eBike Shops in Montréal, QC (2026): 14 Verified Storefronts
Rad Power's bankruptcy in December 2025 closed the Vancouver store — Canada's last major chain e-bike storefront — and left tens of thousands of Canadian riders without a reliable nearby service point. Montréal felt that gap immediately. The city has one of the most developed cycling networks in North America (1,083 km of bike paths, the REV express lanes, and a BIXI electric fleet), and the riders who built their commutes around a single brand suddenly need a local electric bike shop to turn to. This page is the answer: every verified e-bike storefront in the City of Montréal, independently confirmed in June 2026.
Québec's e-bike rules are also stricter than most Canadians expect — throttle-only bikes are banned, helmets are mandatory for all ages, and the STM has barred e-bikes from the métro since December 2024. Before you buy, the Montréal e-bike rules guide and the Québec eBike laws guide are essential reading. This directory covers the shops; those two pages cover what you can legally ride where.
This directory is published and maintained by Zeus eBikes, a Canadian online e-bike retailer, as part of the Canadian eBike Brands & Shops directory — an independently researched reference for Canadian riders. Zeus has no commercial relationship with any shop listed here. Each shop was confirmed against its own website and current business listings in June 2026 — address, phone, posted hours, and the e-bike brands on its floor. We included only physical storefronts that sell e-bikes; pure repair shops, rental-tour operators, and online-only sellers were excluded. Any shop whose e-bike sales could not be confirmed from a current source was held back rather than guessed. This page covers the City of Montréal (post-2002 amalgamation); Téo Vélo in Montréal-Est (a demerged municipality) is listed under Greater Montréal. Shop data changes — call ahead to confirm hours, which shift seasonally. Found an error or closure? milad@zeusebikes.ca.
There are 14 verified electric bike shops in the City of Montréal, plus Téo Vélo just east in Montréal-Est. Shops cluster in Griffintown and Plateau-Mont-Royal, with further locations in Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, Côte-des-Neiges, Saint-Henri, Rosemont, and Verdun. For the widest brand selection, start with E2-Sport (Cube, Amflow, Moustache — premium European brands, largest e-bike inventory in Québec) and EZbike Montréal (Aventon, Velotric, Himiway — value imports from roughly $1,000–$2,000 CAD). For a single brand: Giant Montréal, Trek Griffintown, Trek Plateau, and Davélo (Specialized) each go deep on one badge. For a used e-bike: Vélo Urbain and Vélo iBike carry used inventory. Most shops are closed Sunday — call ahead. Before you buy, confirm your bike is legal under Québec's e-bike rules — throttle-only bikes are banned province-wide — and check whether a Montréal-specific restriction affects where you plan to ride.
On This Page
Where to Buy an eBike in Montréal
Rad Power's closure — and the CPSC battery-fire warning affecting five of its most popular models — sent a wave of displaced riders looking for alternatives and a local service point. Montréal's independent e-bike scene is actually better positioned than most Canadian cities to absorb them: the market here skews toward specialist stores rather than big-box retail, and several shops actively service brands they didn't sell. That matters when you're holding a bike that came from a bankrupt chain.
The local lineup divides into three useful groups. Pure e-bike specialists — E2-Sport, EZbike Montréal, EZWheel Canada, Ride Bike Style, Téo Vélo — stock only electric. Full-service bike shops with strong e-bike walls — Allo Vélo, Vélo Urbain, Vélo iBike, Bicycles Quilicot, Bicycles Eddy, Davélo — pair electric inventory with deep mechanical know-how and multi-brand service. And brand concept stores — Trek (two locations), Giant — go deep on one badge. Which fits depends on whether you want range or depth.
Montréal's e-bike market is specialist-driven, not big-box. That means narrower but deeper inventories at most shops, and mechanics who know e-bikes specifically — worth more than a department store's selection when you need a warranty fix or a battery diagnostic in February.
Québec & Montréal E-Bike Rules (2026) — What Every Buyer Must Know
Québec's rules are stricter than the federal PAB framework and stricter than most other provinces. If you buy a bike here — or bring one from another province — these rules apply the moment you leave the shop.
