The under-$2,000 Australian e-bike market is bigger than it was 12 months ago, and most of the new entrants are good. The question is no longer "is the cheap one OK", it is "which cheap one is right for your specific commute". Three of them have been through our test ride. Here is how to choose.
The cheap one we would actually buy: Eunorau META26 X2.0
The META26 X2.0 lands at $1,869 AUD on the Eunorau Australia site and is the only sub-$2,000 e-bike we have ridden in this bracket that uses a torque sensor instead of a cadence sensor. That single component decision is the difference between feeling like an electric bike and feeling like a treadmill that hates you. The 250 W mid-drive is AU-compliant out of the box, the step-through frame fits a child seat without contortion, and the battery is on a locking mount you can pull off and bring inside. Verdict 4 out of 5.
The folding one that fits your boot: Engwe T14
If your commute involves a train and then a 2 km walk you do not want to do, the Engwe T14 is the answer. It folds, it weighs 23 kg, the 350 W Bafang hub will get you up most Australian suburban inclines without melodrama, and at $1,299 AUD with the CARTELLTV discount it is the cheapest serious entry to the e-bike conversation that does not feel like a compromise on day one. Range claim is 28 km. Real range loaded with a backpack and one steep hill is closer to 22. Verdict 3.5 out of 5.
The fat-tyre one with the asterisks: Engwe EP2-Pro
The EP2-Pro is the one we cannot fully endorse and cannot ignore either. The 750 W motor is too powerful to be road-legal in Australia unrestricted. Engwe ships it in a 250 W AU mode but it is one app setting away from being illegal on a public path. If you are an off-road owner with private property and you are buying it for your own land, the fat tyres and the 60 km range are excellent value at $1,899 AUD. If you are buying it for a public commute, get something else. Verdict 3.5 out of 5.
What we would actually pick
For a normal Australian commute (under 10 km, mixed bike path and road, sometimes rain), the Eunorau META26 X2.0 is the right answer. The torque sensor and the step-through frame are the difference between riding it every day and riding it until the novelty wears off in week three. Save the extra $570 over the cheapest option. You will use the bike more often, and the bike will outlive both of the others.
What to watch
The Australian e-bike scene under $2,000 is going to keep getting better. Reid, Lekker, and at least two Chinese brands have product going through compliance testing right now. We will write again when something lands that beats the META26 on price-per-feature.


