EN15194 Certified Electric Bikes Australia | EWHIP Safety Certifications

Australia's Most Certified Street-Legal Electric Bikes — EN15194, CE & IEC 62133 Approved

Every e-bike sold in Australia is not created equal — and the certification papers prove it.

At EWHIP, every bike we build has been independently tested and certified to the highest Australian and international safety standards. Not because we had to. Because we built this brand around one belief: you should never have to choose between riding legal and riding great.

What Is EN15194 Certification — and Why It Matters for Australian Riders?

EN15194 is the global gold standard for electric bicycle safety. It's the certification that determines whether an e-bike is classified as a pedal-assisted bicycle under Australian road rules — meaning you can ride it on public roads, bike paths, and cycleways without registration, a licence, or insurance.

Without EN15194, your e-bike is legally classified as a motor vehicle. Ride it on a public road and you risk:

On-the-spot fines and confiscation

Unregistered vehicle penalties (up to $5,000+ in NSW)

Your home insurance being voided if a fire occurs

Every EWHIP — The Boom and The Captain — carries full EN15194 certification. Our 250W Bafang motors are tested to cut out at 25km/h, keeping you fully compliant across every Australian state and territory.


En15194 & IEC 62133 Battery Certification — Your Home's Best Protection

The 2026 NSW Government Battery Safety Mandate didn't come from nowhere. Cheap, uncertified lithium-ion batteries are behind a wave of devastating house fires across Sydney and Australia's major cities.

EWHIP runs Samsung 48V 20Ah lithium-ion cells — certified to both IEC 62133 and EN15194:2023 (the toughest safety standard for e-bike battery systems) and CE (the European product safety benchmark). These aren't marketing claims. They're documented, third-party laboratory test results.

What this means practically:

No thermal runaway risk — Samsung cells are tested to withstand extreme heat, impact, and overcharge conditions

Safe to charge indoors — in your apartment, garage, or strata building without violating body corporate rules

Compliant with 2026 NSW mandates from day one — no retrofitting, no workarounds needed


IEC 62133-2:2017 — The Battery Test Most Brands Skip

IEC 62133-2:2017 is the international safety standard specifically for lithium-ion and lithium polymer batteries in portable applications. It tests for short-circuit protection, overcharge, forced discharge, and thermal abuse.

Most discount e-bike brands selling into Australia have never heard of it.

EWHIP batteries carry this certification. It's the reason our bikes charge safely every time, and the reason our customers have had zero battery incidents in over a year of riding.


What Australia's 2026 E-Bike Laws Mean for You

From 1 February 2026, the NSW Government made battery certification mandatory — not optional. Similar regulations are being adopted nationally.

Here's the simple version:

Uncertified e-bikes are now illegal to sell and ride on NSW public roads

Uncertified batteries cannot legally be charged in strata buildings across most of Sydney

Fines and confiscation apply to non-compliant bikes regardless of where you bought them

If your current bike doesn't carry EN15194, IEC and CE marks — it's a liability, not an asset.

EWHIP was built from the ground up to be fully compliant. Our customers ride, commute, and charge with total peace of mind.


Certified Doesn't Mean Compromise

There's a myth in the Australian e-bike market that going legal means going slow or going plain. We built EWHIP to destroy that myth.

The Boom — a rugged EN15194-certified fat tyre café racer with 20x4.0" puncture-resistant tyres and hydraulic suspension, built for Sydney commutes and coastal trails alike.

The Captain — a retro electric beach cruiser with the same certified Samsung battery system, built for riders who want vintage style and zero legal stress.

Both are 100% street legal. Both are built for Australian roads. Both look nothing like anything else on the path.

Every certificate on this page represents a test your bike passed — and a risk your competitor's bike didn't bother taking.

Ride legal. Ride safe. Ride EWHIP.

See Our Official Safety Testing

Electrical Product Safety Certification Scheme IEC 62133-2:2017

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Q: Are EWHIP electric bikes road legal in all Australian states? Yes. EWHIP bikes are EN15194 certified with 250W Bafang motors that cut out at 25km/h — meeting the legal definition of a pedal-assist bicycle in every Australian state and territory.

Q: What is EN15194 certification? EN15194 is the international standard for electrically power-assisted cycles (EPACs). It certifies that an e-bike's motor, battery, and control systems meet strict safety and performance requirements for road-legal use.

Q: Are EWHIP batteries safe to charge in apartments and strata buildings? Yes. Our IEC and CE certified Samsung batteries comply with 2026 NSW Battery Safety Mandates and are approved for indoor charging in residential and strata buildings.

Q: What happens if I ride an uncertified e-bike in NSW? From February 2026, uncertified e-bikes are illegal on NSW public roads. Penalties include on-the-spot fines, vehicle confiscation, and potential insurance voiding.

Shop Our 100% Certified Street-Legal Range Now

Woman with electric bike featuring fat tyres and brown saddle on a sandy beach path.