New laws in effect – 1 July 2026
The Queensland Government’s tougher e-scooter and e-bike laws are now in place, to stop behaviour that puts lives at risk.
Stronger laws from 1 July 2026 are now in effect:
- Police can seize and destroy illegal devices.
- Random Breath Tests by Police to enforce drink riding for riders of e-bikes, bicycles, e-scooters and other Personal Mobility Devices in public places. 0.05 BAC applies.
- Devices faster than 25km/h now banned. E-scooters and other Personal Mobility Devices must be restricted so they can’t exceed 25km/h. E-bike motors can only assist up to 25km/h. E-bikes can only be ridden faster under human pedal power.
- 12km/h speed limits apply on footpaths and when passing pedestrians on shared paths for e-bikes, e-scooters and other Personal Mobility Devices.
- E-scooters, e-skateboards or e-unicycles can be ridden on roads, including on-road bike lanes, with a speed limit of up to 60km/h. Riders can only go to a maximum speed of 25km/h.
- Higher penalties apply for speeding, failure to wear a helmet, careless riding, illegally carrying passengers and riding e-scooters, e-skateboards or e-unicycles on prohibited roads.
- E-scooter, e-skateboard and e-unicycle riders must be aged 16 years or older to ride unsupervised. Children aged 12-15 can ride only under adult supervision.
- Parents will be fined for under 16s riding illegally.
Effective from 31 August 2026:
- Riders of e-bikes, e-scooters, e-skateboards and e-unicycles must be 16 with a licence. Some exemptions* for medical conditions and disabilities, for 12-17 year olds riding with adult supervision, and for people riding in designated recreational areas will apply.
*Details on the exemptions will be available in late August prior to 31 August. There will be a 3-month transition period for those with eligible medical exemptions to allow time for them to comply.
Effective from 28 February 2027:
- Compliance labelling for e-bikes* will be mandatory, by 28 February 2027.
- E-scooters, e-skateboards and e-unicycles purchased before 1 July 2026 must be limited to a maximum output of 25km/h. Contact your retailer to discuss options.
*Information about the assurance scheme to help e-bike owners comply with the new labelling requirements, including eligibility, key dates, available locations and alternative options will be available on this website closer to 1 October 2026.

New and increased penalties:
- Not wearing a helmet – $518
- Doubling – $518
- Riding on a prohibited road – $518
- Careless riding – $518
- Speeding – $345 to $1,986 depending on speed
- Drink riding – $518 to $6,908 (maximum court imposed)
- Unsafe parking – $172
- Parents can be fined for children under 16 years riding illegally (illegal device, underage or unlicensed) – $518
The new laws respond to widespread community concerns over the use of these devices.
The nation-leading reforms strengthen accountability for riders, parents and suppliers. They provide advice on who can ride, what they can ride, where and how fast – to keep all road users safe.
Rules by device
Click through to the individual pages to view the full list of changes.