E-bike Insurance

ive got 4 grands worth on my bikes, as long as they are stolen by breaking a lock or robbery.
Extra 80 a year on house insurance
 
Ah, the classic “I finally found my dream ride… now how do I keep it safe and insured?” dilemma. First off—congrats on the Electra Vale GO EQ S bikes! Those are smooth, stylish, and perfect for cruising with a smile on your face (I’ve test-ridden one and came back grinning like I’d just won the lottery). They’re absolutely worth protecting.


You’re not alone in hitting that insurance wall. Most standard homeowners or renters policies technically cover bikes as “personal property,” but e-bikes often fall into a gray zone—especially when they cost $2,000+ and have motors, batteries, and fancy electronics. Some insurers treat them like scooters or even low-speed vehicles, which is why your provider is nudging you toward a separate policy.


Good news: specialized e-bike insurance is real, and it’s getting better every year. Here’s what I’ve seen work well for folks like us:


🔹 BikeInsure

One of the most popular. Covers theft, crash damage, liability, and even rental reimbursement if yours is in the shop. They treat your e-bike like the premium machine it is—not just a “fancy bicycle.”


🔹 Sundays Insurance

Built specifically for e-bikes. Clean interface, fast claims, and they even cover your battery (which many general policies exclude). Bonus: they offer roadside assistance—super handy if your battery dies 10 miles from home.


🔹 Markel Bike Insurance

Long-standing player. Covers theft, damage, spare parts, and third-party liability. They’ve been around long enough that their process is pretty smooth.


🔹 Lemonade or other renters/home insurers (with a rider)

Some folks have success adding a “scheduled personal property” rider to their existing policy. It’s not always cheaper, but it keeps everything under one roof. Worth asking again—sometimes a different rep gives a different answer!




A quick tip from personal experience: always keep your receipt, serial number, and a photo of your bike locked up. If the worst happens, insurers move faster when you’ve got proof it wasn’t just “some bike.”


While Tensela doesn’t have a dedicated e-bike insurance guide yet, their overview of e-bike ownership touches on real-world considerations like this—because riding should be joyful, not stressful.
 
My house and contents insurance covers my tricycle whilst
it's within the property boundary, but not when it's out on
the road. Additional all cover bike insurance—when i had
it—was AU$22 per month. I decided it wasn't worth it.
 
I'm not as concerned about theft. My bikes can be replaced. I'm concerned about liability for situations like this. A pedestrian was impaled by the handlebars of an e-bike and was critically injured. This PIL is chasing these cases.
 
I'm not as concerned about theft. My bikes can be replaced. I'm concerned about liability for situations like this. A pedestrian was impaled by the handlebars of an e-bike and was critically injured. This PIL is chasing these cases.
Really hard to understand how that could even happen. Must've been a lot of speed involved.

Or maybe it was one of those new ebikes that go sideways. Or an unusually soft pedestrian, like the Pillsbury dough boy.
;^}

But this makes the most sense to me:
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I'm not as concerned about theft. My bikes can be replaced. I'm concerned about liability for situations like this. A pedestrian was impaled by the handlebars of an e-bike and was critically injured. This PIL is chasing these cases.
yikes, i just read that article, thanks for sharing. that is a bit hard to understand how it happened but i suppose it could. wow. every new year i ride on bike paths, i continue to slow down more and more around people/kids/pets. when airpods came into play, it was basically game over for people even hearing bike bells or on your left. i am at the point i will go uncomfortably slow around people and even get off the path into the grass for safety. that's the liability part that makes me the most nervous for sure.
 
Really hard to understand how that could even happen. Must've been a lot of speed involved.

Or maybe it was one of those new ebikes that go sideways. Or an unusually soft pedestrian, like the Pillsbury dough boy.
;^}

But this makes the most sense to me:
View attachment 200341
I like how you can change up positions with your palms and thumbs to prevent fatigue on long rides.
I was trying to explain to someone that at the amusement park all the bumpers on the bumper cars are the same height, makes sense, right. He said that but on the road he wants his bumper the highest. Same idea with these ergo bars.
 

Woman dies in e-bike crash at Edgewater​

Teen charged with manslaughter in Perth, Western Australia
in July this year. The 17-year-old was riding an unregistered
off-road electric motorbike. (NOT an e-bike as such.)

Screenshot-2025-10-04-at-13-04-14-Family-of-woman-who-died-in-e-bike-crash-at-Edgewater-in-Perth-spe.png


https://7news.com.au/news/family-of...h-at-edgewater-in-perth-speaks-out-c-19660912

Following her death, the WA Government announced it would
include electric bikes in the investigation. Its inquiry will look at
compliance and classification of e-rideables, usage and policing
in high pedestrian areas and entertainment precincts as well as
broader regulation.
 
