eBike Shops in Toronto, ON: Every Verified Storefront
Toronto's e-bike market is unlike any other Canadian city's. It's large enough that brand-concept stores, multi-brand specialists, subscription services, European cargo importers, and Canadian manufacturers all operate blocks apart — yet the rules governing where you can actually ride are more complex here than anywhere else in the country. The TTC seasonal ban catches riders off guard every November. The ravine trail restrictions bite every summer. The Ontario throttle rules are in active flux as of this month. Getting into the right shop is step one. Knowing the rules before you leave the parking lot is step two.
This page covers step one: every verified e-bike storefront in the amalgamated City of Toronto — from Queen West to Scarborough — checked against current websites and business listings in June 2026. For step two, our Toronto e-bike laws guide and Ontario eBike Laws 2026 cover every restriction in detail.
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; repair-only shops, online-only retailers, and rental-tour operators were excluded. Any shop whose e-bike sales could not be confirmed from a 2025–2026 source was held back rather than guessed. Scope is the post-1998 amalgamated City of Toronto — North York, Scarborough, Etobicoke, York, and East York are all included; Mississauga, Brampton, Markham, and Vaughan are deferred. Shop data changes — call ahead to confirm hours, which shift seasonally. Found an error? milad@zeusebikes.ca.
There are 15 verified e-bike storefronts across the City of Toronto. For the widest brand selection, start with Amego EV (two Toronto locations — Canada's largest e-bike retailer, carrying Aventon, Gazelle, Tern, Stromer, Cannondale, Cube, and more) and Sweet Pete's (multi-brand, established 1997). For a single brand: Trek Bicycle Queen West, Giant Bicycles Toronto, and Bike Depot (Specialized) each go deep on one badge. For Canadian brands: Emmo (two downtown Toronto locations). Before you buy, confirm your bike clears Ontario's 500W / 32 km/h PAB rules and check the Toronto-specific restrictions on the ravine trails and TTC — they apply from day one.
On This Page
Where to Buy an eBike in Toronto
Ontario's e-bike market lost its biggest national presence in December 2025 when Rad Power filed for bankruptcy and closed its Vancouver store — Canada's last major chain e-bike location. That closure accelerated a shift already underway in Toronto: buyers who once browsed brand websites now need a local mechanic who can service what they're riding, and the city's independent shops have been absorbing that demand all spring.
Toronto's shop landscape splits into five useful segments. Volume multi-brand specialists — Amego EV (two locations) and Sweet Pete's — carry the broadest selections and do the highest volume of e-bike service in the city. Value-focused dealers — EZbike Canada, Effi Bike, E-Wheels Toronto — carry the mid-market brands most first-time buyers are comparing online. Brand concept stores — Trek, Giant, Bike Depot (Specialized), KindHuman (Cube) — go deep on one badge with factory-backed service. Canadian manufacturers — Emmo sells direct from two downtown Toronto locations. And specialist independents — Curbside Cycle (European cargo and premium), Zygg E-Bikes (subscriptions and rent-to-own), Repair and Run (ENVO + multi-brand service) — serve niches the volume shops don't cover.
Toronto has enough shops that you can compare a $1,200 Aventon against a $4,500 Riese & Müller within a 20-minute ride. The question is not which shop has bikes — it's which shop has the right bike for your commute and a mechanic you can call when something needs fixing mid-winter.
Ontario & Toronto E-Bike Rules (2026) — What Every Buyer Must Know
Ontario's rules follow the federal PAB framework on the key numbers but add provincial requirements that surprise out-of-province buyers. Toronto then adds a second layer of local restrictions — particularly on transit and park trails — that are among the most complex of any Canadian city.
Ontario Regulation 369/09 does not explicitly ban throttle-assist e-bikes, and throttle bikes have operated in a legal grey area for years. However, Ontario ERO Proposal 026-0422 — which would create a formal Class 1 (pedal-assist only) and Class 2 (pedal-assist or throttle) classification — had its public comment period close on June 7, 2026. The outcome is pending as of this writing. If you are buying a throttle-capable bike for Ontario, confirm the legal status before you ride. Source: Ontario Environmental Registry (ero.ontario.ca), Notice 026-0422.
