

Table of Contents
Quick Overview
Both the ENVO ST50 and the Mokwheel Asphalt ST are 48V step-through commuters built around 500W rear-hub motors, hydraulic disc brakes, and a genuinely accessible low step-over frame. On paper, they look remarkably similar — and that's exactly what makes this comparison worth your time.
The Mokwheel Asphalt ST arrives at an attractive price point (approximately $2,050 CAD at current exchange rates, though no official CAD storefront exists), and it earns its credentials: wider 2.4" tires, 100mm suspension travel, dual torque + cadence sensor system, and an included rack and fenders make it a well-specified machine. If you're in the US, or you have a local shop willing to service a grey-market import, it's genuinely compelling.
The ENVO ST50, built in Burnaby, BC by ENVO Drive, plays a different game. UL 2849 safety certification, a 180 kg payload rating (vs 136 kg for the Mokwheel), dual-battery capability for up to 200 km of range, 9-speed Shimano gearing, CANBUS diagnostics, and a full national Canadian dealer network change the ownership experience in ways that aren't visible in a spec sheet.
Full Spec Comparison
| Specification | ENVO ST50 | Mokwheel Asphalt ST |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $2,679 CAD | ~$2,050 CAD est. (USD $1,499) |
| Frame | Hydroformed 6061 aluminum, S/L (5'0"–6'6") | Aluminum 6061, step-through |
| Motor | Brushless geared rear hub, 500W / 750W peak | Brushless rear hub, 500W / 860W peak |
| Torque | ~60–80 Nm | 70+ Nm |
| Sensor | ✓ Dual torque + cadence sensor | ✓ Dual torque + cadence sensor |
| Battery | 48V 15Ah / 720 Wh, LG cells, removable & lockable | 48V 14.7Ah / ~706 Wh, removable |
| Dual Battery | ✓ Yes — up to 200 km | ✗ No |
| Range | Up to 150 km (PAS 1) / 200 km dual battery | 42–96 km (claimed 80–96 km; real-world ~42–85 km) |
| Max Speed | 32 km/h default / 45 km/h Class 3 unlockable | 45 km/h Class 3 — must de-rate for Canada |
| Payload | ★ 180 kg (400 lbs) | 136 kg (300 lbs) |
| Weight | ~28 kg | ~28.5 kg (63 lbs) |
| Brakes | Tektro HD-E350 hydraulic disc (motor cut-off) | Tektro HD-E350 hydraulic disc |
| Gears | ★ Shimano Altus 9-speed, 48T / 11–36T | Shimano 7-speed, 44T, 170mm crank |
| Tires | CST 27.5" × 1.95" | ★ 27.5" × 2.4" (wider) |
| Fork | 80mm travel, lockable suspension | ★ 100mm travel, adjustable |
| Display | Color, Bluetooth, ENVO app, CANBUS diagnostics | Color LED display |
| Lights | 300 lm integrated front; brake-activated rear | Integrated front & rear (brake-activated) |
| Rear Rack | 25 kg standard / 85 kg oversized option | Included (standard capacity) |
| Fenders | Available | ✓ Included |
| UL 2849 | ✓ SGS Listed (SGSNA/24/SZ/00099) | ✗ Not confirmed |
| Canadian Dealer | ✓ National network | ✗ US direct only |
| CAD Storefront | ✓ envodrive.com | ✗ USD pricing only |
| Warranty | ENVO standard + dealer-backed | 2-year limited (mail-in, no local service) |
*Mokwheel CAD price is estimated from USD $1,499 at ~1.37 exchange rate. No official CAD storefront or pricing is available.
Performance & Motor
Both bikes run 500W-rated brushless rear-hub motors, and both deliver the kind of low-end torque that makes step-through commuters genuinely fun on hills. The Mokwheel's 860W peak output edges slightly ahead of the ENVO's 750W continuous, though in real-world riding at Canadian-legal assist levels, that difference rarely surfaces. Both bikes use a dual torque + cadence sensor system that delivers a natural, progressive pedal feel — a genuine advantage over simpler cadence-only PAS systems.
ENVO ST50: 750W peak motor with dual torque + cadence sensor for natural pedal feel
The ENVO ST50's dual torque + cadence sensor system provides solid responsiveness and pairs with a thumb throttle that is particularly useful for low-speed manoeuvring in traffic. Both are well-executed; neither feels artificial at moderate speeds. The key differentiators here are elsewhere: gearing depth, fork travel, and tire width.
