eBike Shops in Saskatchewan (2026): 2 Cities, 11 Verified Stores

Saskatchewan e-bike shop directory showing 2 verified cities, Saskatoon and Regina, 2026 edition
2Cities verified
11Verified shops
500WSaskatchewan PAB limit
Jun 2026Verified
Quick Answer

This directory lists 11 verified e-bike shops across Saskatchewan's two largest cities for 2026 — each store cross-checked against its own listing before it was added. The clusters are Saskatoon (7 shops) and Regina (4 shops), which together hold almost all of the province's dedicated e-bike retail. Before you buy, confirm the bike is a compliant power-assisted bicycle: a maximum 500 W motor, assist that cuts out at 32 km/h, and working pedals (SGI). Riders must be at least 14 and wear an approved helmet at every age — and anything over 500 W or without pedals is a motorcycle in Saskatchewan, not a bicycle. For the full rules, read our Saskatchewan e-bike laws guide.

Saskatchewan's eBike Map, City by City

Rad Power Bikes — for years a common budget e-bike in Prairie garages — filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in December 2025 and voided its Canadian warranties, leaving riders across Saskatchewan hunting for a local shop that will actually answer the phone. Choose the wrong one and you can sink two thousand dollars into a bike no nearby store will service, or a motor that quietly breaks Saskatchewan's 500 W cap and turns your "bicycle" into a motorcycle that SGI says needs a licence, plate, and insurance. This page exists to make that decision safe: it maps every verified e-bike shop in the province, city by city, and pairs it with the 2026 law you need to know before you buy.

Saskatchewan's e-bike retail is compact but concentrated. Across the two cities live today, we have verified 11 storefronts — full-service specialists, manufacturer dealers, and bicycle shops with serious e-bike inventory. The depth is in the two big centres: Saskatoon carries the larger share with seven verified shops, and Regina holds four. Because so much of the province's population sits in or around these two cities, a buyer almost anywhere in Saskatchewan is within driving range of a verified store. Each city below has its own verified directory page; this index points you to the right one and tells you what is unusual about riding there.

Start With Your City Both of Saskatchewan's largest cities have a verified directory page, together covering 11 shops. Find yours, note which stores are dedicated e-bike specialists versus bike shops with e-bike stock, and call before you drive — a Prairie winter means some shops run reduced or seasonal hours.
How We Verified Every Shop and Every Law

No shop appears in this directory on the strength of a single source. Each storefront was confirmed two ways: a live Google Business listing showing it is open and trading, cross-checked against the shop's own website or a manufacturer's authorised-dealer page. Listings that existed in only one place, or that returned a permanently-closed flag, were left out. Address, specialty, and dealer status were recorded from the shop's own published information, never inferred. We re-verify the full set on a six-month cycle, so a store that closes is removed rather than left to mislead a buyer.

The law section is built the same way. Every figure — the 500 W cap, the 32 km/h cut-off, the minimum age of 14, the all-ages helmet requirement, and the rule that anything over 500 W or without pedals is a motorcycle — is taken directly from SGI's "E-bikes (power-assisted bicycles)" handbook page under The Traffic Safety Act, then confirmed against SGI's own published wording. Nothing here is paraphrased from memory, and where a rule could not be verified to a named source, it is flagged as such rather than asserted.

No verified shop in your town yet? Zeus eBikes is a Canadian online retailer, not a local storefront — but every bike we sell is a compliant 500 W / 32 km/h power-assisted bicycle, ships free across Saskatchewan, and is backed by a 14-day return window. Questions before you buy? Call 1-866-938-7580 and a real person answers.

Browse Zeus eBikes

Saskatchewan eBike Law — 2026 Quick Reference

An e-bike that meets Saskatchewan's "power-assisted bicycle" definition is driven under the same rules of the road as a bicycle under The Traffic Safety Act — no driver's licence, registration, plate, or vehicle insurance required. Cross the line on motor power or remove the pedals and SGI treats it as a motorcycle, with full motorcycle licensing and registration. Every rule below comes straight from SGI.

  • Motor power — 500 W maximum: the e-bike must be "equipped with an electric assist motor that is no larger than 500 watts." An electric cycle larger than 500 W is classed as a motorcycle (SGI, "E-bikes (power-assisted bicycles)").
  • Assisted speed — 32 km/h maximum: the bike "cannot be operated at a speed of greater than 32 km/h (20 mph)" (SGI).
  • Working pedals required: the bike must be designed to be propelled by a combination of muscular power and motor assist. An electric cycle "without pedals" is considered a motorcycle and needs full motorcycle licensing and registration (SGI).
  • Rider age — 14 or older: the minimum operating age for a power-assisted bicycle is 14 — younger than Ontario's 16-and-over rule (SGI).
  • Helmet — required at every age: the operator must wear "an approved bicycle or motorcycle helmet," with no adult exemption (SGI).
  • No licence, registration, or insurance for a compliant PAB: a power-assisted bicycle within the limits above does not require a driver's licence, vehicle registration, or insurance, though a municipality may require a bicycle sticker (SGI).
  • Rules of the road apply: a power-assisted bicycle "must be driven in accordance with the rules of the road under The Traffic Safety Act normally applicable to a bicycle" (SGI).