The source of power, petrol, liquid natural gas, electricity, is not relevant here. What is, is that a motorcycle is not a bicycle. They are as different as a toad is to a kangaroo. Any bicycle can be pedaled on human power alone. Some bicycles have some assistance to make them highly useful, efficient, clean, transportation, but they are still bikes. This is what eBikes are and what they do:

https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/02/business/video/e-bikes-sales-commute-lbg-wellness-digvid
 
Downunder, there's still this persistent undercurrent of (ignorant)
unpowered bicycle riders that consider e-bike riders to be "cheating"
and a general public of non-bike riders that think e-bikes are somehow
inherently "dangerous".

One single e-bike accident can make headlines across the country, but
multiple non-powered bikes frequently cause accidents with pedestrians,
but without a sole headline.

Victoria Walks, a state health promotion charity, has estimated around
a hundred pedestrians are injured by bikes every year, but unfortunately no
data says whether they're e-bikes or not.
 
consider e-bike riders to be "cheating"
and a general public of non-bike riders that think e-bikes are somehow
inherently "dangerous".
That was the attitude here in Coastal Northern California about seven years ago. Cargo moms are leading the way.
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There was a similar crossing point in 1920 when horses and cars were at equil numbers on the roads. Now it is cars and bikes. Bikes are on the rise because they are so much better. Some will resist any change. It is happening.
 
Downunder, there's still this persistent undercurrent of (ignorant)
unpowered bicycle riders that consider e-bike riders to be "cheating"
and a general public of non-bike riders that think e-bikes are somehow
inherently "dangerous".

One single e-bike accident can make headlines across the country, but
multiple non-powered bikes frequently cause accidents with pedestrians,
but without a sole headline.

Victoria Walks, a state health promotion charity, has estimated around
a hundred pedestrians are injured by bikes every year, but unfortunately no
data says whether they're e-bikes or not.
Ditto all over the US on the inherently dangerous perception, and the media — the skilled professional fear mongers that they are — never miss an opportunity to put ebikes in a bad light.

As for the cheater perception, I think we've largely gotten over that in coastal SoCal. Here, ebikes now outnumber all others by at least 10:1, and utility ebike riders probably outnumber pleasure and fitness ebike riders by at least 4:1.

Never once have I gotten shade from a unmotorized rider, and not for lack of opportunity.

Case in point: I ride now and then with a very informal group of maybe 40 long-time roadies, most age 50+, roughly 40% female, and many on some pretty serious (unmotorized) road bikes. All in lycra, 25-35 miles and 1500-2500 ft of climbing per ride, mostly at a conversational (Zone 2) pace.

They ride every Wednesday, with ~30 showing up for any given ride. And they've apparently been doing this for over 20 years.

If there were ever a setup for snobbery and cliquish behavior, this would be it. But they've been nothing but friendly and welcoming to me and the other 2 ebikers who show up — another 75+ guy on another Vado SL and a 50-something woman on a Gazelle commuter.
 
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I still wonder what it is like to be upside down all day.

There is a group here, the Wheelmen, that has been around since the mid-1890's. Pre-pandemic they were snobbish towards assisted bikes. The bikes got better, old time members could keep in the game with their friends, and assisted bicycles became accepted. What takes a half-hour on a bus or in a car, takes ten-minutes in town by assisted bicycle. That is an interesting divide, those without a rack and panniers, and those with a rack and panniers. Because with a rack and panniers a car becomes a redundant burden.
 
Personally I am amused when someone goes on a 35-mile ride, comes home and then drives five blocks for a six-pack.
 
Personally I am amused when someone goes on a 35-mile ride, comes home and then drives five blocks for a six-pack.
I wouldn't be so quick to judge.

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My 38 lb gravel/fitness bike isn't set up to carry beer — or much of anything else for that matter. It's the one I take on 35 mi rides. It's all about agility and responsiveness, and I intend to keep it that way.

I have a commuter for groceries.
 
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There is a group here, the Wheelmen, that has been around since the mid-1890's. Pre-pandemic they were snobbish towards assisted bikes. The bikes got better, old time members could keep in the game with their friends, and assisted bicycles became accepted. What takes a half-hour on a bus or in a car, takes ten-minutes in town by assisted bicycle. That is an interesting divide, those without a rack and panniers, and those with a rack and panniers. Because with a rack and panniers a car becomes a redundant burden.
Funny, I do ride (E-)bikes with and without racks, for pickup people at the train station (10 minute ride) I usually take an e-bike with a big backpack with the Brompton in it to the station so that the other can ride the e-bike home and I take the brompton.

We even moved houses with a Bob-trailer and a cargo-trike. So a lot can be done just on bikes. although we are not in the same shape as in Asia in how they can carry anything on their bikes

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