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Ride1Up Roadster Review (2026): An Ebike That Feels Like a Bike

Wired
Wired

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Ride1Up Roadster Review (2026): An Ebike That Feels Like a Bike

This lightweight commuter ebike feels a lot like a regular bike would feel if I had bionic legs. I wish there were more mechanics for it.

$1,395 at Ride1Up Rating: 8 /10 WIRED Weighs only 40 pounds. Battery and motor well-integrated. Choice of belt or nine-speed chain drive. Plush seat. Proportional ride assist mimics actual bike riding. Affordable price.

TIRED Small screen. Range is middling. Shops that will perform even basic maintenance are few and far between.

“Dude. Is that an ebike?” The call came from a man on the sidewalk with a pierced septum and a tattoo of a bike chain. He wasn't the only one who asked. The Ride1Up Roadster V3 doesn't look like an ebike, which is precisely why it drew notice from former bike shop repairmen and fitness-obsessed schoolteachers.

Ride1Up's city commuter Roadster, released last year and out of stock through much of 2025, is at the vanguard of a new generation of smartly integrated ebikes that look and feel like a bike without motor assist. Like the Aventon Soltera 3 we rated this year as WIRED's favorite commuter bike , the Roadster V3 is a lightweight ebike excellent for tooling around the city, weighing about 40 pounds depending on the precise model. Its proportional torque assist can make it feel a lot like an extra-peppy classic bike—albeit one whose 500-watt motor can crank up to 28 miles an hour when set to operate as a Class 3 ebike.

This is an ebike geared toward how I usually want to use an ebike: as a fast and versatile city bike for kicking around my city of Portland, Oregon. I have spent months, and hundreds of miles, riding the nine-speed model of the Roadster V3 to grocery stores and friends' houses—up steep ridges and across rivers, or just down the street—and lifting it one-handed up my stairs and into my house. The Roadster rides like a bicycle that's easier to pedal. This is how I want it to feel.

At $1,395, Ride1Up's roadster is also affordable for a high-performance ebike with premium parts and a throttle to help launch up difficult hills. The 20- o 40-mile range is limiting for long-distance touring but more than sufficient for most daily commutes. A dearth of affiliated repair shops is a worry for service, a common problem with direct-to-consumer ebikes, because most regular bike shops refuse to even fix a flat if they don't sell a particular brand. But the Ride1Up also punches well above its price class in power, features, and versatility.

Belts and Chains San Diego-based Ride1Up is a newer ebike company, less than a decade old. The company is building its reputation mostly by offering a lot of specialized and utility bikes at accessible prices. But as someone who often favors classic road bikes, I'll admit some of their other models have struck me as a bit chunky or over-engineered, geared to trail riders and the sort of person who wants to cart a surfboard to the beach.

Not so the Roadster. The Roadster V3 is fun and light and is easy to mistake for a classic bicycle even when you're riding it. The cables run through the hollow of the frame. The battery, while removable, is also integrated almost imperceptibly into the chassis.

At its price, it offers a surprising amount of customization. Three frame sizes make the bike accessible to riders from 5'2" to 6'4". At above 6 feet and 200 pounds myself, I opted for the largest frame, which still weighs only 40 pounds.

Photograph: Matthew Korfhage Those tired of greasy hands will probably be most excited about the option to outfit the Roadster with a Dayco carbon belt drive—a no-oil, no-grease, quiet, low-maintenance option that often lasts longer than a bike chain. But in a river town bisected by a steep ridge, I opted for the nine-speed chain so I could coast up high grades on lower gears. Off-roaders can add a suspension fork for a $50 upcharge to absorb some trail vibration.

The Roadster also has a lot of class. Specifically, it spans all three ebike classes, from 1 to 3.

Out of the box, it's a Class 1 ebike, throttled at 20 miles an hour and allowed in most states wherever basic bikes are permitted. The throttle on the left handlebar means the Roadster can also run as a class 2 bike. If you toggle the ebike's settings , you can uncork speeds up to 28 miles an hour and operate the Roadster as a Class 3 ebike—which in many states will trigger additional riding restrictions but allowed me to keep up with cars on city streets.

Headlights and taillights come stock and are integrated into the bike. The alloy frame is strong but light, the seat is a cushy Selle Royal, and the wheels I received as stock were Schwalbe G-One RS—a low-resistance tire made for speed and equally suited to gravel or road surfaces. Some Roadsters might get a more rugged Continental Terra Trail tire as a stock tire instead. And the built-in screen is small enough that I need my reading glasses to read it (though riding modes are helpfully color-coded).

