike fitting, rentals, and financing, with repair pick-up and delivery offered in Moncton, Dieppe, Riverview and Shediac. The Specialized Turbo line covers commuter and trail e-bikes, while Velec and iGo add upright, Canadian-market city models. If you want a brand-name pedal-assist e-bike with a service department behind it, this is the first room to walk into.

Mike's Bike Shop — 67 Englehart Street, Dieppe

Address: 67 Englehart Street, Dieppe, NB E1A 8K2 (Trek's official store page, Yelp and Yellow Pages all list E1A 8K2; one older directory shows E1A 8H3 — confirm before mailing)
Phone: (506) 852-7100
Website: mikesbikeshop.ca
Brands: Authorized Trek and Electra dealer with a dedicated electric-bikes department (road, mountain, city & cruiser e-bikes)
Hours: Mon-Wed 10 am-6 pm · Thu-Fri 10 am-8 pm · Sat 9 am-6 pm · Sun 11 am-5 pm
Focus: A well-established Dieppe bike shop carrying the Trek and Electra families, with an electric-bikes section spanning commuter, mountain, city and cruiser styles. Reviewers single out the staff's knowledge of e-bikes. Online stock can read empty between model years, so call or visit to confirm which electric models are physically on the floor before a special trip.

eDrive Powersports — 2311 Route 115, Irishtown

Address: 2311 Route 115, Irishtown, NB E1H 2L4 (a partner listing shows E1H 2L2 — confirm before mailing)
Phone: (506) 532-2400
Website: edrivepowersports.ca
Brands: Emmo, Daymak, Yulbike, Fuell, Dost (e-bikes, electric mopeds, electric kick scooters and electric motorcycles)
Hours: Summer showroom hours approx. Mon-Wed 9 am-4 pm · Thu-Fri 9 am-6 pm · Sat 9 am-3 pm · Sun closed or by appointment (confirm seasonally)
Focus: Billed as the largest all-electric showroom in Atlantic Canada, eDrive opened its expanded Irishtown location in March 2023 with an on-site test path and an integrated repair shop. The line-up leans toward heavier electric mobility — mopeds, scooters and motorcycles — alongside e-bikes from Emmo, Daymak, Yulbike, Fuell and Dost. If you want to test-ride electric two-wheelers across categories in one stop, this is the showroom to plan around. Note that some of these models exceed the 500W power-assisted-bicycle limit and are not legally bicycles — see the laws section below.

La Bikery Co-operative — 120 Assomption Boulevard, Moncton

Address: 120 Assomption Boulevard, Moncton, NB (downtown, near the Petitcodiac River and NB Trail)
Website: labikery.ca
Services: Bicycle repairs and maintenance, a do-it-yourself workshop, bike rentals, learn-to-ride programs, bike tours, and refurbished-bike sales
Focus: A non-profit community bicycle centre rather than a new-bike retailer — included here honestly because it is a real, staffed storefront that services bikes and rents them downtown. It does not advertise new e-bike sales, but for repairs, a workshop space, or an affordable refurbished bike to start riding, it is a genuine local resource. Confirm current rental and service options by phone or through their site before visiting.

Greater Moncton Shop Takeaway For a brand-name pedal-assist e-bike with a full service department, start with VELO Bike Ski Trail (Mountain Rd, Moncton) or Mike's Bike Shop (Dieppe). For electric mopeds, scooters and motorcycles alongside e-bikes — and a test path to try them — head to eDrive Powersports (Irishtown). For repairs, rentals or an affordable refurbished bike downtown, La Bikery. Call ahead everywhere: hours shift with the season and e-bike floor stock moves fast.

Can't find the right fit in Greater Moncton? Many Canadian retailers ship e-bikes free across the country.

Whoever you buy from, look for a 500W / 32 km/h power-assisted-bicycle build, a clear return window, and real Canadian phone support. Our guide to spotting a legit eBike store walks through every question to ask, and how to finance an eBike in Canada covers paying over time.

