Electric Bicycle for Deliveroo

Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
20,368
16,870
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
Which one would you choose and why? Opinions please
none of the above.
Deliveroos don't earn a fortune, so you'll need not only a reliable transport, but a cost effective transport too.
Bikes tend to lose a lot of value compared to cars at the same age.
You need you budget your transport over a year for example. Let us know how much you can spend on transport then we can give you a more objective advice.
 
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flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,195
30,599
Thank you for your reply @flecc perhaps I need to manage my expectations a little better. I am not sure which one to for go now. The Stromer does look very fancy and powerful but if I can't use it legally then I am stuck.

The KibeBike that @soundwave suggested with a Bafang motor looks good. https://www.cloudsto.com/forum/kirbebike-vapour/kirbebike-vapour-full-suspension-emtb-detail.html

Which one would you choose and why? Opinions please :)
Either of these can be registered so will be legal if you do that and you have or get a moped driving licence and third party insurance.

I can't really judge which would be best since I have no experience of either, though both look similarly powerful, but I'd doubt a 70 mile range on either without a second battery. However the Kirkebike is shipped to you direct from China (and is out of stock anyway) so probably doesn't have a certificate of conformity, which will make registration much more difficult since you'd need to get it single vehicle approved at an approved testing station first. That's probably why they warn this:

"Please check your local laws on ebikes for where you live in the world"

The Stromer is EU sourced so comes with the certificate as standard from their dealers, which forwarded to the DVLA results in registration without any difficulties.
.
 

soundwave

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 23, 2015
16,896
6,507

WonderingLeaf

Finding my (electric) wheels
Jul 10, 2021
11
0
none of the above.
Deliveroos don't earn a fortune, so you'll need not only a reliable transport, but a cost effective transport too.
Bikes tend to lose a lot of value compared to cars at the same age.
You need you budget your transport over a year for example. Let us know how much you can spend on transport then we can give you a more objective advice.
Some of us earn more than others depending on how many hours we do and on which days. Friday, Saturday and Sunday are best as there is usually a x2.5 boost. Tonight I made £100 in about 5 hours

My average seems to be about £500 per week. This is not my main job but it definitely helps. The price of the bike is not too much of an issue because I will claim it on my Self Assessment

I tend to spend about £700 per year on train tickets but over the last 18 months or so that has been a lot lower for obvious reasons, we were not allowed to travel much.
 

WonderingLeaf

Finding my (electric) wheels
Jul 10, 2021
11
0
Either of these can be registered so will be legal if you do that and you have or get a moped driving licence and third party insurance.

I can't really judge which would be best since I have no experience of either, though both look similarly powerful, but I'd doubt a 70 mile range on either without a second battery. However the Kirkebike is shipped to you direct from China (and is out of stock anyway) so probably doesn't have a certificate of conformity, which will make registration much more difficult since you'd need to get it single vehicle approved at an approved testing station first. That's probably why they warn this:

"Please check your local laws on ebikes for where you live in the world"

The Stromer is EU sourced so comes with the certificate as standard from their dealers, which forwarded to the DVLA results in registration without any difficulties.
.
That is great to hear, thank you for that. The importance to me is being able to go uphill easily. I think I will gave to accept that I’m not going to get same range from a pedelec as I would from a small car or moped.

The Stromer is a lot more expensive but seems to have more features too. Are the sorts of premium bikes good value for money in the long run?
 

Scruffydroid

Pedelecer
Dec 12, 2020
53
20
It gets a bit more complicated when importing E-Bikes from China...

The Kirby vapour is an example, where you need to consider whether the following applies.


Caveat emptor

(Just as a matter of interest, I purchased an Andy Kirby 1500w kit in. November 2020. I had to pay £42.83 in duties. Bear in mind that it was not a complete bike, just a motor/wheel/controller). The battery was shipped separately and no duty was charged.

The kit was actually shipped from CHANGZHOU NCYCLEBIKE CO.,LTD
 

cyclebuddy

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 2, 2016
1,639
770
Beds & Norfolk
The price of the bike is not too much of an issue because I will claim it on my Self Assessment
From what you've said, HMRC won't allow you to claim the whole purchase cost. To do that you'd need to prove that the bike is used wholly and exclusively to conduct your trade - you'd not be allowed to use the bike for any personal mileage AT ALL.

That might be (IS) very difficult to prove, especially if it's your only form of transport. As you've said:
...but I do not drive and will be interested in maybe using the bicycle to travel long-ish distances (20 to 40 miles) to visit friends and run errands of my own when not working for Deliveroo.
IIRC, all you can claim is 20p per mile, and you need to keep track of your "working" mileage (as you do if using a personal car for work).

And you can't even claim the mileage for travelling elsewhere to start your shift - that's classed as personal mileage:
Had I travelled to another town on the bike before starting my shift, those would probably be a lot higher...
At 20p per mile, you'll need to cycle 20,000 delivery miles to recover the cost of a £4000 e-bike.

You maybe want to check this with your own accountant/book-keeper before spending so much on an e-bike.
 

Scruffydroid

Pedelecer
Dec 12, 2020
53
20
You can claim the bicycle as a deduction on your personal tax return under the provisions of an Annual Investment Allowance.


You will need to take into account any personal use, and offset this percentage.
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,195
30,599
The Stromer is a lot more expensive but seems to have more features too. Are the sorts of premium bikes good value for money in the long run?
Having no persomal experience of them I can't really say, but as ever, the law of diminishing returns comes into play. A Ford Fiesta and a Rolls Royce do exactly the same job of carrying one in comfort at all the allowed speeds anywhere on our roads. The Rolls has more refinement but the extraordinary cost of that is all out of proportion to the gain. With anything you buy, the more you pay, the less value you get.
.
 

WonderingLeaf

Finding my (electric) wheels
Jul 10, 2021
11
0
Either of these can be registered so will be legal if you do that and you have or get a moped driving licence and third party insurance.

I can't really judge which would be best since I have no experience of either, though both look similarly powerful, but I'd doubt a 70 mile range on either without a second battery. However the Kirkebike is shipped to you direct from China (and is out of stock anyway) so probably doesn't have a certificate of conformity, which will make registration much more difficult since you'd need to get it single vehicle approved at an approved testing station first. That's probably why they warn this:

"Please check your local laws on ebikes for where you live in the world"

The Stromer is EU sourced so comes with the certificate as standard from their dealers, which forwarded to the DVLA results in registration without any difficulties.
.
That is great to hear, thank you for that. The importance to me is being able to go uphill easily. I think I will gave to accept that I’m not going to get the same range from a pedelec as I would from a small car or moped.

I have some thinking to do