Ontario provincial rules (O. Reg 369/09, Highway Traffic Act):
- Motor power: maximum 500W nominal — the nameplate rating on the manufacturer's label. A 750W motor with a software speed limiter is still a 750W motor and does not qualify as a PAB under Ontario law. (Source: O. Reg 369/09, Section 1(2))
- Speed cut-off: motor assistance must stop at 32 km/h. Riders may coast faster under their own power. (Source: O. Reg 369/09)
- Weight limit: maximum 120 kg (bike + battery combined). This is an Ontario-specific rule with no federal equivalent. (Source: O. Reg 369/09, Section 1(2)(c))
- Functional pedals: the bike must have pedals that can propel it at all times, even when the motor is running. (Source: O. Reg 369/09)
- Helmet: mandatory for all ages. Unlike most provinces, Ontario requires helmets for every e-bike rider regardless of age. Approved standards include CSA, CPSC, ASTM, and EN 1078. (Source: Highway Traffic Act, Section 104(2.2))
- Age: riders must be at least 16. No maximum age. (Source: O. Reg 369/09)
- Licence: not required for riders 16+. (Source: O. Reg 369/09)
- Registration: not required. Compliant e-bikes cannot be registered and do not need plates. (Source: O. Reg 369/09)
- Manufacturer label: a permanent bilingual label must be affixed to the bike certifying PAB compliance. Ontario police can check for this label. (Source: O. Reg 369/09, Section 1(2)(d))
The TTC prohibits all e-bikes from its subway, buses, streetcars, stations, and platforms from November 15 to April 15. The ban was introduced following a battery fire incident in December 2023. During the permitted season (April 16–November 14), e-bikes are allowed on weekends and statutory holidays anytime, and on weekdays only before 6:30 a.m., between 10:00 a.m. and 3:30 p.m., and after 7:00 p.m. E-bikes cannot use front bus bike racks. Source: TTC official policy (ttc.ca).
Toronto municipal restrictions on where you can ride:
- Bike lanes: compliant e-bikes are permitted in all Toronto bike lanes and separated cycle tracks. (Source: City of Toronto e-bike rules page)
- Sidewalks: prohibited — same as conventional bicycles. (Source: Ontario HTA, enforced city-wide)
- Ravine trails (Don Valley, Humber Valley, waterfront path): restricted to pedal-assist e-bikes under 40 kg that require active pedalling. Throttle-capable bikes or bikes over 40 kg are prohibited with a $30 fine. Speed limit on all park paths: 20 km/h. (Source: Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 608 — Parks)
- Toronto Islands: same weight and pedal-assist restriction applies. (Source: Toronto Parks Bylaw Chapter 608)
- Accessibility exception: individuals with disabilities may ride any e-bike type on park paths under the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA), 2005. (Source: AODA)
- Proposed changes (not yet law): Toronto City Council voted 26–0 on May 22, 2026 to request a staff report on banning motorcycle-style (throttle-only) e-bikes from bike lanes and exploring local licensing. A staff report is due December 2026 — no changes are in effect yet. (Source: Toronto City Council agenda item 2026.IE29.10)
The full picture — including GO Transit rules, parking bylaws, and the ravine trail map — is in our Toronto e-bike laws guide. The provincial framework detail is in Ontario eBike Laws 2026.
Three things to verify before buying any e-bike for Toronto: (1) the motor nameplate says 500W or under, (2) the bike weighs under 120 kg, (3) if you plan to use the ravine trails or waterfront path, the bike is pedal-assist only and under 40 kg. If you commute by TTC in winter, confirm you have secure bike parking at both ends before December.
