E-bike cyclists and e-scooter riders are being pushed to use high-speed roads with traffic, instead of footpaths and shared paths, under Queensland government laws that will be passed this year.

That is the motivation for the 10km/h limit – a jogging speed slower than a toddler on a balance bike – on footpaths and shared paths, as revealed in the explanatory notes for the laws cracking down on e-mobility devices.

Clotilde Belanger bought a legal pedal-assist e-bicycle to ride to work in the CBD in 2019, travelling along the Enoggera Creek and Ithaca Creek bikeways.

The trip takes about 50 minutes each way, averaging a speed of about 20km/h. A 10km/h restriction on shared paths would add an extra 30 minutes to her commute each way, as about half the bikeways are on paths shared with pedestrians.

“To completely avoid using shared paths, I would need to ride on Waterworks Road in peak-hour traffic, which would be a death wish,” she said.

“I am a mother of two and primary income earner for my household, so I would like to stay alive.”

The bill, introduced to parliament on Wednesday night, accepted all 28 of the e-mobility inquiry’s recommendations, and has been referred back to the committee that conducted the inquiry.

The changes were proposed after a spate of injuries and deaths, mostly involving non-compliant e-motorbikes or e-scooters, in 2025. They were welcomed by the RACQ and the local branch of the AMA, but drew criticism from cyclists and the state’s peak tourism body.

Under the laws, e-scooter riders could use any road with a speed limit up to 60km/h, instead of the current 50km/h, to “support rider choice and reduce traffic on footpaths”.

That means within months it would be legal to ride a scooter in traffic on the Story Bridge, Turbot Street, Gympie Road, Kelvin Grove Road, Moggill Road and Coronation Drive.

But despite cars, trucks and buses travelling at 60km/h, e-scooters will be required to have a new maximum design speed of 25km/h.

E-bike riders can ride on roads with any speed limit, unless they are specifically prohibited. This would not change.

But under the new laws, e-scooter and e-bike riders would be required to ride at 10km/h or slower on footpaths and shared paths, unless specifically signed at a higher or lower speed limit – a limit that would not apply to cyclists using non-electric bikes.

“Lower speeds on footpaths and shared paths may deter riders from using these environments in areas with high pedestrian activity or where high-quality active transport infrastructure is available, encouraging riders to select routes that better support higher speeds,” the bill’s explanatory notes said.

About 90 per cent of Queensland’s separated bicycle infrastructure is shared pathways, with very few “bicycle only” or “pedestrian only” paths.

In a guideline for shared paths available on its website, Transport and Main Roads noted that bicycles could become unstable to ride at speeds below 11km/h.

On well-designed paths, though, people riding bikes can travel 15-25km/h with minimum risk or negative impacts for walkers, it said, arguing they were “high cost for little benefit”.

QUT research last year in Brisbane found residents’ biggest barriers to active transport were car and traffic safety concerns, and a lack of physically separated lanes.

Young women are four times less likely to cycle than men the same age, with fears about being hit by a car among the biggest worries.

The bill also introduces RBTs for electric and non-electric bicycle riders, with fines for low-range, mid-range and high-range drink-riding ranging from $500 to $6676.

This would not include demerit point or other licence penalties, even though all e-bike and e-scooter riders would have to hold at least a learner’s car licence or interstate or international equivalent.

Riders would be banned from riding for eight hours after being charged with a drink-riding offence.

The bill’s explanatory notes said there were 12 deaths involving e-mobility devices in 2025, including eight on e-scooters and three deaths involving non-compliant e-motorbikes, which are already illegal to ride on public paths and roads.

There was one fatality involving a legal e-bike. This involved a nine-year-old boy, riding on a footpath with his dad, who was killed when hit by a minivan driver who mounted the kerb.

The committee will accept submissions on the bill from Friday.

When passed, the laws will come into effect from July, with a six-month transition period to ensure devices are legally compliant, including making sure e-scooters cannot exceed 25km/h.

Edit: So, will Crisafuckwit and Mickelturd take responsibility when there are more cyclist deaths? Fuck this shitty government.

Posted by fluffy_101994

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27 Comments

  1. Shi-Stad_Development on

    Wouldn’t have been a problem if we had just built sperated bike lanes

  2. Electrical_Age_7483 on

    Look forward to holding up a huge line of traffic and blaming the government 

  3. kaiserfleisch on

    This article really nails the worst aspect of this bill, that it will encourage increased road usage.

    (I hope Clotilde sticks with cycling, even if she needs to ride a regular bicycle.)

  4. So the speed limit will be lower than the minimum safe speed recommended by TMR?

    Idiots.

