Selected electric motorcycles and scooters File:Zero DS 2011 Aktion.jpg|Zero DS (motorcycle) File:ZEV Electric 10 kw LRC motor scooter, front.jpg|ZEV LRC (scooter) File:20160801 E-bike Bagan 6616.jpg|Electric scooter on the field on Bagan Plain in Myanmar File:KTM, electric off-road motorcycles.jpg|KTM, electric off-road motorcycles
1895 to 1950 The early history of electric motorcycles is somewhat unclear. On 19 September 1895, a patent application for an "electrical bicycle" was filed by Ogden Bolton Jr. of Canton Ohio. On 8 November of the same year, another patent application for an "electric bicycle" was filed by Hosea W. Libbey of Boston. At the
Stanley Cycle Show in 1896 in London, England, bicycle manufacturer
Humber exhibited an electric tandem bicycle. Powered by a bank of storage batteries, the motor was placed in front of the rear wheel. Speed control was by a resistance placed across the handlebars. This electric bicycle was mainly intended for racetrack use. The October 1911 issue of
Popular Mechanics mentioned the introduction of an electric motorcycle. It claimed to have a range of to per charge. The motorcycle had a three-speed controller, with speeds of . In 1919,
Ransomes, Sims & Jefferies made a prototype electric motorcycle in which the batteries were fitted under the seat of the
sidecar. Even though the vehicle was registered for road use, it never went past the trial stage. In 1936, the Limelette brothers founded an electric motorcycle company called Socovel (
Société pour l’étude et la
Construction de
Véhicules
Electriques or Company for research and manufacture of electric vehicles) in Brussels. They continued production during the German occupation with their permission. Due to fuel rationing, they found some degree of success. But after the war, they switched to conventional models. The electric models remained available until 1948. During the
World War II, compelled by fuel rationing in the United States, Merle Williams of Long Beach, California, invented a two-wheeled electric motorcycle that towed a single-wheeled trailer. Due to the popularity of the vehicle, Williams started making more such vehicles in his garage. In 1946, it led to the formation of the Marketeer Company (current-day ParCar Corp.).
1950 to 1980 In 1967,
Karl Kordesch, working for
Union Carbide, made a
fuel cell/
Nickel–cadmium battery hybrid electric motorcycle. It was later replaced with a
hydrazine fuel cell, giving it a range of and a top speed of . In the same year, a prototype electric motorcycle called the Papoose, was built by the
Indian Motorcycle Company under the direction of Floyd Clymer. In 1974, Auranthic Corp., a small manufacturer in California, produced a small motorcycle called the Charger. It had a top speed and an range on a full charge. In the early 1970s, Mike Corbin built a street-legal commuter electric motorcycle called the Corbin Electric. Later in 1974, Corbin, riding a motorcycle called the Quick Silver, set the electric motorcycle speed world record at . The motorcycle used a 24 volt electric
starter motor from a
Douglas A-4B fighter plane. In 1975, Corbin built a battery-powered prototype street motorcycle called the City Bike. This motorcycle used a battery manufactured by Yardney Electric. In June 1975, the first Annual Alternative Vehicle Regatta was held at
Mt. Washington,
New Hampshire. The event was created and promoted by Charles McArthur, an
environmentalist. On June 17, Corbin's motorcycle completed the uphill course in 26 minutes.
1980s to 2000s In 1988, Ed Rannberg, who founded Eyeball Engineering, tested his electric drag motorcycle in
Bonneville. In 1992, the January issue of
Cycle World carried an article about Ed Rannberg's bike called the KawaSHOCKI. It could complete in 11–12 seconds. It had a top speed of about and a range of . About 100 of these were built. In 1996, the first mass-produced electric scooter,
Peugeot Scoot'Elec, was released. It used Nickel-Cadmium batteries and a range of .
