RULES AND ACCESS TOOLS

What Class of E-Bike Do I Need?

Use a single class reference to match legal limits, riding goals, and bike setup before you buy.

Updated June 12, 2026.

Ariel Rider • E-Bike Class Guide

What Class of E-Bike Do I Need?

Class 1 vs Class 2 vs Class 3 made simple. Pick the right class for where you ride and how you ride.

Ariel Rider e-bikes ship configured as Class 2 (20 mph throttle) by default. Confirm local rules before riding on public roads, paths, or trails.

Nationwide picture

47

states in this dataset currently use the three-class e-bike model.

Registration watch

2

state profiles still flag registration, licensing, or motor-vehicle treatment for at least one setup.

Freshness

Jun 11, 2026

most recent review across the live state-law dataset.

What is an e-bike?

Three classes, one simple framework

Most states sort e-bikes into three classes. That creates a simple shared language for speed, throttle use, and access.

Class 1

Pedal-assist only (up to 20 mph)

  • Motor help only while you pedal.
  • Usually the cleanest fit for shared paths and many trail systems.

If access is the priority, Class 1 is usually the safest starting point.

Class 2

Throttle allowed (up to 20 mph)

  • Throttle allowed up to 20 mph.
  • Strong all-around fit for commuting, hills, and carrying gear.

Ariel Rider e-bikes ship configured as Class 2 by default.

Class 3

Faster pedal-assist (up to 28 mph)

  • Pedal-assist only up to 28 mph.
  • Best for faster road commuting where local rules allow it.

Check helmet, age, and path restrictions before using a Class 3 setup.

Live legal baseline

What the class label actually tells you

The class sticker on the frame only helps if it lines up with the rules where you ride. Our state-law metaobjects keep this guide tied to the same 50-state dataset behind Ariel Rider’s legal pages, so the advice here stays anchored to current summaries.

47

published state entries currently mirror the Class 1, 2, and 3 framework

50

entries explicitly mention throttle language under Class 2 or equivalent rules

50

entries currently flag extra Class 3 rules for age, helmets, or riding access

The latest published review date in the current dataset is June 11, 2026. Open your state page before relying on any class label for trail or street access.

Which e-bike class fits how you ride?

A guided 3-step quiz for paths, city streets, cargo, throttle, speed, and age rules.

Answer six questions to reveal the clearest starting e-bike class for how you ride. The result updates as you choose, and the main button jumps you to that result.

Step 1 - Tell us how you ride

Start with the ride you want most

One clear route preference does most of the work. Then refine for hills, throttle, cargo, speed, and rider age.

Built from live state-law data across 50 state pages. Latest review: June 11, 2026.

Live preview

Class 2

Most versatile public-road fit

Jump to Step 2

Common rider questions

Start with a familiar use case, or answer the questions below in order.

Stage 1

Choose the route and terrain

These two answers do the most work for access and everyday feel.

Question 1 Where will you ride most? Access rules usually start here.
Question 2 How hilly is your area? Climbs change how much assist feels useful.

Stage 1 of 3

Change any answer and the recommendation updates instantly.

E-bike classes, at a glance

Scan the three classes side by side first. Then open your state page before assuming one class is allowed everywhere.

Broadest path access

Class 1

Pedal-assist only

20 mph
Throttle: No

Best for

Shared paths, greenways, relaxed commuting

Double-check

Trail access rules + posted speed limits

Most versatile starting point

Class 2

Throttle-capable

20 mph
Throttle: Yes

Best for

Stop-and-go commuting, hills, cargo errands

Double-check

Whether throttles are allowed on specific paths/trails

Road-first speed

Class 3

Pedal-assist only

28 mph
Throttle: Typically no

Best for

Road commuting, keeping pace with traffic where permitted

Double-check

Local Class 3 requirements + path/trail restrictions

Choose your next Ariel Rider with more confidence

Start with the riding profile that fits your terrain and comfort needs, then verify the legal setup where you ride.

Helpful tools

X-Class 60V

City + fun

X-Class 60V

Moped-style comfort and a tuned platform for traffic and hills. Great for riders who want a confident street presence.

Kepler Dual Battery

Commute + cargo

Kepler Dual Battery

Built for practical riding: commuting, errands, and carrying gear. If your rides involve distance, racks, or hills, start here.

Questions riders ask most

Short answers on classes, access, and what actually changes by location.

What’s the difference between Class 1, Class 2, and Class 3?

Class 1 is pedal-assist only up to 20 mph. Class 2 adds a throttle (still capped at 20 mph on motor assist). Class 3 is pedal-assist only up to 28 mph. Access and equipment rules vary by state, city, and trail manager.

Which e-bike class is best for paths and multi-use trails?

If you want the broadest access, Class 1 is often the safest bet. Many places restrict throttles or higher-speed assist on certain paths, so always check local rules.

Do I need a license, registration, or insurance?

Many places treat standard three-class e-bikes like bicycles, but rules vary. If a bike is operated beyond local class limits, it may be treated differently and can trigger extra requirements. Always confirm local regulations.

How do I know what class my e-bike is?

Look for a class label, confirm whether it has a throttle, and verify the max assisted speed in its settings. If a bike can be configured in multiple modes, you’re responsible for using a legal configuration where you ride.

How current is Ariel Rider's class guidance?

This page references 50 published state-law metaobject entries. 47 currently use the three-class framework, and 50 flag extra Class 3 rules for age, helmets, or access. The latest dataset review date is June 11, 2026.

Local trail managers, parks, and city codes can still change access faster than statewide summaries, so open your state page before relying on one class label everywhere.