Enjoy cycling and scooting with our bikes and scooters collection. Bikes provide eco-friendly transportation saving fuel costs, offer excellent cardiovascular exercise burning calories while being low-impact on joints, and create family bonding through neighborhood rides, trail adventures, or bike park visits—while scooters deliver fun efficient mobility for commuting, campus transportation, or recreational riding appealing to children, teens, and adults.
Our collection includes kids' bikes: balance bikes (12-14 inch wheels, no pedals) teaching toddlers ages 2-5 balance and steering before adding pedals, training wheel bikes (12-20 inch wheels) helping children ages 3-8 transition to pedaling with removable stabilizers, and youth bikes (20-24 inch wheels) for ages 8-12 developing riders. Adult bikes include mountain bikes with wide knobby tires, suspension forks, and 21-27 speeds tackling trails and rough terrain, road bikes with thin tires, drop handlebars, and lightweight frames optimized for paved speed, hybrid bikes combining features for versatile city and light trail riding, and cruiser bikes with upright geometry, wide seats, and single speeds for relaxed neighborhood riding.
Electric scooters provide motor-assisted transportation: kick scooters require manual pushing—lightweight portable folding designs for children or short distances, electric scooters with battery-powered motors (250-500+ watts) reaching 15-25+ mph for 10-40 mile ranges—popular for commuting, campus transportation, or recreational riding. Consider local laws regulating electric scooter use on roads, sidewalks, or bike paths.
Bike sizing ensures comfort and safety: kids' bikes sized by wheel diameter—12" suits ages 2-4 (85-100cm tall), 16" fits ages 4-6 (100-120cm), 20" accommodates ages 6-9 (120-135cm), 24" serves ages 9-12 (135-150cm). Adult bikes sized by frame height or standover height—measure inseam (floor to crotch) and consult brand sizing charts ensuring proper fit preventing discomfort or injury. Test rides before purchasing confirm fit.
Bike features affecting performance: gear systems (single-speed, 7-speed, 21-speed, or continuously variable) provide different terrains adaptability—more gears suit hilly areas while single-speeds suffice for flat riding. Suspension (front fork suspension on mountain bikes, full suspension with rear shock, or rigid no-suspension) absorbs bumps—crucial for trail riding but adds weight and cost unnecessary for road riding. Brake types include coaster brakes (pedal backward to brake) on kids' bikes, rim brakes (caliper or V-brakes) squeezing wheel rims—economical but less effective in wet weather, and disc brakes (mechanical or hydraulic) offering superior stopping power especially in mud or rain—standard on mountain bikes.
Safety equipment essential for cycling: properly fitted helmets (required for minors in most jurisdictions), lights for visibility during dawn/dusk/night riding, bells or horns alerting pedestrians, and reflective gear increasing visibility. Bike locks prevent theft especially for expensive models. Assembly typically requires installing handlebars, pedals, and front wheel—bike shops offer professional assembly ensuring safety (cost $50-150) or partial assembly bikes reduce setup. Bikes encourage outdoor activity, reduce environmental impact, and provide affordable transportation creating healthy sustainable lifestyles.