All Toronto Shops at a Glance
| Shop | Neighbourhood | eBike brands (sample) | Services |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amego EV (2 locations) | King West · Midtown | Aventon, Gazelle, Tern, Stromer, Cannondale, Cube | Sales · Service · Test rides |
| EZbike Canada | College West | Aventon, Velotric, Heybike, NCM | Sales · Service · Rentals · Financing |
| Trek Bicycle – Queen West | Queen West | Trek (full electric range) | Sales · Service (all brands) · Test rides |
| Giant Bicycles Toronto | Queen West | Giant, Liv | Sales · Service · Financing |
| Sweet Pete's | Bloordale | Trek, Giant, Kona, Devinci (e-bikes) | Sales · Service · Rentals · Fitting |
| Bike Depot | Bloordale | Specialized (exclusive) | Sales · Service |
| Effi Bike | Downtown (Yonge) | Effi (house brand, long-range) | Sales · Service · Rentals · B2B |
| Zygg E-Bikes | Corktown | Cube, Gazelle, O2feel, Velec, Yuba | Sales · Rentals · Subscriptions · Service |
| Emmo (2 locations) | Spadina · Oxford St | Emmo (Canadian) | Sales · Service |
| Epic Cycles – Junction | Toronto Junction | Stromer, Surron, Magnum, InMotion | Sales · Service · Test rides |
| Repair and Run (2 locations) | Annex · Queen West | ENVO Drive (sales); Pedego (service) | Sales · Service · E-diagnostics |
| Curbside Cycle | Annex | Riese & Müller, Urban Arrow, Brompton electric | Sales · Service |
| E-Wheels Toronto | St. Lawrence | Emmo, Oiios | Sales · Service · Test rides · Financing |
| TN Ebike Canada | North York | Bluerev, Magnum, Stromer | Sales · Service · Customisations |
| KindHuman Bicycles | Forest Hill | Cube (official dealer), Cannondale | Sales · Service · Custom builds |
First-time buyer? Our complete Canadian eBike buying guide walks through motor types, battery sizing, Ontario PAB compliance, and the questions to ask in-store before signing anything.
Read the Buying Guide →The Shops — City of Toronto
Amego Electric Vehicles – King West
533 Richmond St W, Toronto, ON M5V 3Y1 · (416) 907-4922 · amegoev.com
Hours: Mon–Fri 10:30am–6:30pm, Sat 10:30am–5:00pm · Closed Sun
eBike brands: Aventon, Gazelle, Tern, Stromer, Cannondale, Cube, Argon 18, NCM, Bulls, ET Cycles, Velotric, Yuba · Services: Sales, service, repairs, test rides, diagnostics
Operating since 2010, Amego is Canada's highest-volume e-bike retailer and the natural starting point for any Toronto buyer who wants to compare very different bikes — European cargo, performance commuters, and value imports — under one roof. The King West flagship is a two-storey showroom with the largest in-store e-bike selection in the city.
Amego Electric Vehicles – Midtown
87 Wingold Ave, Unit 4, Toronto, ON M6B 1P8 · (416) 907-4922 ext. 2 (service) · amegoev.com
Hours: Mon–Fri 10:30am–6:00pm, Sat 10:30am–5:00pm, Sun 11:00am–4:00pm
eBike brands: Same full lineup as King West · Services: Sales, certified e-bike mechanics, service & repairs, test rides
Amego's midtown superstore — a full-service shop with certified mechanics across all major brands. The Sunday hours are a practical advantage for working riders who can't get to a shop on a weekday, and the service team handles warranty and diagnostic work for brands bought elsewhere.
EZbike Canada – Toronto
280 College St, Toronto, ON M5T 1R9 · (647) 699-4777 · ezbike.ca
Hours: Mon–Sat 10:00am–6:30pm · Call to confirm Sun
eBike brands: Aventon, Velotric, Heybike, NCM, ET Cycle and more · Services: Sales, service, repairs, test rides, rentals, financing, free consultations
A multi-brand dealer at College and Spadina carrying the mid-market North American brands most first-time buyers are already researching online — with the advantage of being able to test-ride before committing. Seven-day after-sales support is confirmed.
Trek Bicycle – Queen West
625 Queen St W, Toronto, ON M5V 2B7 · (416) 504-6138 · trekbikes.com
Hours: Tue–Sat 10:00am–6:00pm, Sun 12:00pm–5:00pm · Closed Mon
eBike brands: Trek (full electric range) · Services: Sales, service & repair (all bike brands), test rides
Trek's Queen West store on one of Toronto's busiest cycling corridors. The 24-hour service turnaround claim and multi-brand repair capability are the reasons to buy Trek here rather than ordering online — useful when a warranty issue comes up mid-commute season and you can't wait for shipping.
Giant Bicycles Toronto
650 Queen St W, Toronto, ON M6J 1E4 · (416) 703-9990 · gianttoronto.com
Hours: Tue–Sat 11:00am–6:00pm, Sun 12:00pm–5:00pm · Closed Mon
eBike brands: Giant, Liv (electric road, city, mountain, adventure) · Services: Sales, service & repair, financing (0% available)
An official Giant dealer on Queen West carrying the full electric range from one of the world's largest bike manufacturers — including the women's Liv line. 0% financing is confirmed, which makes Giant's higher-end commuter and e-MTB models more accessible than the sticker price suggests.
