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500W Electric Bikes — Every Road-Legal Pick Zeus Stocks in Canada (2026)

500 watts is the most important number in Canadian e-biking. It's the nominal power ceiling most provinces use to define a power-assisted bicycle — the class of e-bike you can ride on roads, bike lanes and paths with no licence, no registration and no insurance in most of the country. Every bike on this page states 500W nominal or less on its listing, verified by Zeus. From a $999 folder to a $5,999 full-suspension mountain bike, this is the road-legal shelf.

🇨🇦 Ships from Canada · Free Canada-wide shipping · Real humans answer 1-866-938-7580 · 14-day returns · Financing at checkout.

Quick answer

A 500W e-bike is road-legal across most of Canada because it fits the power-assisted bicycle framework: 500W or less continuous motor power, assistance cutting off at 32 km/h, working pedals. The best all-round road-legal pick Zeus stocks is the Addmotor CITYPRO E-43 ($1,799); the best budget entry is the Samebike 350W Folding ($999); the strongest performance pick is the Eunorau Urus 2.0 ($5,999, 500W Bafang M600 mid-drive). Quebec riders aged 14–17 need a 6D permit; every other rule is provincial — check our laws guide.

Every road-legal pick, cheapest first

PriceBikeMotor (as listed)
$999Samebike 350W Folding350W
$1,199Samebike CY20 Folding Commuter (pre-order)350W
$1,199Samebike RS-A01 Pro-T Step-Thru (pre-order)500W
$1,199Yeason Commuter500W
$1,499Samebike LOTDM200-II500W
$1,499Samebike RS-A02 Pro500W nominal
$1,499Samebike XD26-II Full-Suspension (pre-order)500W nominal
$1,699Meigi Hera Electric Trike 🛞 trike350W nominal
$1,799Addmotor CITYPRO E-43500W
$1,799YVY C22500W
$1,999Movin' Pulse Fat-Tire Delivery500W
$2,099Eunorau Meta275500W
$2,199Soho 50 (Designed in Canada)500W
$2,199Movin' Tempo Max500W
$2,299Eunorau Meta Foldable500W
$2,373Freesky NOVA B-360 Dual-Battery500W
$2,499Eunorau Defender eMTB500W
$2,499Eunorau ONE-TRIKE 2.0 🛞 trike500W
$2,499Taubik Monaco500W
$2,799Taubik Escape Folding500W
$2,999Himiway Zebra D5 Pro500W mid-drive
$3,099Taubik Westridge 29T500W
$3,099Taubik Westridge 4T500W
$3,299Meet One Breeze Pro Trike 🛞 trike500W
$3,699Himiway A7 Pro Full-Suspension500W mid-drive
$3,899Velotric Discover M350W nominal mid-drive
$5,999Eunorau Urus 2.0 Full-Suspension eMTB500W Bafang M600

Prices verified in stock July 11, 2026. Every wattage above is the nominal rating stated on the product listing, per the Zeus Peak-vs-Nominal Power Disclosure. Pre-order models ship on the window shown on their listing.

Why 500W is the magic number in Canada

Canada's federal power-assisted bicycle definition was repealed in February 2021 — the rules are now provincial, but nearly every province kept the same shape: 500W nominal and 32 km/h assisted speed. Under that line, an e-bike is treated like a bicycle. Over it, you're into off-road or vehicle territory — different rules, different insurance reality, different places you can ride. That's why a 500W bike with a smart motor and a big battery is the sweet spot for anyone whose riding includes public roads: it's not the compromise choice, it's the everywhere choice. For the trade-offs in detail, read our Best 500W Electric Bikes guide and 500W vs 750W vs 1000W explained.

Licence, insurance, and who can ride these

In most provinces, the bikes on this page need no driver's licence, no registration and no insurance — that's the entire point of the PAB class. Quebec requires riders aged 14–17 to hold a 6D permit. This also makes 500W e-bikes the practical transportation answer for many Canadians who don't hold a driver's licence — newcomers waiting on licence conversion, seniors who've retired from driving, and riders under most provincial administrative suspensions. One honest legal caution: a Criminal Code driving prohibition is different — courts have held e-bikes are motor vehicles under the Criminal Code, so riding during a criminal prohibition isn't legal, and impaired riding on any e-bike can be charged. Details, province by province: our laws guide.

How we verify wattage — the Zeus Peak-vs-Nominal Power Disclosure

Budget e-bike marketing loves peak numbers. Zeus grades every bike by its nominal (continuous) wattage — the number the law measures — and prints the peak beside it when the manufacturer publishes both. Every bike on this page states 500W nominal or less on its own listing; dual-motor bikes whose combined output exceeds 500W are deliberately not on this page even when each motor is 500W — they live in our dual-motor collection with their own honest legality notes.

The Zeus Service Promise

Free shipping from our Canadian warehouse. Manufacturer warranty on every model — Zeus helps you file it with a real person: 1-866-938-7580 or milad@zeusebikes.ca. 14-day returns. Financing at checkout — the honest math is in our financing guide.

FAQ — 500W electric bikes in Canada

Is a 500W ebike legal in Canada?
Yes — 500W nominal with 32 km/h assist is the road-legal power-assisted bicycle framework in most provinces. No licence, registration or insurance required in most of the country (Quebec 14–17: 6D permit).

Is 500W enough power?
For streets, paths and moderate hills, comfortably — especially with a mid-drive like the Zebra D5 Pro, A7 Pro, Discover M or Urus 2.0, where 500W nominal delivers strong torque. For steep off-road climbs with heavy loads, riders often step up to off-road-class bikes — knowingly trading road legality for power.

What's the difference between 500W nominal and 500W peak?
Nominal is continuous rated output — the legal number. Peak is a short burst maximum. A "1,000W peak" bike with 500W nominal can be road-legal; a 1,000W nominal bike is not a PAB.

Do I need a licence or insurance for these bikes?
No, in most provinces — that's what the PAB class means. Quebec riders 14–17 need a 6D permit. Home or tenant insurance often covers e-bikes as personal property; confirm with your insurer.

What is the best 500W electric bike in Canada?
Zeus's picks: best all-round the Addmotor CITYPRO E-43 ($1,799); best budget the Samebike 350W Folding ($999); best trike the Eunorau ONE-TRIKE 2.0 ($2,499); best mountain the Eunorau Urus 2.0 ($5,999).

Can I ride these on bike paths and trails?
PABs are generally allowed wherever bicycles are, but municipalities set their own trail rules — some paths restrict any motor assist. Check local bylaws; our laws guide covers every province.

Why aren't dual-motor bikes on this page?
Because combined output exceeds 500W even when each motor is rated 500W. We list them honestly in the dual-motor collection instead of blurring the line here.

Are 750W e-bikes legal in Canada?
Not as power-assisted bicycles in most provinces — 500W is the common ceiling. Some provinces and uses differ; the full breakdown is in our wattage guide.

Which of these work for winter?
The fat-tire and mid-drive picks (Defender, Westridge 4T, Zebra D5 Pro, Urus 2.0) handle packed snow best. Expect 15–25% range loss below 5°C and never charge a frozen battery — see the winter guide.

What if I want more choice under $2,000?
Eleven bikes here are under $2,000 — and our under-$2,000 collection shows the full budget shelf, including the off-road options this page excludes.

Deeper research: Best 500W eBikes guide · eBike laws by province · Mid-drive vs hub motor · Under $2,000 collection.