Is your grandchild riding an e-bike? You might want to hear this $700 fine story

A recent incident in Queensland has put a spotlight on a growing issue on Aussie roads—and it’s raising serious questions for parents.

What started as a routine check turned into a stark warning for families across the country, highlighting the potential risks and legal consequences of letting kids ride modified electric bikes.

Here’s what you need to know about this alarming trend and what authorities are saying.


Parents across Australia are being put on notice after a Queensland dad was slapped with over $700 in fines for allegedly letting his 15-year-old son ride a modified e-bike.

The 50-year-old Mackay man was hit with several offences, including permitting the operation of an uninsured bike, permitting the use of a defective vehicle, and permitting the ride of an unregistered motorbike.

The crackdown comes as authorities ramped up enforcement on e-bike safety, with officers recently spotted in Sydney’s CBD targeting non-compliant e-bike riders.


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Queensland dad fined over son's modified e-bike use. Image source: Qld Police


‘We are seeing frequent instances of children sometimes as young as 12 riding high-powered non-compliant electric motorcycles, sometimes on busy streets around towns,’ said Mackay Whitsunday District Highway Patrol Officer in Charge, Senior Sergeant Shane Edwards.

He added: ‘These e-bikes are often dangerous to the rider and other motorists, and to pedestrians on our roads and pathways.’

Earlier this year, NSW Police also targeted several e-bike riders in Sydney, as seen in social media posts.

Since January, Mackay police conducted 18 street checks, issuing infringement notices for offences like riding unregistered, unlicensed, and uninsured e-bikes, as well as failing to wear an approved helmet.

Offenders ranged in age from 13 to 16 years old, highlighting the increasing popularity of e-bikes among younger Australians, despite the hefty price tag—an average e-bike costs $2,000, with some high-end models reaching up to $6,000.


While each state and territory has different e-bike regulations, all require the rider to provide some level of propulsion, and the top speed of these bikes must be capped at 25 km/h.

Ed Hore, President of the Australian Cycling Alliance, previously discussed the issue, stating that e-bikes with throttles capable of exceeding the legal speed limits must be removed from our roads.

Hore also suggested introducing a licensing and insurance requirement for e-bike riders, with food delivery riders currently being the most frequent users of these high-powered bikes.

However, authorities have raised concerns over an emerging trend—children using these potentially dangerous vehicles.


Senior Sergeant Edwards reminded the public that road safety is ‘everyone’s responsibility,’ including parents.

He said: ‘We will be addressing the dangerous and illegal use of e-bikes in our communities to ensure no one is seriously injured or killed.’

He also warned, ‘Parents can be fined or even charged for allowing their children to ride these vehicles if unlicensed, unregistered, or modified.’

According to Edwards: ‘Electric bikes are not toys, and the rules around the use of an electric bike are the same as a motorbike, regardless of being powered by an electric battery instead of petrol.’

Mackay residents were advised to expect an increased police presence over the Easter school holidays, with more e-bike users likely to take to the streets.


In a previous story, we explored how the rise of e-bikes is causing concern for road safety

With more people turning to these fast-growing vehicles, it’s crucial to understand the potential dangers involved.

To dive deeper into why e-bikes could become deadly without proper regulation, check out our full story here.

Key Takeaways
  • A Queensland dad was fined over $700 for allowing his son to ride a modified e-bike.
  • Authorities are cracking down on illegal e-bike use, especially among younger riders.
  • Police have been issuing fines for unregistered, unlicensed, and unsafe e-bikes.
  • Parents can face fines or charges for letting their children ride non-compliant e-bikes.

With e-bikes becoming more popular among kids, do you think the current rules are enough to keep our roads safe? Share your thoughts in the comments below.
 

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So pleased about this report. Especially the bit about bikes being capped at 25ks. We who use scooters should bombard governments with this. My 12 months old scooter is almost unused because "the government decided that 12ks was too fast" for scooters. 10ks is hopeless where I live. No footpaths, driveways that end up in the middle of the road, road itself very narrow but hopeless when cars/trucks are parked and, recently while the council altered a corner on the next street, all traffic were redirected down our street. This street is also a truck and bus thoroughfare. I even had a couple of kids about 12 years of age tell me I shouldn't be on a footpath, wanted to know where my "helmet and set belt" was and demanded to know what speed I could do. They then laughed and told me they could do over 30ks on their scooters. My scooter is a canardly. It can hardly get up our hills, especially in a SLIGHT wind. This is why I call my home unit "my jail". I've complained to the governments and local council.... council told me that footpaths were "not a priority for at least 3 years". They've done nothing in the last 30 years that I know of.
 