Québec bans throttle-only operation. Under Article 492.2 of the Highway Safety Code (SAAQ), the motor may only activate while you are actively pedalling. A throttle-equipped bike that lets you ride without pedalling is illegal on Québec roads and bike paths — even if it is sold as a valid product elsewhere in Canada. If you are buying for Québec, confirm the bike is pedal-assist only, or that its throttle can be disabled. Source: SAAQ (saaq.gouv.qc.ca — Electric Bike guidance page).
The rules that apply in Montréal in 2026 (sourced to SAAQ, SPVM, and Ville de Montréal):
- Motor power: maximum 500W nominal — the nameplate rating on the manufacturer label, not a software-limited figure. A 750W motor electronically limited to 32 km/h is still a 750W motor and is not legal in Québec. (Source: Article 492.2, Highway Safety Code)
- Speed cut-off: motor assistance must stop at 32 km/h. Riders may pedal faster under their own power. (Source: Article 492.2)
- Throttle: banned. Pedal-assist only — you must be pedalling for the motor to engage. This is stricter than federal PAB rules, which permit throttles. (Source: Article 492.2; SAAQ)
- Helmet: mandatory for all ages — no exemption for adults. Québec is one of the few provinces where adult riders are also required to wear a helmet. Accepted standards include CAN/CSA-D113.2, ASTM F1447, and EN 1078. Fine for non-compliance: $60–$100. (Source: Protective Helmets Regulation, Article 2.1)
- Age: riders 18+ need no licence. Riders aged 14–17 must hold a Québec Class 6D licence (the moped class). Riders under 14 are prohibited on public roads. (Source: Article 492.2)
- Registration and plates: not required. E-bikes cannot be registered and do not need licence plates. (Source: SAAQ)
- Moveable step (marche-pied): bikes with a scooter-style footrest instead of pedals are banned from all bike paths and REV lanes. They may only use roadways. SPVM issued 1,301 cycling contraventions in the first half of 2024 related to moped-style frames. (Source: SPVM enforcement guidance)
- Montréal park paths: a 20 km/h speed limit applies on all park paths, including Parc du Mont-Royal. (Source: Ville de Montréal cycling policy)
- STM métro and buses: all e-bikes banned since December 2024, citing lithium battery fire safety concerns. (Source: STM)
- REM (Réseau express métropolitain): e-bikes allowed during off-peak hours only — not on weekdays between 7:00–9:30 AM or 3:30–6:00 PM. (Source: REM)
- Insurance: SAAQ's public auto insurance does not cover e-bike injuries unless a registered motor vehicle is also involved. (Source: SAAQ)
For the full Montréal-specific picture — including REV lane access, seasonal BIXI electric-bike availability, and park-by-park rules — see our Montréal e-bike rules guide. For the provincial framework: Québec eBike Laws 2026.
Before buying any e-bike for use in Québec, confirm three things: the motor is rated 500W or under on the manufacturer label; the bike is pedal-assist only (no throttle-only mode); and the buyer is 18+ or holds a Class 6D licence if 14–17. A bike that passes in Ontario may not pass in Québec.