ENVO ST50 — Performance Strengths
- 750W / ~60–80 Nm torque
- Dual torque + cadence sensor system
- Thumb throttle (helpful in traffic)
- 9-speed Shimano Altus — wider gear range
- 48T chainring for high-speed efficiency
- Lockable 80mm fork — firm & predictable on pavement
- CANBUS real-time motor diagnostics
Mokwheel Asphalt ST — Performance Strengths
- 860W peak output
- Dual torque + cadence sensor system
- 100mm fork — more bump absorption Win
- 27.5" × 2.4" tires — better grip & stability Win
- 70+ Nm torque
For urban pavement riders, the ENVO's narrower 2.35" tires and lockable fork are a feature, not a limitation — they roll faster on smooth surfaces. If you frequently navigate gravel paths, mixed-surface trails, or rough northern roads, the Mokwheel's 100mm travel fork and 2.4" tire combination is genuinely superior. Credit where it's due.
One Canadian-specific note: the Mokwheel ships Class 3 (45 km/h) from the factory. To be street-legal across Canadian provinces, it must be de-rated to 32 km/h before use — something ENVO handles from the factory, with an optional Class 3 unlock available. Read more about Canadian e-bike regulations in our guide on things to consider when buying an e-bike.
Range & Battery
ENVO ST50 (with Cargo Rack)'s 720 Wh battery is user-removable, lockable, and dual-battery capable
On paper, these bikes are nearly identical in battery capacity — 720 Wh vs ~706 Wh. At PAS 1 on flat terrain, both can achieve impressive range figures. The ENVO's claim of 150 km (PAS 1) is plausible given LG cell quality and efficient motor management; real-world riding at mixed assist levels typically yields 60–90 km, which covers a week of typical urban commutes on a single charge.
The Mokwheel's 80–96 km claimed range should be read carefully. Independent riders report 42–85 km depending on assist level, rider weight, and terrain — the gap between PAS 1 and PAS 3 can be substantial. With a 136 kg payload limit, heavier riders (particularly those approaching or exceeding 100 kg with gear) may see the lower end of that range more often.
Battery quality matters for long-term ownership too. ENVO's use of LG cells with UL 2271 listing and a removable, lockable design that integrates into the downtube is a premium detail. Both batteries are removable for indoor charging — important in Canadian winters where garage temperatures can damage lithium cells.
Safety Certifications & Payload
This section matters more than many buyers realize. Lithium battery fires in e-bikes are the leading cause of fire-related fatalities in several North American cities. Certification isn't bureaucratic box-ticking — it's the difference between a battery that has been independently tested to failure and one that hasn't.
ENVO ST50 — Safety Profile
- UL 2849 — Full system safety cert (SGS Listed: SGSNA/24/SZ/00099) Win
- UL 2271 — Battery pack certified
- Motor cut-off on brake lever activation
- 180 kg (400 lb) payload — accommodates nearly all riders with cargo Win
- CANBUS diagnostics — real-time battery health monitoring
- Adjustable rear kickstand
Mokwheel Asphalt ST — Safety Profile
- UL 2849 status not confirmed Gap
- No official IP weatherproofing rating published
- Motor cut-off on brake lever activation
- 136 kg (300 lb) payload — adequate for most solo riders
- No CANBUS diagnostics
The 44 kg payload gap between these two bikes is not a footnote. A 90 kg rider carrying 20 kg of commuter gear and groceries is already at 110 kg — well within ENVO's limit, but approaching two-thirds of Mokwheel's maximum. For e-cargo applications, family errands, or larger-framed riders, the ENVO ST50's 180 kg limit provides a meaningful safety margin. You can explore the full range of UL 2849-certified e-bikes at EbikeBC to understand what the standard covers.
Components & Build Quality
Both bikes use Tektro HD-E350 hydraulic disc brakes — the same brake — so stopping power is a wash. Frame material is 6061 aluminum on both. Where they diverge is in the details that affect daily riding texture.
Mokwheel Asphalt ST features a 100mm suspension fork and 2.4" wide tires
The Mokwheel Asphalt ST wins this category on suspension and tire specifications. A 100mm travel adjustable fork over the ENVO's 80mm lockable unit absorbs more vertical impact — pothole-heavy city streets and gravel shoulders benefit noticeably. Pair that with 27.5" × 2.4" tires versus the ENVO's 2.35" CST rubber, and the Mokwheel has a more comfortable, planted ride feel on imperfect surfaces. The included rack and fenders also add practical day-one value.
The ENVO ST50 counters with drivetrain depth: Shimano Altus 9-speed with an 11–36T cassette and 48T chainring gives a wider gear range than the Mokwheel's 7-speed setup, which matters on sustained climbs or when carrying heavy loads. The hydroformed aluminum frame (not just extruded), colour Bluetooth display with ENVO app integration, and CANBUS diagnostics system reflect a more deeply engineered machine overall.
For a deeper look at what separates good and great e-bike builds, see our guide on how to choose the best electric bike and our best urban electric bikes roundup.
