Guide

Electric Bike Brands UK

Every major UK electric bike brand compared for 2026: premium Bosch names, Halfords and Decathlon high-street favourites and value direct brands rated.

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Quick comparison

E-bikePriceMotorRangeWeightRatingBuy
#1CubeCubefrom around £1,899Bosch Performance LineUp to 60-90 miles (claimed)Around 22-26kg 4.7 Check price
#2GiantGiantfrom around £2,099Giant SyncDrive (Yamaha-based)Up to 60-100 miles (claimed)Around 21-25kg 4.6 Check price
#3SpecializedSpecializedfrom around £2,500Specialized / Brose mid-driveUp to 50-90 miles (claimed)Around 15-23kg 4.6 Check price
#4RaleighRaleighfrom around £1,299Bosch Active / Performance LineUp to 60-80 miles (claimed)Around 24-27kg 4.4 Check price
#5Carrera (Halfords)Carrerafrom around £899250W rear hubUp to 40-60 miles (claimed)Around 22-25kg 4.2 Check price
#6Decathlon (B'Twin)Decathlonfrom around £799250W hub and mid-drive optionsUp to 40-70 miles (claimed)Around 20-26kg 4.3 Check price
#7EskuteEskutefrom around £899250W rear hubUp to 55-65 miles (claimed)Around 25-27kg 4.2 Check price
#8EngweEngwefrom around £799250W hub (UK road-legal models)Up to 60-85 miles (claimed)Around 22-30kg 4.0 Check price
#1

Cube

Cube

from around £1,899
Motor
Bosch Performance Line
Range
Up to 60-90 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 22-26kg
4.7
Check price
#2

Giant

Giant

from around £2,099
Motor
Giant SyncDrive (Yamaha-based)
Range
Up to 60-100 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 21-25kg
4.6
Check price
#3

Specialized

Specialized

from around £2,500
Motor
Specialized / Brose mid-drive
Range
Up to 50-90 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 15-23kg
4.6
Check price
#4

Raleigh

Raleigh

from around £1,299
Motor
Bosch Active / Performance Line
Range
Up to 60-80 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 24-27kg
4.4
Check price
#5

Carrera (Halfords)

Carrera

from around £899
Motor
250W rear hub
Range
Up to 40-60 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 22-25kg
4.2
Check price
#6

Decathlon (B'Twin)

Decathlon

from around £799
Motor
250W hub and mid-drive options
Range
Up to 40-70 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 20-26kg
4.3
Check price
#7

Eskute

Eskute

from around £899
Motor
250W rear hub
Range
Up to 55-65 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 25-27kg
4.2
Check price
#8

Engwe

Engwe

from around £799
Motor
250W hub (UK road-legal models)
Range
Up to 60-85 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 22-30kg
4.0
Check price

The UK electric bike market has grown from a handful of names into dozens of brands, and they are not all chasing the same buyer. Some sell £3,000 Bosch-powered machines through bike shops with full servicing, while others ship a £799 fat-tyre bike to your door in a box. Knowing which tier a brand sits in tells you most of what you need to know before you spend a penny.

This guide compares every major electric bike brand sold in the UK in 2026, grouped by how they sell and who they suit. We rated each on build quality, motor system, support and value rather than on a single hero model. A brand is a long-term relationship: you will want spares, servicing and a warranty that someone actually honours.

How the UK e-bike brands break down

The clearest way to choose is by how a brand reaches you, because that decides who builds the bike, who services it and who answers when something breaks.

Premium brands like Cube, Giant and Specialized sell mainly through bike shops, pairing their frames with trusted drive units, usually Bosch, Shimano or their own well-developed motors, and Raleigh sits at the affordable end of this tier with a long British heritage. High-street brands such as Carrera and Pendleton (Halfords) and B’Twin (Decathlon) let you walk in, try a bike and have it built and serviced under one roof, which is invaluable for first-time owners. Value direct brands, including Eskute, Engwe, Fiido and ADO, sell online and undercut everyone on paper specs, but in exchange you take on self-assembly, self-servicing and courier-based returns.

Both routes are covered in more detail in our dedicated buying guides if you are still deciding between buying online and buying in store.

1. Cube - best premium all-rounder

#1

Cube

Cube

4.7 from around £1,899
Best for: Best premium all-rounder
Motor
Bosch Performance Line
Battery
Bosch PowerTube 500-750Wh
Range
Up to 60-90 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 22-26kg

What we like

  • Proven Bosch motors and batteries
  • Strong value within the premium tier
  • Wide dealer network for servicing

Watch-outs

  • Entry price is high versus direct brands

Our verdict: German engineering with Bosch power and keen pricing makes Cube the premium brand most riders should shortlist first.

Check price

Cube is the German brand that consistently undercuts other premium names while using the same gold-standard Bosch motors and PowerTube batteries. Its Reaction and Touring ranges cover trail, hybrid and touring riding, and the build quality is excellent. You pay more than a direct brand, but you get dealer servicing, a long warranty and reassuringly strong resale value in return. Cube is the sensible starting point for most riders who want a premium e-bike that will last a decade.