Read the eBike Canada Guide

Trail Access — The Riverfront Trail and the 15 km/h Rule

Riverfront Trail & shared paths — bikes welcome, 15 km/h cap Moncton's Riverfront Park carries roughly five kilometres of paved and gravel trail along the Petitcodiac, connecting downtown to Dieppe and Riverview, and the wider network keeps growing with new bike lanes on Killam Drive, Vaughan Harvey Boulevard and Dickson Boulevard. The City's official "Share the Trail" guidelines set a maximum cycling speed of 15 km/h, ask riders to "walk, run, and cycle on the right," and apply a "wheels yield to heels" rule giving pedestrians the right of way; when passing, sound a bell or call out and pass on the left. The published rules address bicycles generally and do not single out e-bikes, so ride a pedal-assist e-bike as you would a bicycle and stay under 15 km/h. Source: moncton.ca "Share the Trail."
Enforcement & etiquette — education, not fines (for now) The City has said it does not issue fines for trail-rule breaches; instead it has added etiquette signage at key Riverfront points and has recreation staff stop riders to educate them. After reported close calls, local cyclists have publicly pushed for more signage and courtesy on the shared path. Translation for e-bike owners: the 15 km/h limit is real even if it isn't ticketed — a heavier, faster e-bike on a crowded riverfront path is exactly the scenario that draws complaints, so ease off the throttle around pedestrians. Sources: moncton.ca "Share the Trail"; CBC News (Moncton trail etiquette, 2026).
Trail Access Takeaway The Riverfront Trail and Moncton's growing bike-lane network are your reliable e-bike routes — just treat the posted 15 km/h limit and "wheels yield to heels" rule as the law of the path, even though the City educates rather than fines. Slow right down around pedestrians, and use a bell.

New Brunswick eBike Laws — What Makes an eBike Legal in Moncton

New Brunswick — power-assisted bicycle (PAB) framework
  • Motor: Maximum 500W
  • Speed cut-off: Motor assist stops at 32 km/h
  • Pedals: Fully operable pedals required (assist disengages when you stop pedalling)
  • Minimum age: Rider must be 16 or older
  • Helmet: Approved helmet, chin strap fastened, mandatory for every cyclist of ALL ages
  • Lights: A headlight is required when riding at night
  • Licence / registration / insurance: Not required for a compliant PAB
A compliant e-bike is treated as a bicycle and may use roads and bike lanes where conventional bikes are allowed; it is generally not permitted on provincial highways, and municipalities may add their own rules. Important caveat: this 500W / 32 km/h framework is published on a Government of New Brunswick webpage and is not spelled out in the provincial Motor Vehicle Act, which makes New Brunswick's e-bike rules the least-codified of any province. A small number of secondary sources list a minimum age of 14 rather than 16 — because the rule isn't statutory, confirm the current figure with the Government of New Brunswick before relying on it for a young rider. Heavier electric mopeds, scooters and motorcycles that exceed 500W or assist past 32 km/h are not power-assisted bicycles and fall under different rules. Sources: Government of New Brunswick; current New Brunswick e-bike legal summaries (June 2026). For the full national picture, see our eBike laws Canada guide and the Canadian eBike Legal Access Atlas.
The codification gap — why "the law" here is a webpage Be aware that New Brunswick has not written the e-bike definition into its Motor Vehicle Act the way Ontario or British Columbia have. That means the practical rules — 500W, 32 km/h, age 16, helmet for all — come from a provincial government information page and long-standing federal practice, not a statute you can cite chapter and verse. For everyday riding this rarely matters, but if you are buying a borderline model (a high-power "e-bike," an electric moped, or anything throttle-only above 32 km/h), confirm its legal status directly with the Province before you ride it on the road. When the law is thin, the safest bike is an unambiguous 500W / 32 km/h pedal-assist build.

Where to Ride Your eBike in Moncton

  • City streets and bike lanes — permitted; a compliant 500W / 32 km/h e-bike rides as a bicycle, so ride with traffic, signal turns, and use the growing network on Killam Drive, Vaughan Harvey Boulevard and Dickson Boulevard.
  • Riverfront Trail and shared paths — open to bikes, including pedal-assist e-bikes, under the City's trail guidelines; obey the posted 15 km/h limit, keep right, and yield to pedestrians.
  • Sidewalks — sidewalks are for pedestrians; ride on the road or designated paths, not the sidewalk. Confirm any specific restriction in the City's traffic by-law (T-322) before assuming.
  • Provincial highways — generally off-limits to e-bikes; stick to municipal roads, lanes and trails.
  • Parks & conservation areas — Riverfront Park's paved and gravel trails welcome cyclists under the share-the-trail rules; for trail-use specifics in other parks or nearby conservation lands, confirm with the City or the land manager, since posted signage is the final word.
Riding in Moncton — Takeaway Streets, bike lanes and the Riverfront Trail are your dependable network — a compliant e-bike rides there as a bicycle, with the 15 km/h trail limit and pedestrian right-of-way as the rules that actually get noticed. Keep off provincial highways, wear a certified helmet every ride, and when a model's legal status is unclear, choose an unambiguous 500W / 32 km/h pedal-assist build.

