Planning began in 2012 to establish a bicycle-sharing system in Detroit, headed by Lisa Nuskowski, the eventual founder of Detroit Bike Share. The system, eventually named MoGo, commenced operations on May 23, 2017, with a ceremonial ride in which cyclists rode the system's 300 original bicycles from a central location to their assigned docking stations across the city. The system's ridership exceeded expectations, logging 100,000 rides within its first six months of operation. To better serve riders with disabilities, MoGo piloted the MoGo Adaptive cycling program in May 2018. The six-month pilot program was successful, and has been offered every summer since. Later, in 2019, MoGo introduced 50 rentable Class I
electric bicycles, dubbed MoGo Boost, available at select stations in the main MoGo network. Nuskowski left MoGo in 2021, becoming the president of
M-1 Rail. She was replaced as executive director by Adriel Thornton. MoGo launched a significant expansion in June 2020, adding stations in northwestern Detroit and several suburbs on the
Woodward Corridor to the city's north in Oakland County, taking the system beyond Detroit's city limits for the first time. In September 2022, the network was expanded further, with the addition of three new stations on
Belle Isle. In September 2023, MoGo announced the addition of 26 additional electric bicycles to the fleet, of an improved model relative to the fifty units introduced in 2019. The agency has announced their intention to invest in additional electric bicycles. == Fleet and network ==