All Montréal Shops at a Glance
| Shop | Neighbourhood | eBike brands (sample) | Services |
|---|---|---|---|
| E2-Sport | Griffintown | Cube, Amflow, Moustache | Sales · Service · Delivery |
| EZbike Montréal | Plateau-Mont-Royal | Aventon, Velotric, Heybike, NCM, Himiway | Sales · Service · Warranty |
| EZWheel Canada | Côte-des-Neiges | Heybike, Aventon, Gazelle, Segway | Sales · Service · Test rides |
| Allo Vélo (VeloLifestyle) | Griffintown | Gazelle cargo e-bikes | Sales · Rentals · Service · Café |
| Giant Montréal | Notre-Dame-de-Grâce | Giant, Liv, Momentum | Sales · Service · Bike fitting |
| Trek Montréal – Griffintown | Griffintown | Trek (full electric range) | Sales · Service (all brands) · Returns |
| Trek Montréal – Plateau | Plateau-Mont-Royal | Trek (full electric range) | Sales · Service |
| Ride Bike Style | Plateau-Mont-Royal | Ride Bike Style (house brand), Michael Blast | Sales · Service · Test rides |
| Davélo | Saint-Henri | Specialized (exclusive) | Sales · Service · Bike fitting · Rentals |
| Vélo Urbain | Plateau-Mont-Royal | Multi-brand commuter & e-bikes | Sales · Service · Rentals |
| Vélo iBike | Plateau-Mont-Royal | Multi-brand urban & e-bikes | Sales (new & used) · Service |
| Bicycles Quilicot – Rosemont | Rosemont | EBGO and multi-brand | Sales · Service · Test rides |
| Bicycles Eddy | Verdun | Cannondale, Norco (e-bikes) | Sales · Service |
| Téo Vélo | Montréal-Est* | Téo Vélo (Québec-made) | Sales · Service · Rentals · Financing |
* Montréal-Est is a separate demerged municipality east of the City of Montréal. Included here as Greater Montréal.
Most Montréal e-bike shops are closed on Sunday. Exceptions: Allo Vélo (Sat–Sun 10 AM–5 PM) and Vélo Urbain (Sat–Sun 11 AM–5 PM). For all other shops, Saturday is the last walk-in day of the week — call ahead if your schedule is tight.
Buying your first e-bike? Our complete Canadian eBike buying guide walks you through motor types, battery sizing, and what to check before you sign anything — including the Québec-specific questions most salespeople won't raise.
Read the Buying Guide →The Shops — City of Montréal
E2-Sport
1950 Rue Notre-Dame Ouest, Montréal, QC H3J 1M8 · (514) 934-1010 · e2-sport.ca
Hours: Tue–Fri 10:00am–6:00pm (Thu–Fri until 8:00pm by appointment), Sat 10:00am–5:00pm · Closed Sun–Mon
eBike brands: Cube, Amflow, Moustache · Services: Sales, mechanical workshop, e-bike service & repair, home delivery, consultations
The most e-bike-focused independent in Griffintown — a 100% electric shop carrying 50+ models across hybrid, mountain, cargo, gravel, and fat-bike categories. For breadth of premium European brands under one roof, this is the starting point in Montréal.
EZbike Montréal
4065 Rue Saint-Denis, Montréal, QC H2W 2M7 · (514) 900-3723 · montreal@ezbike.ca · ezbike.ca
Hours: Call to confirm — hours not posted on website
eBike brands: Aventon, Heybike, Velotric, NCM, Himiway · Services: Sales, service, repairs, warranty support, product demonstrations
A multi-brand e-bike and e-scooter dealer on the Plateau. The brand mix skews toward value-priced North American and Asian imports — a useful stop for riders comparing Aventon, Himiway, or Heybike against pricier European alternatives a few blocks away.
EZWheel Canada
5219 Boulevard Décarie, Montréal, QC H3W 3C2 · (438) 558-2688 · ezwheel.ca
Hours: Mon–Sat 11:00am–5:00pm · Closed Sun
eBike brands: Heybike, Aventon, Gazelle and a broad electric-mobility lineup · Services: Sales, test rides, in-store demonstrations, e-bike and e-scooter repair service, expert consultations
A 100% Canadian-owned electric mobility specialist in Côte-des-Neiges, carrying e-bikes alongside e-scooters and personal electric vehicles. The broad service capability — including battery diagnostics and motor work on brands they didn't sell — makes it useful for riders whose original shop has closed.
Allo Vélo (VeloLifestyle)
141 Rue du Shannon, Montréal, QC H3C 2J4 · (514) 937-8356 · velolifestyle.com
Hours: Tue–Fri 10:00am–6:00pm, Sat–Sun 10:00am–5:00pm
eBike brands: Gazelle cargo e-bikes · Services: Sales, electric cargo bike rentals (seating up to 4 children), service, café
The only place in Montréal to rent an electric cargo bike — the shop pairs sales with a rental fleet and a café, making it as much a neighbourhood institution as a retailer. If you want to live with a cargo e-bike before committing to one, Allo Vélo is the only option in the city.