2000s On 26 August 2000,
Killacycle established a drag racing record of completing a in 9.450 seconds on the Woodburn track in
Oregon. Killacycle used
lead acid batteries at a speed of . Later, Killacycle using
A123 Systems Li-ion nano-phosphate cells set a new quarter mile record of 7.824 seconds breaking the 8 seconds barrier at in Phoenix,
Arizona, at the All Harley Drag Racing Association (AHDRA) 2007, on 10 November 2007. In 2006,
Vectrix introduced the first commercially available high performance electric scooter, the VX-1. Following insolvency and initial bankruptcy reorganization, the Gold Peak battery group purchased the company in 2009. Vectrix expanded product lines, offering the VX-2 and the three wheeled VX-3. But Vectrix ceased operations in January 2014 and filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation, with its remaining assets auctioned off the following June. In February 2009, at the TED conference,
Mission Motors, a San Francisco startup led by a former Tesla Motors engineer, unveiled the Mission One, an electric motorcycle capable of . If achievable, this would make the Mission One the fastest production electric vehicle in the world. On April 4–5, 2009,
Zero Motorcycles hosted the "24 Hours of Electricross" event in
San Jose. It is considered the first all-electric off-road
endurance race. On June 14, 2009, the first electric
Time Trial Xtreme Grand Prix (TTXGP) all-electric street motorcycle race took place on the
Isle of Man in which 13 machines took part.
Rob Barber riding a motorcycle built by
Team Agni won the race. He completed the course in 25 minutes 53.5 seconds, an average speed of . In September 2009, product manager Jeremy Cleland of
Mission Motors broke the AMA electric motorcycle land speed record during the BUB Motorcycle Speed Trials at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, US riding the company's Mission One. The bike registered a speed of .
2010s In 2010, ElectroCat, made by
Eva Håkansson, set the record time for an electric motorcycle to climb
Pikes Peak. The motorcycle, ridden by John Scollon, completed the course in 16 minutes 55.849 seconds. ElectroCat uses batteries manufactured by A123 Systems. On June 26, 2011,
Chip Yates broke ElectroCat's previous record at Pikes Peak. He completed the course in 12 minutes 50.094 seconds. On 30 August 2011, Yates riding his prototype SWIGZ.COM electric superbike established the official
Guinness record of the fastest electric motorcycle. The motorcycle clocked a speed of at Bonneville. In 2012, Paul Ernst Thede set an SCTA record run of at Bonnevile Salt Flats, Utah, US. This did not qualify as a Guinness World record as it wasn't timed by the FIM timing association. In 2012 Electro Force cycles made their debut as a commuter cycle for commuters to ride to work or for enjoyment. These cycle were built by Jennifer Northern of
Issaquah, Washington, US. She became the first woman to develop and manufacture an electric vehicle in the US. The maximum speed reached was , while immediate speeds reached up to in 6 seconds, programmable with regenerative braking or on the throttle. Their range was up to 100 miles while maintaining in all weather and hills. It was the first of their kind built by a woman in the US. In 2012, Jim Higgins rode the street-legal Mission Motors' Mission R at the Sonoma Raceway quarter-mile drag strip and set a National Electric Drag Racing Association (NEDRA) street-legal electric motorcycle record for the SMC/A3 class with a time of 10.602 at . On June 30, 2013, Carlin Dunne riding a Lightning Motorcycle-built electric bike beat conventional motorcycles at Pikes Peak. He clocked a 10 minutes 00.694 seconds at the course. In 2017,
Scorpio Electric announced its scope of business includes manufacturing and assembly of electric motorcycles and scooters. On November 20, 2018,
VinFast from
Vietnam introduced two electric scooter models in
Hanoi, with 4 model: VinFast Klara A1 (
Lithium-ion battery), VinFast Klara A2 (
Lead–acid battery), VinFast Ludo and VinFast Impes. In 2019, the
Lark Streamliner, a
streamliner motorcycle, was built to challenge a land speed record in its class.
2020s In 2022,
VinFast of
VinGroup from Vietnam introduced 2 new models, the Theon S and Feliz S. In 2023, Bobfleet introduce its next generation model: Model X gen2. File:Ola S1 Purple.jpg|India's OLA S1 Pro Gen 1 Electric Scooter is a market leader and has sold more than 800,000 scooters. File:Ttxgp bikes isle of man tt 2009.jpg|TTXGP bikes at Isle of Man TT 2009 File:ChipYatesWithFlagAtBonnevilleWithElectricMotorcycle.jpg|
Chip Yates at
Bonneville Salt Flats in 2011 File:Newone - VinFast Klara cream.jpg|Cream VinFast Klara electric scooter File:Scooter, Berlin (P1080138).jpg|
Niu NQi in Berlin, 2019 File:Newone - VinFast Theon.jpg|VinFast Theon S in 2022 at VinHomes Riverside ==Types==