Canadian Support & Accessibility
This is where the comparison becomes straightforward for most Canadian buyers. The ENVO ST50 is made by ENVO Drive, a Canadian company headquartered in Burnaby, BC. Their bikes are sold through a national dealer network — meaning you can walk into a shop, test ride the bike, ask questions about your specific commute, and bring it back for warranty service without shipping it across a border.
ENVO ST50's step-through frame fits riders 5'0"–6'6" in two sizes
The Mokwheel Asphalt ST is sold by a US-based company through mokwheel.com. They ship to Canada, and the bike can arrive in reasonable condition. But there is no Canadian dealer, no CAD pricing, no storefront in Canada, and no in-person service. When something goes wrong — and with any e-bike, eventually something will — your options are to ship the bike or affected components to the US, handle repairs yourself, or find a local shop willing to work on an unfamiliar brand without parts access.
ENVO's Canadian ecosystem extends to after-purchase support too: their technical articles on choosing the best commuter e-bike and ENVO e-bike maintenance are written for Canadian conditions. Parts are stocked at envodrive.com with Canadian shipping.
It's also worth considering what other Canadian-first options look like in the urban mobility space. For riders who want an enclosed or weather-protected commuter, Veemo offers covered e-trikes designed for Canadian all-season use — including the Veemo SE — which addresses a different but complementary segment of the Canadian commuter market.
Long-Term Support & Parts
Long-term e-bike ownership is measured in years of commuting, not the first few rides. Three years from purchase, you may need a replacement brake cable, a new cassette, a controller, or a battery cell replacement. Where you buy determines how easily you can get those things.
For the ENVO ST50, parts are stocked domestically. ENVO's service network means a trained technician can diagnose motor or battery issues in-person using the bike's CANBUS system — a real diagnostic advantage. Shimano Altus components are also widely available at any Canadian bike shop.
Mokwheel Asphalt ST's dual torque + cadence sensor system
For the Mokwheel Asphalt ST, Shimano 7-speed components are similarly available, but proprietary motor or battery parts will need to come from Mokwheel directly — which means international shipping, customs, lead times, and no guarantee of long-term parts availability for a relatively new brand. The 2-year limited warranty is reasonable, but "limited" and "mail-in only" are critical qualifiers for Canadian buyers.
If long-term support matters to your purchase decision — and for a $2,000+ bike, it should — our guide on things to consider when buying an e-bike walks through exactly these questions. You can also browse the full urban commuter e-bike collection at EbikeBC for Canadian-supported alternatives.
Category Scores
Scored out of 10, weighted for Canadian commuter priorities:
ENVO ST50 — Overall
Mokwheel Asphalt ST — Overall
The Verdict
ENVO ST50 — 180 kg payload, UL 2849 certified, national Canadian dealer support
The Mokwheel Asphalt ST is a genuinely well-built machine, and if you're a US-based rider or a technically capable cyclist comfortable sourcing your own parts, it represents strong value at its price point. The 100mm suspension fork, wide 2.4" tires, dual sensing system, and included rack and fenders are real advantages you'll feel on imperfect roads.
But for Canadian commuters making a long-term ownership decision, the ENVO ST50 is the more complete package. UL 2849 full-system safety certification, a 180 kg payload that accommodates virtually any rider and cargo combination, dual-battery capability for up to 200 km of range, 9-speed gearing, CANBUS diagnostics, and a national dealer network that means warranty service stays in Canada — these aren't marketing bullets. They are the practical difference between a bike you ride for two years and one you ride for ten.
At $2,679 CAD with all the above included and backed by a Canadian company that stocks parts domestically, the ENVO ST50 is the step-through commuter we'd recommend to most Canadian riders in 2026.
Ready to Ride the ENVO ST50?
Available now through EbikeBC and ENVO's national Canadian dealer network. Test ride it at a dealer near you, or explore the full urban commuter lineup online.
Shop ENVO ST50 at EbikeBC Browse All Urban CommutersRelated Reading
- How to Choose the Best Electric Bike — EbikeBC
- Best Urban Electric Bikes 2025 — EbikeBC
- Things to Consider When Buying an E-Bike — EbikeBC
- UL 2849-Certified E-Bikes — EbikeBC
- Choosing the Best Commuter E-Bike — ENVO Drive
- Maximising ENVO ST50 Range — ENVO Drive
- Veemo SE — All-Season Enclosed E-Trike for Canadian Commuters
Prices and specifications current as of March 2026. CAD price for Mokwheel Asphalt ST is an estimate based on USD $1,499 at prevailing exchange rates; no official CAD pricing is published by Mokwheel. Always verify current pricing and certification status with the manufacturer before purchase. EbikeBC is an authorized ENVO dealer.



