Giant Montréal
5252 Rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montréal, QC H4A 1T9 · (514) 439-1168 · shopgiantmontreal.ca
Hours: Tue–Fri 10:00am–6:00pm, Sat 10:00am–5:00pm · Closed Sun–Mon
eBike brands: Giant, Liv, Momentum · Services: Sales, certified e-bike service & repair, professional bike fitting, mechanical workshops, online appointments
A Giant Certified Boutique of Excellence since 2012 in NDG, carrying the full electric road, city, mountain, and adventure range from one of the world's largest bike manufacturers. The women's Liv line and Momentum urban e-bikes are also on the floor.
Trek Bicycle Montréal – Griffintown
291 Rue de la Montagne, Montréal, QC H3C 4K4 · (438) 265-0875 · trekbikes.com
Hours: Call to confirm — hours vary seasonally
eBike brands: Trek (full electric range) · Services: Sales, 24-hour service & repairs (all bike brands), price matching, 30-day return/exchange
Trek's Griffintown flagship, near the Lachine Canal. Trek's 30-day return policy and multi-brand service are the reasons to buy here over an independent — useful if you are moving to Montréal from another city and already know you want a Trek.
Trek Bicycle Montréal – Plateau-Mont-Royal
4210 Rue Saint-Denis, Montréal, QC H2J 2K8 · (438) 260-0873 · trekbikes.com
Hours: Call to confirm — hours vary seasonally
eBike brands: Trek (full electric range) · Services: Sales, service & repair
Trek's second Montréal location, on Saint-Denis in the heart of the Plateau. Same brand depth as Griffintown, more central for riders in the Plateau, Mile End, or Rosemont who don't want to cross downtown.
Ride Bike Style
2463 Avenue Mont-Royal Est, Montréal, QC H2H 1L4 · (833) 388-2224 · ridebikestyle.com
Hours: Mon–Sat 10:00am–5:00pm (call to book appointment) · Closed Sun
eBike brands: Ride Bike Style (house brand), Michael Blast · Services: Sales, maintenance & repairs (first service recommended after ~100 km), test rides, 2-year warranty on electrical components
A vintage-style e-bike boutique near the Plateau's Mont-Royal strip. The house brand emphasises aesthetics — bikes that look like classic city cycles but run on a motor — with the Michael Blast line adding a moto-inspired option. Test rides are available by appointment.
Davélo
930 Rue de Courcelle, Montréal, QC H4C 3C8 · (514) 937-8888 · davelo.ca
Hours: Mon–Fri 10:00am–6:00pm, Sat 10:00am–5:00pm · Closed Sun
eBike brands: Specialized (exclusive) · Services: Sales, certified e-bike service & repair, professional bike fitting, rentals
A Specialized dealer in Saint-Henri, established in 2012, carrying Specialized's full electric range with certified technicians. If you have already decided on a Specialized e-bike, this is the right place in Montréal for factory-backed fitting and warranty service.
Vélo Urbain
4445 Avenue Papineau, Montréal, QC H2H 1T7 · (514) 750-1550 · velo-urbain.ca
Hours: Mon–Fri 10:00am–6:00pm, Sat–Sun 11:00am–5:00pm
eBike brands: Multi-brand commuter and e-bikes · Services: Sales (new & used), repairs, tune-ups, accessories, rentals
A Plateau commuter specialist operating since 2009, stocking urban and e-bikes alongside a used-bike section and a rental fleet. The used-bike inventory is a point of difference — uncommon in dedicated e-bike retail and useful for budget-conscious first-time buyers.
