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Motorized Bicycle Laws in North Dakota

Motorized Bicycle Laws in North Dakota are easiest to follow when you split the question into two lanes: electric bicycles and motorized bicycles / mopeds. North Dakota now gives electric bicycles their own class 1, 2, and 3 definitions, path-access rules, and equipment rules. But a gas-powered or moped-style bike that fits the state's motorized-bicycle definition still falls into the permit, registration, title, insurance, and under-18 helmet lane.

Note: This North Dakota guide is based on current North Dakota Century Code definitions plus current NDDOT motorcycle-license and registration guidance. It is informational only and not legal advice.

Last reviewed / source-checked: 2026-03-16

North Dakota-specific caution: The biggest legal split in North Dakota is whether your machine is an electric bicycle or a motorized bicycle. The state specifically excludes electric bicycles from the motorized-bicycle definition, so riders should not mix those rule sets together.

Quick answer: are motorized bicycles legal in North Dakota?

  • Electric bicycles: Yes. North Dakota defines class 1, class 2, and class 3 electric bicycles separately from motorized bicycles and lets them use bicycle paths and multi-use paths unless a governmental entity with jurisdiction prohibits them.
  • Motorized bicycles / mopeds: Yes, if the vehicle fits the state's definition and the rider follows the permit, registration, title, and insurance rules.
  • Motorized-bicycle definition: Two or three wheels, pedals or footrests, up to 2 brake horsepower, up to 49.98cc if gas-powered, top speed no more than 30 mph on level ground, automatic/direct drive, and no more than 32 inches wide.
  • License / permit rule for motorized bicycles: You need a valid permit or license of any class, and North Dakota can issue a specific motorized-bicycle operator's permit starting at age 14.
  • Registration / title / insurance: North Dakota registration law and NDDOT guidance treat mopeds as registered vehicles that need title work and liability insurance.
  • Helmet rule: Riders under 18 on a motorized bicycle must wear a DOT-standard helmet. For class 3 e-bikes, riders under 18 must wear a safety helmet.
  • Path rule: Electric bicycles can use bicycle paths and multi-use paths unless locally prohibited. A motorized bicycle belongs in the roadway vehicle lane, not the bicycle-path lane.
Motorized Bicycle Laws in North Dakota road riding overview
North Dakota riders first need to know whether they are in the electric-bicycle lane or the registered motorized-bicycle lane.

Motorized Bicycle Laws in North Dakota: what North Dakota calls your ride

North Dakota is clearer than many older state summaries because the code now separates e-bikes from mopeds.

  • Electric bicycle: A bicycle with fully operable pedals, a seat or saddle, and a motor of 750 watts or less that meets the class 1, 2, or 3 definitions.
  • Class 1: Pedal-assist only, with assistance ending at 20 mph.
  • Class 2: Can propel the bicycle without pedaling, with assistance ending at 20 mph.
  • Class 3: Pedal-assist only, with assistance ending at 28 mph.
  • Motorized bicycle: A 2- or 3-wheeled vehicle with pedals or footrests, up to 2 brake horsepower, up to 49.98cc if combustion-powered, a top speed of no more than 30 mph, automatic/direct drive, and a width of no more than 32 inches.

That definition split is the core of Motorized Bicycle Laws in North Dakota. The North Dakota code expressly says the term motorized bicycle does not include an electric bicycle.

Motorized Bicycle Laws in North Dakota for electric bicycles

North Dakota uses a real class 1, 2, and 3 e-bike framework

North Dakota's definitions section now spells out all three e-bike classes instead of forcing riders to guess whether the state recognizes them.

Electric bicycles get their own equipment and labeling rules

Beginning January 1, 2022, North Dakota requires manufacturers or distributors to place a permanent label on an electric bicycle showing:

  • the designated class
  • the maximum assisted speed
  • the motor wattage

The statute also requires the electric motor to disengage when the rider stops pedaling or when the brakes are applied.

North Dakota allows e-bikes on bicycle paths and multi-use paths unless locally prohibited

This is one of the most useful state-specific rules. North Dakota says an individual may operate an electric bicycle on any bicycle path or multi-use path unless otherwise prohibited by a governmental entity having jurisdiction. That means local trail managers, park agencies, or cities can still post narrower rules.

Class 3 riders have extra equipment and helmet rules

North Dakota requires a class 3 electric bicycle to have a functioning speedometer. It also says an individual under 18 may not operate a class 3 electric bicycle unless wearing a safety helmet.

North Dakota's e-bike lane is different from its moped lane

The cited e-bike statutes focus on classification, equipment, and path access. North Dakota's permit, registration, title, and liability-insurance rules in this source packet are tied to motorized bicycles / mopeds, not to the separate electric-bicycle definition.