I think the speed limit of mobility scooters should be "governed" in the some way trucks are.
Apparently some can be set at a speed limit but people can increase it. I know of one such case. THe footpaths in the area are so uneven that they were taking them on the roads and apparently were going pretty fast compared to what they should be for safety.
 
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So pleased about this report. Especially the bit about bikes being capped at 25ks. We who use scooters should bombard governments with this. My 12 months old scooter is almost unused because "the government decided that 12ks was too fast" for scooters. 10ks is hopeless where I live. No footpaths, driveways that end up in the middle of the road, road itself very narrow but hopeless when cars/trucks are parked and, recently while the council altered a corner on the next street, all traffic were redirected down our street. This street is also a truck and bus thoroughfare. I even had a couple of kids about 12 years of age tell me I shouldn't be on a footpath, wanted to know where my "helmet and set belt" was and demanded to know what speed I could do. They then laughed and told me they could do over 30ks on their scooters. My scooter is a canardly. It can hardly get up our hills, especially in a SLIGHT wind. This is why I call my home unit "my jail". I've complained to the governments and local council.... council told me that footpaths were "not a priority for at least 3 years". They've done nothing in the last 30 years that I know of.
So you’re saying that I’ll have to go slow if I need to get a mobility scooter gamiry? There are a lot of hilly areas around Launceston so i mightn’t get up the hill, how depressing. There I was planning on being a hoon! I’ve seen a few scooters in my area that seem to go a reasonably fast. One of my friends bought one & rode it to the podiatrist, which isn’t far from her house, but it scared her almost to death. Our footpaths are not good so she had to ride on the road, so the scooter was packed up & never used again. I don’t think councils care too much about the state of footpaths & the problems we older people encounter. In my street the paths are very uneven, with some parts higher than the other, so hard to walk on & the next street is worse. I’m sorry you feel so stuck & I wish I lived closer, image the amazing conversations we could have.
Keep fighting, Patricia 😃
 
In NSW the law does not exist whereby parents of offending children are fined for offences committed by those children. Our local MP brought this up in parliament to change the law where child offenders are concerned but so far no luck in changes being made. The high school children are informed by the teachers that they can get away with breakages or actual thieving because there is no law to stop them and parents are no longer allowed to use any smack or hit of any kind against them.
 
So you’re saying that I’ll have to go slow if I need to get a mobility scooter gamiry? There are a lot of hilly areas around Launceston so i mightn’t get up the hill, how depressing. There I was planning on being a hoon! I’ve seen a few scooters in my area that seem to go a reasonably fast. One of my friends bought one & rode it to the podiatrist, which isn’t far from her house, but it scared her almost to death. Our footpaths are not good so she had to ride on the road, so the scooter was packed up & never used again. I don’t think councils care too much about the state of footpaths & the problems we older people encounter. In my street the paths are very uneven, with some parts higher than the other, so hard to walk on & the next street is worse. I’m sorry you feel so stuck & I wish I lived closer, image the amazing conversations we could have.
Keep fighting, Patricia 😃
We don't even have footpaths of any kind of hard substance. except in the CB, Just grass and that is definitely very uneven. The roads in most areas are even worse. It was definitely a wrong move when local councils were forced to amalgamate a few years ago.
 
So you’re saying that I’ll have to go slow if I need to get a mobility scooter gamiry? There are a lot of hilly areas around Launceston so i mightn’t get up the hill, how depressing. There I was planning on being a hoon! I’ve seen a few scooters in my area that seem to go a reasonably fast. One of my friends bought one & rode it to the podiatrist, which isn’t far from her house, but it scared her almost to death. Our footpaths are not good so she had to ride on the road, so the scooter was packed up & never used again. I don’t think councils care too much about the state of footpaths & the problems we older people encounter. In my street the paths are very uneven, with some parts higher than the other, so hard to walk on & the next street is worse. I’m sorry you feel so stuck & I wish I lived closer, image the amazing conversations we could have.
Keep fighting, Patricia 😃
l'm getting a Q5OR carbon electric wheelchair which only weighs 14.5 kg it cost around $4000 but with stupid Trump and his tax on China it will probably cost more now. l tried using it in the shop which was full of people and l was off and away before l knew it was so very quick l nearly banged into everyone. l think will need a bit of practice but it will be so much better then the wheelchair l have and will save my son pushing it up the hilly parts of Kingston with his bad back. l asked whether the controls could be changed to the left as l am left handed now and they
 
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Yet in QLD, one can drive a vehicle that is not road worthy, and I have seen them. I live in Mackay, get my car serviced every 12 months. When first moved here, I worked for a Nursing Agency. Often, coming home after an afternoon shift, 10.30-11pm, cars heading into town down the Peak Down H`way, 1 headlight, no headlight, only parking lights. Have noticed bald tyre`s, the list goes on. Also the scooters, ones people pay for. back and forwards across the road. The main road through town. First time I wondered what it was when driving towards cross roads with lights. They dodge around and between traffic. Never saw a Police car at night in the 2 years I worked.
 