Vélo iBike Montréal
2127 Rue Rachel Est, Montréal, QC H2H 1P9 · (438) 380-5811 · veloibike.ca
Hours: Mon–Fri 10:00am–7:00pm, Sat 10:00am–5:00pm · Closed Sun
eBike brands: Multi-brand urban and e-bikes · Services: Sales (new & used), repairs, maintenance, accessories, e-bike-specific service
A fixed-gear and urban bike specialist on Rachel Est with a broad e-bike inventory and extended weekday hours — practical for working riders who can't get to a shop on a Saturday. New and used inventory available in-store.
Bicycles Quilicot – Rosemont
3200 Rue Masson, Montréal, QC H1Y 1Y3 · (514) 842-1121 · bicyclesquilicot.com
Hours: Call to confirm — hours vary seasonally
eBike brands: EBGO and multi-brand (confirmed e-bike demonstrations) · Services: Sales, accessories, test rides, repairs
A full-service neighbourhood bike shop on Masson in Rosemont, carrying road, hybrid, mountain, and e-bikes with in-store test-ride demos. One of the longer-established independents in the east end, useful for riders in Rosemont and Petite-Patrie who prefer not to cross town.
Bicycles Eddy
6341 Boulevard Monk, Montréal, QC H4E 3H8 · (514) 767-0559 · bicycleseddy.com
Hours: Call to confirm — hours not posted on website
eBike brands: Cannondale, Norco (e-bike range) · Services: Sales (road, mountain, e-bikes), repairs, maintenance
A full-service Verdun shop carrying Cannondale and Norco e-bikes alongside a conventional bike lineup. Serves the south-west boroughs — Verdun, LaSalle, and Côte-Saint-Paul — where specialist e-bike retail is otherwise thin.
Which shop fits your need: widest brand selection → E2-Sport; value brands + service → EZbike or EZWheel; cargo e-bikes → Allo Vélo; brand-specific → Trek, Giant, or Davélo (Specialized); commuter + used → Vélo Urbain or Vélo iBike; east end → Bicycles Quilicot; south-west → Bicycles Eddy.
Greater Montréal (Nearby)
One manufacturer-retailer just east of the city limits is close enough that most Plateau and east-end riders treat it as local. Shops in Laval, Longueuil, and the South Shore will appear on those cities' own pages as the directory expands.
Téo Vélo
1225 Boulevard Saint-Jean-Baptiste, Montréal-Est, QC H1B 4A2 · (514) 642-8506 · teovelo.com
Hours: Call to confirm — hours not posted on website
eBike brands: Téo Vélo (Québec-designed and assembled) · Services: Sales, repairs, workshop, rental programme, financing, 2-year warranty
A Québec-based e-bike designer and manufacturer selling direct from its east-end facility, with folding, city, fat-tire, and cargo models in its own line. A 10-year track record, 2-year warranty, and Québec-based support make it the strongest local-brand option in the greater Montréal market — and a meaningful alternative to imported brands when you want post-sale support you can drive to.
Not sure which bike to buy? Our guide to spotting a legit eBike store in Canada covers the questions every buyer should ask before handing over money — in-store or online.
Read the Store Guide →Buying Local vs Online in Montréal
The case for buying in a Montréal shop is stronger than in most cities. Québec's throttle ban means you need to be certain a bike is pedal-assist compliant before you ride it — a local shop will know which models pass and which don't, and can configure the bike correctly before you leave. An online retailer outside Québec may not. The SAAQ manufacturer-label requirement — the bike must carry a removable label certifying PAB compliance — is also something a local shop should verify at point of sale.
Beyond legal compliance: Québec winters are real. A local mechanic who knows the Bosch or Shimano system your bike runs, available in February when a connector fails and the temperature is −20°C, is worth more than the margin you saved buying online. The shops in this directory exist year-round. Most of them service brands they didn't sell.
When it makes sense to buy online: you have ridden the exact model, you know it passes Québec's rules, and you are a confident home mechanic. For a first e-bike, or any bike you'll use for a serious daily commute, the local shop usually pays for itself the first time you need a repair done the same week instead of the same month.
For more on the legal side of buying in Québec — including what the SAAQ checks if your bike is stopped — see our Québec eBike Laws 2026 guide and the complete Canadian eBike guide.