Motorized Bicycle Laws in North Dakota for mopeds and motorized bicycles

North Dakota's motorized-bicycle definition is broader than just “a bike with a small motor”

To stay in the motorized-bicycle lane, the vehicle has to meet the state's full definition. That means no more than 49.98cc if it uses a combustion engine, no more than 2 brake horsepower, no more than 30 mph on a level surface, automatic/direct drive, and a maximum width of 32 inches.

You need a valid permit or license to ride a motorized bicycle on public roads

North Dakota's driver-license law says the director may issue a motorized bicycle operator's permit to an applicant who is at least 14 years old. To get that permit, the rider must pay the required fee, pass a written exam on traffic laws and the rules of the road, and satisfy the eyesight requirement.

If you already have an operator's license, temporary permit, instruction permit, or motorcycle permit, the statute says you do not need a separate motorized-bicycle operator's permit.

North Dakota registration law treats mopeds as registered vehicles

North Dakota law imposes an additional motorcycle-safety-education fee at the time of motorized bicycle and motorcycle registration. The current NDDOT registration manual also treats mopeds as titled and registered vehicles, with a registration/license fee, title fee, and applicable excise/disposal fees at titling.

Liability insurance is required on a registered moped

NDDOT's registration manual says liability insurance is required on a registered moped. The same manual notes that a motorcycle or moped is required to have liability insurance but is not required to carry no-fault insurance like a standard passenger car.

Riders under 18 must wear a DOT helmet on a motorized bicycle

North Dakota's motorcycle-rider equipment rule says no one under 18 may operate or ride on a motorcycle without a DOT-standard helmet. In the motorcycle chapter, North Dakota says the term motorcycle includes motorized bicycles, so the under-18 helmet rule applies to motorized-bicycle riders too.

Passenger rules still matter

A rider cannot carry a passenger unless the vehicle is designed for more than one person. If it carries a passenger, the vehicle must also have passenger footrests unless the passenger is in a sidecar or enclosed cab.

What is different in North Dakota?

  • North Dakota makes a clean legal split between electric bicycles and motorized bicycles instead of lumping them together.
  • North Dakota expressly says a motorized bicycle does not include an electric bicycle.
  • North Dakota gives e-bikes unusually clear bicycle-path and multi-use-path access by default, unless a local authority prohibits it.
  • North Dakota lets riders qualify for a specific motorized-bicycle operator's permit at age 14, which is more specific than a vague “you need some kind of license” summary.
  • North Dakota's moped lane is tied to registration, title work, and liability insurance, not just engine size and speed.
  • North Dakota applies one helmet rule to class 3 e-bikes under 18 and another to motorized-bicycle riders under 18 through the motorcycle chapter.

Common rider situations under Motorized Bicycle Laws in North Dakota

If you bought a 750W commuter e-bike with pedals

Your first question is whether it fits class 1, 2, or 3. If it does, North Dakota treats it in the electric-bicycle lane rather than the motorized-bicycle lane.

If you want to ride a bike path or multi-use trail

North Dakota is fairly friendly to e-bikes here. The statewide default allows an electric bicycle on a bicycle path or multi-use path unless the local authority that controls the facility says otherwise. Check posted local rules before assuming every trail allows every class.

If you bought a small gas-powered moped that tops out at 30 mph

You are likely in the motorized-bicycle lane, not the e-bike lane. That means you should think about permit or license status, registration, title paperwork, and liability insurance before riding on public roads.

If you are 14 to 17 and want to ride legally

North Dakota can issue a motorized-bicycle operator's permit at age 14. If you are under 18 on a motorized bicycle, wear a DOT-standard helmet. If you are under 18 on a class 3 e-bike, the e-bike statute also requires a helmet.

If you are carrying a passenger on a small motorized bike

Make sure the bike is actually designed for a passenger. North Dakota requires proper seating, and passenger footrests are required unless the passenger is in a sidecar or enclosed cab.

Motorized Bicycle Laws in North Dakota helmet rules guide
North Dakota helmet rules differ depending on whether you are on a class 3 e-bike or a motorized bicycle treated through the motorcycle chapter.

Local path and ordinance caveat

North Dakota's statewide rule is helpful, but it is not the end of the story. A city, park system, or other governmental entity with jurisdiction can prohibit electric bicycles on a bicycle path or multi-use path. That means the safest habit is to read posted trail rules, especially on managed recreation paths.

Official North Dakota sources

Related reading

Disclaimer

This page is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. North Dakota statutes, NDDOT procedures, and local path or trail rules can change. Verify the current rules before riding on public roads, bicycle paths, multi-use trails, or municipal property.

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