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Reactions: PattiB
A particular bugbear of mine….I absolutely hate older kids and even adults coming up behind me on the pavement…..Very few actually ring a bell or give any warning, and if they do it’s usually when they’re on your heels almost…..but those bloody e-bikes and scooters etc come along silently and whizz right past you, giving such a scare that can unbalance you and make you stumble and fall……also scaring your dog if you have one, which can also result in an accident……:mad: Unfortunately I have a very low tolerance for wheels on the pavement 🤷‍♀️
 
So you’re saying that I’ll have to go slow if I need to get a mobility scooter gamiry? There are a lot of hilly areas around Launceston so i mightn’t get up the hill, how depressing. There I was planning on being a hoon! I’ve seen a few scooters in my area that seem to go a reasonably fast. One of my friends bought one & rode it to the podiatrist, which isn’t far from her house, but it scared her almost to death. Our footpaths are not good so she had to ride on the road, so the scooter was packed up & never used again. I don’t think councils care too much about the state of footpaths & the problems we older people encounter. In my street the paths are very uneven, with some parts higher than the other, so hard to walk on & the next street is worse. I’m sorry you feel so stuck & I wish I lived closer, image the amazing conversations we could have.
Keep fighting, Patricia 😃
thank you Patricia. I have been told by 2 disability shops that WHETHER YOU LIKE IT OR NOT THE SPEED IS BUILT INTO THE SCOOTERS COMPUTER AND IF YOU FIND OUT HOW TO CHANGE IT THE NEXT PERSON TO USE OR WORK ON IT WILL KNOW WHO DID IT. Apparently they would end up in Court. That is verbatim of what I was told by both. My carer can verify what I say as she was there both times. As I said, we have NO footpaths. A Current Affair was able to see what my street is like, producer said "that street is disgraceful" but done no story over 4 months later. In my short section of this street we have 2 more scooters a no.7, an almost blind and deaf lady at no.3 and a 93 year old opposite. I've been to Launceston twice, loved it but believe it or not, what you have in comparison is heaven. I'd love to know how to get everyone to raise their voices. My old, 2nd hand scooter was at least 12ks which wasn't so bad but according to the shops it was the bright sparks in Canberra who decided that this was too fast for us and cut it back to 10ks or what they call "walking speed".
even with numb legs and my wheelie walker I can walk faster than that and I also live on hills and have wind that pushes you backwards.
Thank you for your thoughts and care PattiB
 
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A particular bugbear of mine….I absolutely hate older kids and even adults coming up behind me on the pavement…..Very few actually ring a bell or give any warning, and if they do it’s usually when they’re on your heels almost…..but those bloody e-bikes and scooters etc come along silently and whizz right past you, giving such a scare that can unbalance you and make you stumble and fall……also scaring your dog if you have one, which can also result in an accident……:mad: Unfortunately I have a very low tolerance for wheels on the pavement 🤷‍♀️
Apparently Chris disability scooters are supposed to be used in the bike lane but we all know how safe that is. I understand very well what you say about people coming up behind you and, believe me, it's even worse when you are deaf. The scooters and bikes can have their speed changed but we disability scooter users have no such choices. I've been almost collect by traffic flying past and driving too close. They don't give a damn. Please stay safe.
 
l'm getting a Q5OR carbon electric wheelchair which only weighs 14.5 kg it cost around $4000 but with stupid Trump and his tax on China it will probably cost more now. l tried using it in the shop which was full of people and l was off and away before l knew it was so very quick l nearly banged into everyone. l think will need a bit of practice but it will be so much better then the wheelchair l have and will save my son pushing it up the hilly parts of Kingston with his bad back. l asked whether the controls could be changed to the left as l am left handed now and they
at least you could/can get into shops. Most of the shops in Bundaberg have steps or ramps out the front and aisles full of stuff you can't get around. This is a very old town with ramps, steps and curved footpaths (very rare things). Without help shopping trolleys roll straight to the gutter and using a wheelie walker plus a trolley FORGET IT. I wish you well with your new wheelchair but if you can, compare your old one with the new. I wish I'd done that with my scooter. There's no way I'd have touched to new one, Bless your son for helping so much but my suggestion is sincerely, keep your old chair for going into the shops. Good luck
 