Our Cube brand guide covers the range model by model.

2. Giant - best for long-term reliability

#2

Giant

Giant

4.6 from around £2,099
Best for: Best for long-term reliability
Motor
Giant SyncDrive (Yamaha-based)
Battery
Giant EnergyPak 400-800Wh
Range
Up to 60-100 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 21-25kg

What we like

  • World's largest bike maker, excellent build quality
  • Capable in-house SyncDrive motors
  • Huge UK dealer support

Watch-outs

  • Premium pricing, limited online discounting

Our verdict: The world's biggest bike brand makes some of the most dependable e-bikes you can buy, backed by strong UK dealer support.

Check price

Giant is the world’s largest bicycle manufacturer, and it builds many of its own components, including SyncDrive motors (developed with Yamaha) that are smooth and dependable. The Explore and FastRoad e-bikes are popular commuting and touring choices, and the UK dealer network is one of the broadest. Giant rarely tops the spec-per-pound charts, but it is still one of the safest names you can buy for sheer longevity and parts availability.

3. Specialized - best performance and lightweight

#3

Specialized

Specialized

4.6 from around £2,500
Best for: Best performance and lightweight
Motor
Specialized / Brose mid-drive
Battery
320-710Wh integrated
Range
Up to 50-90 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 15-23kg

What we like

  • Class-leading lightweight models like the Creo and Turbo
  • Refined, natural motor feel
  • Premium components and finish

Watch-outs

  • Among the most expensive brands
  • Servicing tied to Specialized dealers

Our verdict: The premium performance choice, with featherweight road and gravel e-bikes that ride almost like the real thing.

Check price

Specialized makes some of the lightest and most refined e-bikes on sale. The Turbo Creo and Turbo Vado lines pair discreet mid-drive motors with low weight, so the assistance feels natural rather than like a motorbike. This is the brand for riders who want a performance bike that happens to be electric, rather than the other way round. The catch is price: Specialized is among the most expensive names, and servicing runs through its dealer network.

4. Raleigh - best heritage brand for comfort

#4

Raleigh

Raleigh

4.4 from around £1,299
Best for: Best heritage brand for comfort
Motor
Bosch Active / Performance Line
Battery
Bosch 400-500Wh
Range
Up to 60-80 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 24-27kg

What we like

  • Trusted British name with Bosch motors
  • Comfortable step-through Motus range
  • Wide dealer and Halfords availability

Watch-outs

  • Heavier than premium rivals

Our verdict: A safe, comfortable British heritage brand whose Bosch-powered Motus is a perennial favourite for everyday riders.

Check price

Raleigh is the most trusted name in British cycling, and its e-bikes lean into comfort. The Bosch-powered Motus, especially the step-through and Grand Tour versions, is a long-running favourite for relaxed everyday riding. The frames are heavier than premium rivals, but you still get a real Bosch motor, a familiar brand and broad availability through bike shops and Halfords. Raleigh delivers reassurance where weight matters less.

Our Raleigh Motus review digs into the detail.

5. Carrera (Halfords) - best high-street value

#5

Carrera

Carrera (Halfords)

4.2 from around £899
Best for: Best high-street value
Motor
250W rear hub
Battery
36V integrated 250-496Wh
Range
Up to 40-60 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 22-25kg

What we like

  • Bought, built and serviced at Halfords nationwide
  • Strong value across Vengeance, Impel and Crossfire
  • Easy in-store buying for beginners

Watch-outs

  • Mostly hub motors and cadence sensors

Our verdict: Halfords' own brand is the default first e-bike for many Britons: affordable, available everywhere and easy to service.

Check price

Carrera is Halfords’ own brand and the e-bike many Britons buy first. The Vengeance hardtail, the tidy Impel hybrid and the Crossfire trekking bike all offer solid value, and you can see, buy, collect and service them at Halfords stores nationwide. Most use hub motors and cadence sensors rather than the torque-sensing mid-drives of premium brands, so the ride is less polished, but the convenience and price are still hard to beat for newcomers.

6. Decathlon (B’Twin) - best value high-street brand

#6

Decathlon

Decathlon (B'Twin)

4.3 from around £799
Best for: Best value high-street brand
Motor
250W hub and mid-drive options
Battery
Integrated 360-500Wh
Range
Up to 40-70 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 20-26kg

What we like

  • Excellent value and honest spec sheets
  • In-store buying and servicing
  • Strong warranty support

Watch-outs

  • Premium models limited compared with rivals

Our verdict: Decathlon's B'Twin and Elops e-bikes punch well above their price and benefit from real in-store support.

Check price

Decathlon’s in-house B’Twin and Elops e-bikes are some of the best-value bikes on the high street. The spec sheets are honest and the build quality is dependable, and as at Halfords you get in-store buying, building and servicing plus a strong warranty. Decathlon does not chase the high end, so look elsewhere for a premium mid-drive trail bike, but it is still one of the smartest value brands in the UK for sensible commuting and town riding.