Sweet Pete's Bike Shop
1204 Bloor St W, Toronto, ON M6H 1N2 · (416) 533-4481 · sweetpetes.com
Hours: Mon–Fri 11:00am–7:00pm, Sat 10:00am–6:00pm, Sun 12:00pm–5:00pm
eBike brands: Trek, Giant, Kona, Liv, Devinci (e-bike selections across ranges) · Services: Sales, service, e-bike service, rentals, financing, Retül Dynamic bike fitting
Toronto's largest multi-brand retailer by inventory, in operation since 1997. The breadth of brands — Trek alongside Kona and Devinci — gives buyers a real comparison rather than a single-badge pitch. The Retül fitting system is a plus for riders who commute long distances and need a dialled position.
Bike Depot
1222 Bloor St W, Toronto, ON M6H 1N3 · (416) 531-1028 · bikedepot.com
Hours: Mon–Fri 11:00am–7:00pm, Sat 11:00am–6:00pm, Sun 12:00pm–5:00pm
eBike brands: Specialized (primary), Cannondale, Giant · Services: Sales, service & repair
A Specialized elite shop steps from Sweet Pete's on Bloor West, carrying Specialized's full electric range alongside Cannondale and Giant. Two serious multi-brand shops within a block of each other make the Bloor–Christie stretch the most useful single stop for buyers who want to compare premium e-bikes in person.
Effi Bike Toronto
518 Yonge St, Toronto, ON M4Y 1X9 · (416) 238-9598 · effibike.com
Hours: Mon–Sun 10:30am–8:30pm (confirmed April 2026)
eBike brands: Effi (house brand — long-range commuter, delivery, and family models) · Services: Sales, service, repairs, rentals, B2B solutions, accessories
A long-range e-bike specialist on Yonge at Dundonald, open seven days including evenings — among the broadest hours of any Toronto e-bike shop, and the most useful for delivery and gig-economy riders who need a local service point that fits an irregular schedule.
Zygg E-Bikes
283 Berkeley St, Toronto, ON M5A 2A8 · (647) 370-8880 · ridezygg.com
Hours: Mon–Fri 10:00am–6:00pm, Sat 11:00am–5:00pm · Closed Sun
eBike brands: Cube, Gazelle, O2feel, Velec, Yuba and more · Services: Sales (new & used), service, repairs, rentals, subscriptions ($99/month), rent-to-own, theft protection
A multi-service e-bike operation in Corktown that goes beyond straight sales — the $99/month subscription and rent-to-own options make it the right stop for riders who want to try an e-bike before committing, or who prefer not to tie up capital in a depreciating asset. The brand selection skews European and premium.
Emmo Electric Bikes – Spadina & Oxford St
438 Spadina Ave, Unit 2, Toronto, ON M5T 2G8 · (416) 792-3227 · emmo.ca
Hours (Spadina): Mon–Fri 11:30am–8:00pm, Sat 12:00pm–7:30pm · Closed Sun
8 Oxford St, Toronto, ON M5T 1N9 · same phone
Hours (Oxford): Call to confirm
eBike brands: Emmo (Canadian brand, established 2009) · Services: Sales, service, on-site and off-site repairs
A Canadian e-bike manufacturer selling direct from two downtown Toronto locations. Emmo has been making e-bikes in Canada since 2009 — one of the country's longest-running brands — and the direct-sales model means warranty and service issues stay within the same organisation rather than bouncing between a retailer and a distant manufacturer.
Epic Cycles – Toronto Junction
2828 Dundas St W, Toronto, ON M6P 1Y7 · (416) 305-2111 · epiccycles.ca
Hours: Tue–Fri 11:00am–7:00pm, Sat 11:00am–6:00pm · Closed Sun–Mon
eBike brands: Stromer, Magnum, Surron, InMotion, King Song and more · Services: Sales, service, repairs, test rides, setup & assembly, tuning
A multi-brand electric vehicle retailer in the Junction neighbourhood carrying e-bikes alongside a broader lineup of electric mobility products. The Stromer selection is notable — a Swiss premium brand with strong commuter credentials — and the service team handles setup, tuning, and warranty work in-store.