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We don't even have footpaths of any kind of hard substance. except in the CB, Just grass and that is definitely very uneven. The roads in most areas are even worse. It was definitely a wrong move when local councils were forced to amalgamate a few years ago.
sounds like you live in Blundaburg (the L is intential
 
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thank you Patricia. I have been told by 2 disability shops that WHETHER YOU LIKE IT OR NOT THE SPEED IS BUILT INTO THE SCOOTERS COMPUTER AND IF YOU FIND OUT HOW TO CHANGE IT THE NEXT PERSON TO USE OR WORK ON IT WILL KNOW WHO DID IT. Apparently they would end up in Court. That is verbatim of what I was told by both. My carer can verify what I say as she was there both times. As I said, we have NO footpaths. A Current Affair was able to see what my street is like, producer said "that street is disgraceful" but done no story over 4 months later. In my short section of this street we have 2 more scooters a no.7, an almost blind and deaf lady at no.3 and a 93 year old opposite. I've been to Launceston twice, loved it but believe it or not, what you have in comparison is heaven. I'd love to know how to get everyone to raise their voices. My old, 2nd hand scooter was at least 12ks which wasn't so bad but according to the shops it was the bright sparks in Canberra who decided that this was too fast for us and cut it back to 10ks or what they call "walking speed".
even with numb legs and my wheelie walker I can walk faster than that and I also live on hills and have wind that pushes you backwards.
Thank you for your thoughts and care PattiB
That is terrible gamiry, to have no footpaths at all. It makes me wonder what councils do sometimes. I used to live in a small, seaside community where our street was unsealed without a footpath anywhere in the back streets, only the main street had one. It was a really big day when our street got kerbs & gutters & was actually sealed by the time we moved. The council was more concerned with the city suburbs under their control. 10KPH does seem rather slow but I suppose the authorities don’t want us getting over excited & carried away with ourselves, what morons they are. Maybe a miracle will occur one day & you’ll get essential footpaths, oh dear there go those flying pigs again.
 
About bloody time, scooters should be targeted too. I had modified escooter riden at at about 40k/h on the footpath and made me step off the cemet path as they flew past.
happens here all the time. They love playing chicken,,,, ride up to disability scooter, see how close you can get without hitting them and laugh when they ride away. They do the same thing to seniors or disabled people on 2 legs.
 
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That is terrible gamiry, to have no footpaths at all. It makes me wonder what councils do sometimes. I used to live in a small, seaside community where our street was unsealed without a footpath anywhere in the back streets, only the main street had one. It was a really big day when our street got kerbs & gutters & was actually sealed by the time we moved. The council was more concerned with the city suburbs under their control. 10KPH does seem rather slow but I suppose the authorities don’t want us getting over excited & carried away with ourselves, what morons they are. Maybe a miracle will occur one day & you’ll get essential footpaths, oh dear there go those flying pigs again.
The little piggies live in your area too LOL. It used to take me about 10 minutes to get to the supermarket on my old machine now it takes aver 35 minutes and you should see the fun trying to get across a main road. ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE.
 
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Apparently Chris disability scooters are supposed to be used in the bike lane but we all know how safe that is. I understand very well what you say about people coming up behind you and, believe me, it's even worse when you are deaf. The scooters and bikes can have their speed changed but we disability scooter users have no such choices. I've been almost collect by traffic flying past and driving too close. They don't give a damn. Please stay safe.
I have a lot of patience and tolerance when it comes to mobility issues for anyone struggling to get about outdoors….. I mean, it’s a fact of life for many people but more especially for our elder population. I think it’s ludicrous to expect people who need disability or mobility scooters, to have to use the bike lane, if anyone needs to use wheels on the footpath/pavement, it’s mobility challenged people……. I bet those bright sparks in Canberra didn’t even bother to meet any people that needed mobility scooters, but I bet they got paid handsomely for their conclusions. I think the issue with the lack of a safe footpath belongs to the council, we pay rates for that kind of thing, don’t we? Of course that means next to nothing even if it is a safety issue….. I hope something good happens eventually for you and the others in your street… ☺️
 

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