For a first e-bike in Québec: buy where you can confirm the bike is pedal-assist compliant, test the assist feel, and get local service. Confirm the motor nameplate reads 500W or under, that no throttle-only mode exists, and that the manufacturer's compliance label is present. Then check whether a Québec rebate applies before you pay full price.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many electric bike shops are in Montréal, QC?
There are 14 verified e-bike storefronts in the City of Montréal (several with two locations), plus Téo Vélo just east in Montréal-Est. This directory lists each one with its address, phone, hours, the e-bike brands it carries, and its services — all verified in June 2026.
Which Montréal shop sells which e-bike brand?
Cube, Amflow, Moustache: E2-Sport. Aventon, Velotric, Heybike, NCM, Himiway: EZbike Montréal. Heybike, Aventon, Gazelle, Segway: EZWheel Canada. Gazelle cargo e-bikes (rental fleet): Allo Vélo. Giant, Liv, Momentum: Giant Montréal. Trek (full electric range): Trek Griffintown and Trek Plateau-Mont-Royal. Specialized (exclusive): Davélo. Vintage-style e-bikes and Michael Blast: Ride Bike Style. Québec-made e-bikes: Téo Vélo. EBGO: Bicycles Quilicot Rosemont. Cannondale and Norco e-bikes: Bicycles Eddy.
Can I test ride an electric bike in Montréal?
Yes — most storefronts offer test rides or in-store demonstrations. E2-Sport, EZWheel Canada, Davélo, Ride Bike Style (by appointment), and Téo Vélo all confirm test rides. Call ahead to book, especially on weekends when demand is highest.
Are e-bikes legal in Montréal and Québec?
Yes, with rules stricter than most provinces. Under Québec's Highway Safety Code (Article 492.2 — source: SAAQ (saaq.gouv.qc.ca)), a legal e-bike is limited to a 500W motor and 32 km/h of assistance. Québec bans throttle-only operation — you must be pedalling for the motor to activate. Helmets are mandatory for all ages. Riders 14–17 need a Class 6D licence. On Montréal park paths the speed limit is 20 km/h. See our Montréal e-bike rules guide for the full breakdown.
Do I need a licence or insurance for an e-bike in Québec?
No licence for riders 18 and over. Riders 14–17 must hold a Québec Class 6D licence. No registration, no plates required. SAAQ's public auto insurance does not cover e-bike injuries unless a registered motor vehicle is also involved. (Source: SAAQ)
Can I bring my e-bike on the STM métro or bus in Montréal?
No. The STM banned all e-bikes from its métro and bus network as of December 2024, citing lithium battery fire safety concerns. The REM allows e-bikes during off-peak hours only — not weekdays between 7:00–9:30 AM or 3:30–6:00 PM. (Sources: STM; REM)
The Bottom Line
Montréal's e-bike retail scene is more specialist-driven than it looks from the outside. Fourteen verified storefronts cover the city from Griffintown to Rosemont to Verdun, with a Québec manufacturer just east in Montréal-Est. The shop list is broad enough that you can compare a premium Moustache, a mid-range Aventon, a single-brand Trek, and a vintage-style Ride Bike Style — all within cycling distance of downtown. Start with the specialists for range, the brand stores if you've already decided, and factor the Québec-specific rules into every conversation: throttle compliance, the 500W nameplate rule, and the STM ban are all things the right shop will raise unprompted. A shop that doesn't bring them up is a shop that doesn't know its market.
Related Zeus Guides
Québec & Montréal Rules
Buying & Financing
Canadian eBike Guides
Other City Directories
This Montréal shop guide is part of the Canadian eBike Brands & Shops directory — verified brand profiles and city-by-city shop listings across Canada. Zeus eBikes is a Canadian online retailer and does not operate a Montréal storefront; the shops listed here are independent and we have no commercial relationship with them. All shop details verified June 2026 — call ahead to confirm hours, which change seasonally. Found an error or a closure? milad@zeusebikes.ca.
📸 Cover photo by Playcut.ai — personalized AI actor technology.




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