Repair and Run – Bloor St & Queen West
Bloor: 480 Bloor St W, Toronto, ON M5S 1X8 · (416) 516-6866
Queen: 423 Queen St W, Toronto, ON M5V 2A5 · (416) 591-0777
repairandrun.ca
Hours (both): Mon–Sat 11:00am–7:00pm, Sun 12:00pm–5:00pm
eBike brands: ENVO Drive (sales); Pedego (authorized service centre) · Services: Sales, service, e-diagnostics, battery & motor work, mobile repair (within 10 km), same-day service
Primarily known as a full-service repair shop for all brands, Repair and Run also sells ENVO Drive e-bikes and is a Pedego certified service centre — the closest thing in Toronto to a drop-in e-bike emergency room. The mobile repair option and same-day service are the most distinctive offers in this list for riders who can't move a bike to a shop.
Curbside Cycle
412 Bloor St W, Toronto, ON M5S 1X5 · (416) 920-4933 · curbsidecycle.com
Hours: Tue–Fri 11:00am–7:00pm, Sat 11:00am–5:00pm · Closed Sun–Mon
eBike brands: Riese & Müller, Urban Arrow, Brompton Electric (curated European e-bikes) · Services: Sales, service & repair
Toronto's destination for European premium e-bikes — Riese & Müller cargo and commuter, Urban Arrow cargo e-bikes, and electric Brompton folders. No volume brands, no budget imports. If you are spending $5,000–$10,000+ on a cargo e-bike or a precision German commuter, this is the shop with the expertise to match. One of the few places in Canada where you can test an Urban Arrow or a R&M Packster.
E-Wheels Toronto
328 Queen St E, Toronto, ON M5A 1S8 · (416) 336-2225 · ewheelstoronto.ca
Hours: Mon–Fri 9:00am–5:00pm · Call to confirm Sat–Sun
eBike brands: Emmo, Oiios · Services: Sales, service, test rides, financing (PayPlan by RBC)
A compact e-bike and e-mobility retailer on Queen East near the Distillery District, carrying Emmo and Oiios alongside a broader e-vehicle selection. RBC financing is integrated, which lowers the barrier for commuters comparing a $1,500 e-bike against ongoing transit costs.
TN Ebike Canada
3027 Weston Rd, Toronto, ON M9M 2T1 · (647) 526-7037 · tnebike.com
Hours: Call to confirm — hours not posted on website
eBike brands: Bluerev, Magnum, Stromer and the Dalat V1 house brand · Services: Sales, service, repairs, customisations, parts & accessories
A North York e-bike specialist operating since 2019, carrying performance-oriented brands alongside its own Dalat V1 house brand. The customisation and parts service is a point of difference — useful for riders who want a more hands-on relationship with their bike than a volume retailer typically offers.
KindHuman Bicycles
1924 Avenue Rd, Toronto, ON M5M 4A1 · (416) 787-5463 · kindhuman.cc
Hours: Tue–Wed 10:00am–6:00pm, Thu 10:00am–7:00pm, Fri 10:00am–6:00pm, Sat 10:00am–4:00pm · Closed Sun–Mon
eBike brands: Cube (official dealer), Cannondale (authorized) · Services: Sales, service, repairs, custom builds
An official Cube dealer in Forest Hill, recognised as one of Canada's Best Bike Shops (2025). The Cube e-bike lineup spans commuter, mountain, and cargo models with Bosch mid-drive systems — a different flavour from the Amego or Sweet Pete's selection and worth the trip north for riders who have identified Cube as their target brand.
Widest selection → Amego EV. Best multi-brand comparison on Bloor → Sweet Pete's + Bike Depot (two minutes apart). European premium cargo → Curbside Cycle. Canadian brands → Emmo. Emergency service and mobile repair → Repair and Run. Subscription or rent-to-own → Zygg. East or North end → TN Ebike, KindHuman.
Buying Local vs Online in Toronto
Toronto has enough e-bike shops that the case for buying locally is stronger than in most Canadian cities: you can test-ride multiple brands, compare different assist styles in real traffic, and choose a shop within cycling distance of wherever you'll need service. That last point matters more in Toronto than elsewhere — the ravine trail restrictions and TTC rules mean a bike that fails mid-commute in February leaves you stranded in a way it wouldn't in a city with simpler transit options.
The case for buying online: if you have test-ridden the exact model, you know it passes Ontario's PAB requirements, and you have a local mechanic lined up, the price gap can be real on commodity brands. But the Ontario manufacturer-label requirement — a permanent compliance label must be on the bike — is something a local shop verifies at point of sale. An online purchase that arrives without the label creates a problem the moment a Toronto officer asks to see it.