These rules reflect SGI's published guidance as of June 2026 under The Traffic Safety Act. Saskatchewan does not currently operate the US-style Class 1/2/3 system — it uses the single power-assisted-bicycle definition above. Trail and pathway access is set separately by each municipality (see below). For the full provincial picture, including how Saskatchewan compares with neighbouring Manitoba, read our Saskatchewan and Manitoba e-bike laws guide.

Trails and paths are set locally

SGI governs roads and the rules of the road, but whether you can ride a multi-use trail, pathway, or municipal park is decided city by city. Saskatoon's Meewasin Valley Trail network and Regina's multi-use pathways each set their own rules for motor-assisted bikes, and a municipality may also require a bicycle sticker. Always confirm the local bylaw with the city before your first ride. Each city directory page flags what we could verify. For the complete provincial picture, read our Saskatchewan e-bike laws guide, and for how Saskatchewan compares nationally, our e-bike laws across Canada guide.

Confirm The Bike Is a Legal PAB Before You Pay A road-legal Saskatchewan e-bike has a 500 W motor, assist that cuts at 32 km/h, and working pedals (SGI). Anything past those limits — or any e-bike without pedals — is a motorcycle that needs a licence, plate, and insurance. Ask the shop to confirm the bike's compliance in writing before you hand over money.

Every Saskatchewan City — 2 Verified

Saskatchewan's population is concentrated in two large cities, and both have a full, individually verified shop directory — 11 stores in total. Saskatoon and Regina together account for the overwhelming majority of the province's dedicated e-bike retail, so the two pages below cover most Saskatchewan buyers. Each links straight through to its store-by-store listing.

Central Saskatchewan · 1 live

Southern Saskatchewan · 1 live

Check Your Local Trail Rule Separately Road access is province-wide under SGI, but trail and park access is municipal. The Meewasin network in Saskatoon and Regina's pathways each set their own rules for motor-assisted bikes, and some municipalities require a bicycle sticker. Verify your city's bylaw on its directory page before your first ride.

Comparing a local shop against buying online? Do both. Use this directory to test-ride locally, then weigh it against a province-wide option — free Saskatchewan shipping, PAB-compliant bikes, 14-day returns, and phone support at 1-866-938-7580. No pressure, no fine print.

Browse Zeus eBikes

City Not Listed Yet? You Still Have Options Saskatchewan's verified directory covers its two largest cities today. If yours isn't here, Saskatoon or Regina is usually within driving reach — or you can buy from a Canadian online retailer that ships province-wide with returns and phone support.

Frequently Asked Questions — eBike Shops in Saskatchewan

How many e-bike shops and cities does this Saskatchewan directory cover?

This index covers 11 verified e-bike shops across 2 Saskatchewan cities as of 2026 — 7 in Saskatoon and 4 in Regina, the province's two largest centres. Each shop was cross-checked against its own listing. Saskatoon and Regina together hold the overwhelming majority of the province's dedicated e-bike retail, so a buyer almost anywhere in Saskatchewan is within driving range of one of these stores.

What makes an e-bike road-legal in Saskatchewan?

According to SGI, a road-legal power-assisted bicycle in Saskatchewan has an electric motor of 500 W or less, cannot be operated faster than 32 km/h, and must have working pedals so it can be driven by muscle power. Meet those limits and no driver's licence, registration, or vehicle insurance is required. Any electric cycle larger than 500 W, or one without pedals, is treated as a motorcycle, with full motorcycle licensing and registration.

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

Fourteen. SGI sets the minimum operating age for a power-assisted bicycle in Saskatchewan at 14 years old — younger than Ontario's 16. No driver's licence is needed for a compliant 500 W / 32 km/h power-assisted bicycle, but a rider must be at least 14 to operate one on a public road.

Do you have to wear a helmet on an e-bike in Saskatchewan?

Yes. SGI requires every power-assisted bicycle operator to wear an approved bicycle or motorcycle helmet, regardless of age. There is no adult exemption — the helmet rule applies to all e-bike riders in Saskatchewan.

Can I ride my e-bike on Saskatchewan trails and in parks?

It depends on the municipality. SGI governs roads under The Traffic Safety Act, but trail, pathway, and park access is set locally by each city. Saskatoon's Meewasin Trail and Regina's pathway network each have their own rules, and some municipalities require a bicycle sticker. Confirm the local bylaw with the city before your first ride, and check the directory page for Saskatoon or Regina.

My town isn't listed yet — where can I buy an e-bike in Saskatchewan?

You have two honest options. Saskatoon or Regina is usually within driving distance and each lists verified shops on its directory page. Or you can buy from a Canadian online retailer that ships province-wide — Zeus eBikes, for example, ships PAB-compliant bikes free across Saskatchewan with 14-day returns and phone support at 1-866-938-7580.

The Bottom Line

The right e-bike shop is a local one you can ride back to when something needs a tune — and this directory exists to help you find it across Saskatchewan's two largest cities, with the 2026 SGI law spelled out so you don't buy a bike that breaks it. Use the Saskatoon and Regina pages, test-ride locally, and confirm the bike is a compliant power-assisted bicycle before you pay. If your town isn't listed yet, or you'd rather compare a province-wide online option, there's no rush and no pressure: Zeus ships PAB-compliant bikes free across Saskatchewan, every order carries a 14-day return window, and you can talk through fit, financing, or the legal limits with a real person at 1-866-938-7580 before you decide anything. Worried about the cost? Our financing guide shows how a purchase breaks down into a monthly payment. Take your time — the goal is the bike that's still right for you next winter.