The Decathlon brand guide has the full range.

7. Eskute - best value direct brand

#7

Eskute

Eskute

4.2 from around £899
Best for: Best value direct brand
Motor
250W rear hub
Battery
36V removable (Samsung cells)
Range
Up to 55-65 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 25-27kg

What we like

  • Removable Samsung-cell batteries
  • Comfortable step-through options
  • Good owner reputation for the price

Watch-outs

  • Heavier frames
  • Online-only support and self-build

Our verdict: A standout value direct brand with removable Samsung batteries and a solid reputation among UK owners.

Check price

Among the value direct brands, Eskute has built the strongest reputation with UK owners. Its Polluno and Wayfarer bikes use removable Samsung-cell batteries you can charge indoors, the step-through frames are comfortable, and real-world range is believable. The trade-offs are typical of the tier: heavier frames, self-assembly and online-only support. Even so, Eskute is one of the safer direct picks for a first budget e-bike you can trust.

8. Engwe - best value fat-tyre and folding

#8

Engwe

Engwe

4.0 from around £799
Best for: Best value fat-tyre and folding
Motor
250W hub (UK road-legal models)
Battery
Integrated and removable, large capacity
Range
Up to 60-85 miles (claimed)
Weight
Around 22-30kg

What we like

  • Big batteries and long claimed range
  • Folding and fat-tyre models for the money
  • Aggressive direct pricing

Watch-outs

  • Heavy, and check models are 250W EAPC-legal
  • Self-build and courier-based support

Our verdict: Maximum spec per pound on fat-tyre and folding bikes, as long as you choose the UK-legal 250W models.

Check price

Engwe is the brand to watch if you want fat tyres, folding convenience or a huge battery for little money, and models like the P20 and L20 offer long claimed ranges and aggressive pricing. The important caveat is legality: Engwe sells higher-power versions in some markets, so you must buy the UK 250W EAPC-legal specification to ride on roads and cycle paths without a licence. Expect self-assembly and courier support, as with all direct brands.

Compare live e-bike brand prices

Other brands worth knowing

Several brands fill specific niches beyond the eight above. Pendleton sells through Halfords and focuses on stylish step-through bikes like the Somerby. Voodoo and Gtech cover the budget and lightweight ends respectively. Ribble offers premium British-designed e-bikes online with a more refined finish than the typical direct brand.

Fiido and ADO are direct brands known for lightweight folding bikes. ADO’s carbon-belt, torque-sensor Air models stand out in particular. Our Fiido brand page has the full picture on Fiido. ADO gets a dedicated guide of its own.

Which e-bike brand should you choose?

Work down from how much hand-holding you want. Choose a high-street brand if you are new to e-bikes and value being able to walk into a shop: Carrera or Pendleton at Halfords, or B’Twin at Decathlon. A premium Bosch or Shimano brand such as Cube, Giant or Raleigh will reward you if you want the best long-term ownership and have £1,800 or more. A value direct brand like Eskute, Engwe, Fiido or ADO gives you the most for your money if budget is the priority and you are comfortable building and maintaining the bike yourself.

Whichever brand you pick, confirm the bike is a UK-legal EAPC before you buy; the 250W and 15.5mph rules apply to every brand here. A wider roundup of the best electric bikes picks the standout individual models across these brands.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best electric bike brand in the UK?

There is no single best brand. It depends on budget. Cube, Giant and Specialized lead with Bosch or Shimano motors for premium quality and dealer support. Carrera at Halfords and B'Twin at Decathlon are strongest for high-street convenience. Eskute, Engwe, Fiido and ADO offer the most spec per pound for value online.

Which electric bike brands are best for value in the UK?

The best value e-bike brands in the UK are direct-to-consumer names like Eskute, Engwe, Fiido and ADO. They sell road-legal bikes from roughly £700 to £1,300. Carrera at Halfords and B'Twin at Decathlon offer the best value with in-store buying and servicing. That suits first-time riders better.

Are German electric bike brands better?

German brands like Cube benefit from strong engineering and usually pair with Bosch motors. Bosch motors are widely regarded as the most reliable e-bike drive units. They tend to cost more than direct brands. The build quality, dealer servicing and resale value often justify the premium for long-term riders though.

Which e-bike brands does Halfords sell?

Halfords sells its own Carrera and Pendleton e-bikes, plus the budget Voodoo line and third-party brands such as Raleigh. Buying through Halfords means you can see the bike in store, have it professionally built and use their nationwide servicing network. That is reassuring for new e-bike owners.

Are cheap direct-to-consumer e-bike brands road legal in the UK?

Many are. You must check though. A legal EAPC needs a 250W motor with assistance cutting out at 15.5mph and no throttle above walking pace. Some imported brands sell higher-power versions that are not road legal. Always confirm the UK-specification model before buying.