For a first e-bike, or any bike you plan to commute on year-round, buying from a shop that can service it the same week beats saving $200 on a platform that ships from a warehouse eight provinces away. See our guide to spotting a legit eBike store for the questions to ask before handing over money — in person or online. If financing is a consideration, our eBike financing guide covers every Canadian option with real-world math.
For a first Toronto e-bike: buy where you can test the assist feel, confirm the bike passes Ontario's PAB rules (500W nameplate, under 120 kg, helmet included), and shake hands with a mechanic you can call in February. Then check the Toronto laws guide so the TTC ban and ravine restrictions aren't a surprise on day one.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many electric bike shops are in Toronto?
There are 15 verified e-bike storefronts across the amalgamated City of Toronto (several with two locations), spread across Queen West, Bloordale, the Annex, Corktown, North York, and Scarborough. This directory lists each with its address, phone, hours, brands, and services — verified in June 2026.
Which Toronto shop sells which e-bike brand?
Widest multi-brand selection (Aventon, Gazelle, Tern, Stromer, Cannondale, Cube and more): Amego EV (two locations). Value brands (Aventon, Velotric, Heybike, NCM): EZbike Canada. Trek full electric range: Trek Bicycle Queen West. Giant and Liv: Giant Bicycles Toronto. Specialized: Bike Depot. Cube (official dealer): KindHuman Bicycles. European premium cargo (Riese & Müller, Urban Arrow, Brompton Electric): Curbside Cycle. Canadian-made Emmo: two downtown locations. ENVO Drive: Repair and Run (two locations). Subscription and rent-to-own model (Cube, Gazelle, O2feel): Zygg E-Bikes.
Can I test ride an electric bike in Toronto?
Yes. Amego EV, EZbike Canada, Sweet Pete's, Repair and Run, Effi Bike, Zygg E-Bikes, and TN Ebike Canada all confirm test rides. Call ahead — most shops book e-bike demos separately from conventional test rides, especially on weekends when demand is highest.
Are e-bikes legal in Toronto and Ontario?
Yes, with specific rules. Under Ontario Regulation 369/09, a legal e-bike is limited to a 500W motor (nameplate rating), 32 km/h assistance, a maximum weight of 120 kg, and must have functional pedals. Helmets are mandatory for all ages. Riders must be 16+. No licence or registration required. Toronto adds local restrictions: ravine trails are restricted to pedal-assist bikes under 40 kg; the TTC bans e-bikes November 15–April 15; and weekday TTC use is limited to off-peak hours. See our Toronto e-bike laws guide.
Can I bring my e-bike on the TTC in Toronto?
Only during certain times. The TTC bans all e-bikes November 15–April 15 (winter ban, battery fire safety). From April 16–November 14: allowed weekends anytime; allowed weekdays before 6:30 a.m., between 10:00 a.m.–3:30 p.m., and after 7:00 p.m. E-bikes cannot use front bus bike racks. Source: TTC official policy (ttc.ca).
Can I ride my e-bike on Toronto's ravine trails and waterfront path?
Only if your bike qualifies. Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 608 restricts the Don Valley Trail, Humber Valley Trail, waterfront path, and other park paths to pedal-assist e-bikes under 40 kg that require active pedalling. Throttle-capable or heavier bikes are prohibited with a $30 fine. Speed limit on all park paths: 20 km/h. Accessibility exceptions apply under AODA. Source: Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 608.
The Bottom Line
Toronto has more e-bike retail depth than any other Canadian city — 17 storefronts across the amalgamated city, from a two-storey King West superstore to a Scarborough service point that serves the riders east of the Don who have had almost nothing nearby until recently. The rules here are also the most layered of any Canadian city: an Ontario weight limit that catches buyers off guard, a TTC seasonal ban that changes commute planning in November, and ravine trail restrictions that make the bike you choose matter as much as the route you plan to ride. The right shop in Toronto is the one that raises those issues before you pay — not after. Every shop in this directory sells e-bikes. The better ones sell you a bike that works for how you actually live in this city.
Related Zeus Guides
Toronto & Ontario Rules
Best Bikes for Toronto
Buying & Financing
Other City Directories
This Toronto 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 Toronto 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 closure? milad@zeusebikes.ca.
📸 Cover photo by Playcut.ai — personalized AI actor technology.





Share:
eBike Shops in Kelowna, BC (2026): Every Verified Store
eBike Shops in Vancouver, BC (2026): Every Verified Storefront