  5. Nervous-Marsupial-82 on

    So fucking stupid, 10km/h is a slow run. Will I get booked on foot running my normal 5k speed

  6. Would a coal powered pedal assist bicycle be limited given the proposed laws only target e-things? I have an idea…

    Globalise the roads! (With very slow ebikes)

  7. GustavSnapper on

    I for one encourage an army of 17 year olds riding e-scooters/bikes at a maximum of 25kph in all lanes on Gympie road during peak hour every single day forever.

  8. Dismal-core111 on

    I wouldn’t ride an escooter down a busy main road on the road, I like not being run over

  9. Some-Operation-9059 on

    What an amazing protest this could be. 
    Get all you e-bike riders to create some traffic snarls at peak hour times. I’d even get one and ride along. 

  10. Quoted “bicycles would become unstable below 11kph” on the transports-mains website. Proceeds to limit speed to 10kph.

    So we can all sue the gov for causing the crashes?

    Firstly, all these e-* related accidents are caused by idiots not obeying the existing rules.

    Only allow people holding a learner and above is all that’s needed.

    2nd, taking all illegal e-motorbikes off the road and fine parents $10k for kids caught.

    Don’t penalise those who are doing the RIGHT things.

  11. So instead of pedestrians getting hit by bikes we get bikes getting hit by cars? A painted line is not cycling infrastructure. Protected bike lanes on roads only please.

  12. Reallytalldude on

    Would this apply to Kedron Brook Bikeway, which despite the name is a shared path, and has no immediate parallel road to ride on?

    And what if I get caught doing a staggering 25km/h on that bikeway – that is 15km/h over the limit. Would the car rules apply ie chance of losing my car license?

  13. RudeOrganization550 on

    Wow, what a surprise!! It’s ironic the premier said during the last election campaign – quoting him:

    – “We will bust congestion and get Queensland moving.”
    – ⁠“Queenslanders are spending too long stuck in traffic, and we’re going to fix it.”

  14. It would be cool if we could charge the transport Minister and premier for when this inevitably kills/maims people.

  15. MaroochyRiverDreamin on

    The government: “Get bicycles off the footpath, the road isn’t safe either, also cycle more to use less petrol.”

  16. What a stupid idea.
    Inside the city limits it too dangerous due to congestion.

    Outside its that the traffic is too fast and close.

    Plus there are ford Ranger drivers ..

  17. piespiesandmorepies on

    Ok. So 12 deaths have caused a knee jerk reaction to e-scooters/bikes, but, how many people died in car accidents last year? Why is that not causing all sorts of jerked knees?

  18. Great reporting by Brisbane Times. This seems to be the only Masthead actually covering the “nuances” here: how e-motorbikes are markedly different than normal, compliant, pedal-assist e-bikes. And how this bill stands to fuck shit up for no tangible benefit

  19. So obviously e-bikes and e-scooters needed updated regulations but what the hell are they doing with this? To do something like these regulations they want to proceed with without the infrastructure to support it (ie. way more bike/scooter only paths), and literally forcing them onto roads is causing more problems than it solves.

  20. As a cyclist, it doesn’t make sense to have one speed limit for e-bikes, and another for regular bikes. Both can do similar damage. Even on dedicated cycle paths, some e-bikes are going so much faster than standard bikes that they are a hazard (and they never ring their bell before passing). Just keep it simple with a 25km/h limit, and then maybe 15km/h where it’s crowded or passing pedestrians. Easy.
    If people want to go faster than 25km/h they should get a road compliant vehicle that meets safety standards. It’s stupid having all this requirement on motorbikes/ conventional scooters, but not e-bikes. Also…. Most e-bikes cost as much as a small motorbike, so either take it easy on a footpath or get a motorbike.

  21. davidtheexcellent on

    I remain adamant that the transport minister shouldn’t get access to a vehicle. They need to commute by public and active transport. If it’s inadequate to do the job, then it’s inadequate for the public to do theirs.

  22. Director_Squirtle on

    I despise the lumping of e-bikes (pedal assist) and these electric motor bikes. I had knee surgery last year, and riding my e-bike has been the thing that has helped me get back the muscle mass I had lost. Especially since I throughly enjoyed cycling (recreationally) prior to my injury years ago. And my ex-Beam escooter was a god send when I didn’t have a car and was yet to have surgery.

    To relate to near misses; yesterday I was riding home from work, on the road as the bike path just ends, I was almost hit (like less than a meter) by a Land Rover who “over took me”. I feel like we need stricter laws on car drivers to go along side these “laws”, because the amount of drivers I’ve seen actively driving or parking in a bike lane is insane.

  23. Toomanynightshifts on

    Given the complete inability for Tradies and SUV drivers to regulate their emotions on the road, this is going to keep us in Emergency busy.

    Terrible idea without building the proper infrastructure.