Buying your first e-bike and want it road-legal in New Brunswick from day one?

Match the bike to the law first: a 500W / 32 km/h power-assisted-bicycle build keeps you legal on Moncton roads and the Riverfront Trail. Start with our independent picks for the best electric bikes in Canada.

See the Best eBikes Canada

Frequently Asked Questions — Moncton, NB eBikes

How many eBike shops are in Moncton, NB?

Greater Moncton has four verified storefronts as of June 2026: VELO Bike Ski Trail (1633 Mountain Rd, Unit 3, Moncton, (506) 854-2453 — Specialized Turbo, Velec and iGo e-bikes plus full service), Mike's Bike Shop (67 Englehart St, Dieppe, (506) 852-7100 — a Trek/Electra dealer with a dedicated electric-bikes department), eDrive Powersports (2311 Route 115, Irishtown, (506) 532-2400 — an all-electric showroom carrying Emmo, Daymak, Yulbike, Fuell and Dost), and La Bikery Co-operative (120 Assomption Blvd, Moncton — a non-profit community workshop for repairs, rentals and refurbished bikes). Call ahead to confirm current stock and hours.

Where can I buy an electric bike in Moncton?

For brand-name pedal-assist e-bikes, VELO Bike Ski Trail on Mountain Road carries Specialized Turbo, Velec and iGo, and Mike's Bike Shop in Dieppe is a Trek and Electra dealer with an electric-bikes department. For electric mopeds, scooters and motorcycles alongside e-bikes, eDrive Powersports in Irishtown is the largest all-electric showroom in Atlantic Canada. La Bikery in downtown Moncton handles repairs, rentals and refurbished bikes rather than new e-bike sales. If a local shop does not stock the model you want, several Canadian retailers ship e-bikes directly to Moncton with free shipping.

What are the e-bike rules on Moncton's Riverfront Trail?

The City of Moncton's official trail guidelines set a maximum cycling speed of 15 km/h, ask riders to keep right, and follow a "wheels yield to heels" rule giving pedestrians the right of way. When passing, sound a bell or call out and pass on the left. The City notes it does not issue fines for trail-rule breaches and instead increases signage and educates users. The published guidelines address bicycles generally and do not single out e-bikes; ride a pedal-assist e-bike as you would a bicycle and keep under 15 km/h on the shared Riverfront Trail. Source: moncton.ca "Share the Trail."

What are New Brunswick's e-bike laws?

New Brunswick treats a compliant e-bike as a power-assisted bicycle following the long-standing federal definition: a motor of 500W or less, motor assist that cuts off at 32 km/h, and fully operable pedals. The rider must be 16 or older, an approved helmet is required for every cyclist of all ages on New Brunswick roads, and no licence, registration or insurance is needed. A headlight is required when riding at night. Note that this 500W/32 km/h framework is published on a Government of New Brunswick webpage rather than codified in the Motor Vehicle Act, and individual municipalities may add their own rules. Sources: Government of New Brunswick; New Brunswick e-bike legal summaries (June 2026).

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

Yes. New Brunswick requires every cyclist to wear an approved helmet with the chin strap properly fastened at all times while cycling on provincial roads, and that requirement applies to all ages. There is no helmet exemption for adult e-bike riders in New Brunswick. A properly fitted, certified bicycle helmet is mandatory whether you are on the road or the Riverfront Trail.

How old do you have to be to ride an e-bike in New Brunswick?

The minimum age to operate a power-assisted bicycle in New Brunswick is 16, and no driver's licence is required for a compliant e-bike. A small number of secondary sources list 14, but the more widely cited minimum across New Brunswick e-bike summaries is 16; because the rule lives on a government webpage rather than in codified statute, confirm the current age requirement with the Government of New Brunswick before relying on it for a younger rider.

More from the Canadian eBike Directory

📸 All photography by Playcut.ai — personalized AI actor technology