Bionic Legs With the specs out of the way, let's get to the thing that I find most exciting on the Roadster: the well-calibrated torque assist. Lower-budget or older ebikes, including the previous Ride1Up Roadster V2, often have cadence assist, which offers a fixed amount of support as you pedal.

Torque assist makes an ebike feel more natural, because it offers a proportionate response: The harder you pedal, the harder your bike pushes. But there's a risk to this. With any sensor lag or bad programming, torque assist can feel artificial or jerky and not offer enough support when accelerating from a stationary position.

This is rarely true with the Roadster. When I use it on lower settings, the Roadster feels a lot like riding a classic 10-speed, but with bionic legs. There are four levels of assist: Eco, Tour, Sport, and Boost. The lower three ride so smoothly and responsively that the assist was near unnoticeable except that I am, of course, moving faster and with less effort. The motor is quiet enough that the hum is barely audible above the wind in my ears.

Photograph: Matthew Korfhage I find myself switching among the three lower modes freely, depending on mood and haste and whether I'm trying to preserve battery charge or get some extra exercise. My 200-plus-pound self can manage more than 20 miles of range on a single charge even when climbing hills and going fast, so battery life is rarely an issue during city rides. Which is to say I mostly rode fast, a fact I verified by checking mode use on the Ride1Up's tiny screen. Trip distance is also trackable, as are my average and top speeds and the voltage I'm pulling as I ride.

But then there's Boost mode. At low speeds on flat land with Boost activated, the ride assist can feel a little artificial: a bit like being pushed on a swing while you're already swinging. Sometimes I don't care about this: If it's late and I'm tired, I'll jam Boost anyway and take the push. But if I'm trying to enjoy the trip, I mostly just use Boost to get me over the steep Alameda Ridge that blocks my path from half of the rest of the city.

The throttle is also available, though for my large frame, it doesn't want to crest 15 miles an hour going slightly uphill. I tend to forget it's there, except when I'm hauling groceries from the H Mart five blocks away. I can hang my bags from the handlebars and not hit them with my knees while trying to pedal. I just zoom the throttle. Genius.

Out of Service There is a trade-off inherent to most direct-to-consumer bikes like Ride1Up. Depending on where you live, it can be notoriously difficult to find bike shops willing to work on ebikes they don't sell . Judging from online discussion groups, Ride1Up has a pretty good reputation for being responsive to any customer issues. The company offers a one-year (but extendable) limited warranty covering manufacturer defects only and has relationships with a somewhat sparsely strewn web of bike and repair shops across the country.

But unlike major brands, a small direct-sales company like Ride1Up just doesn't have the reach to offer repair services everywhere. And so, depending on where you are, you'll either have to develop some DIY spirit or make sure you know in advance which shops will service an ebike that they don't carry.

I caught a rear-tire flat on a vicious pothole while going at top speed on a major thoroughfare this fall. (Fix your streets, Portland, it's dangerous and embarrassing.) But I was hesitant to mess with disconnecting the motor on an ebike I'm still reviewing, so looked for a bike shop that would deal with the flat. Four in a row turned me down, citing liability issues or shop policy or just the general spirit of “Nope.” Luckily, Portland has at least one ebike shop, Nomad Cycles , that will generally work on UL-certified ebikes like the Roadster V3 even if they aren't sold in the shop. But not every city or town has a shop like this. And if I didn't, I would have spent time watching maintenance videos online or driving 90 minutes to the nearest Ride1Up-affiliated repair shop in a former lumberjack town up the Columbia Gorge. As with any direct-to-consumer ebike, the best advice is to figure out your go-to bike tech before you buy—even if the tech in question is you.

But this trade-off could be well worth it, especially if you're handy with an Allen wrench. Compared to the ebike it most resembles—that Aventon Soltera 3—the Ride1Up Roadster V3 has more features for $100 less. In particular, the Class-3 upgrade and the option of a nine-speed chain could be pivotal depending on how you like to ride.

For me, in a hilly town, the gears are essential. So is the fact that the Roadster still feels like a bike. The lightweight frame, near-silent operation, well-integrated battery, and natural-feeling pedal assist combine to make the Roadster V3 into the “Dude, is that an ebike?” of ebikes. At less than $1,500, this is no small accomplishment.

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