Best Electric Scooters in Saudi Arabia 2026: Top 10, SAR Prices & Where to Buy
Most “best scooter in Saudi Arabia” lists are spec sheets copied off a manufacturer’s website by someone who has never touched the machine. This one is different.
We run an e-scooter and e-bike repair workshop in the UAE, and we’ve had over 500 scooters on the bench β the exact same models sold here on Noon Saudi, Amazon.sa and at Jarir. Gulf heat and Gulf roads punish a scooter the same way on both sides of the border, so what fails in a Dubai summer fails in a Riyadh one too β often worse, because inland Saudi gets hotter.
This is a buyer’s guide built on that repair experience β honest about what lasts, what doesn’t, and which scooter fits your use, with real SAR pricing and where to actually buy in the Kingdom.

β‘ Quick Picks β Jump to Your Winner
In Saudi Arabia, e-scooters are legal to ride but only in designated areas β cycle tracks, scooter lanes and approved zones, not public roads or sidewalks. The practical speed ceiling is around 20 km/h (5 km/h in parks), the minimum age is 17, and for ordinary low-power scooters no driving licence is currently required. The 25 km/h-class commuter scooters in this guide fit those limits. The two high-performance models at the end do not β treat them as private/off-road only.
How We Ranked These Scooters
We didn’t rank these off spec sheets. Every model here is one we’ve repaired, serviced or stripped down in our workshop. Here’s what actually shaped the order:
How the battery and motor behave above 40Β°C. Throttle fade and battery-management cut-offs in peak summer β a bigger factor inland in Riyadh than on the coast.
Which parts fail first, how often we see them, and how easily you can source spares for that brand in the Gulf.
Suspension over kerbs and pavement joins, tyre durability on hot asphalt, and how the folding hinge holds up over a couple of years.
Each scooter gets four scores: Value, Reliability (from our repair experience), Heat Performance, and Parts Availability. These are workshop judgments, not lab tests. One honest note: our hands-on data comes from the UAE. The mechanics, heat behaviour and reliability transfer directly to Saudi Arabia β but Saudi parts networks differ from the UAE’s, so treat the “Parts” score as a general read on the brand (mainstream Xiaomi/Segway = good in Riyadh and Jeddah via Jarir, Extra and official channels; niche brands = harder anywhere).
The Top 10: Ranked & Reviewed
The 4 Pro is the scooter we recommend more than any other β not because it’s flashy, but because it survives the Gulf. The 700W motor doesn’t throttle as hard in heat as cheaper options, the battery management copes well with high ambient temperatures, and it’s a mainstream model you can get serviced in Riyadh or Jeddah without hunting for obscure parts.
Range claims are optimistic as always β expect roughly 32β36 km in real Saudi riding, less on a brutal summer afternoon. But the build, braking and app make it the easiest scooter to recommend to almost anyone. And at 25 km/h it sits inside the designated-area limits without any fuss.
The most common scooter on our bench β not because it breaks, but because owners keep it long enough to eventually need a tyre or brake pad. That’s a good sign. The folding hinge is the only part that wants occasional tightening after 12β18 months of hard use. Mainstream enough that spares are easy across the Gulf.
- Mainstream β easy to service in KSA
- Holds up well above 40Β°C
- Smooth on pneumatic tyres
- Good app + firmware updates
- Range overstated by ~20%
- Heavy at 14.4 kg to carry
- IPX4 β not fully waterproof
If you ride every single day with real distance involved, the MAX G2 is the one. The self-healing inner tubes alone save you multiple puncture repairs a year on gritty Gulf roads. IPX5 shrugs off the rare downpour and the constant fine dust. And its long-range claim is the most honest in this roundup β real-world rides comfortably clear 50 km.
It’s heavy β 23.2 kg is a lot up stairs. But if you ride door-to-door and lock it at the other end, you won’t notice. One note: it can be set above 25 km/h, so keep it in the lower speed mode to stay within designated-area limits.
We don’t see many G2s for serious repairs β mostly tyre checks and software queries. When they do have issues, it’s usually the charging port after 18+ months. Segway parts are available in the Gulf but not always as fast as Xiaomi stock, so factor in a possible short wait.
- Self-healing tyres = no punctures
- Honest long range (50+ km real)
- IPX5 β dust and rain safe
- Smooth on bad roads
- 23 kg is hard to carry
- Pricier than Xiaomi
- Set speed mode to stay legal
The standard Xiaomi 4 (not Pro) is the entry point we’d actually recommend. Around SAR 1,000β1,200, solid build, same parts ecosystem as its bigger sibling, and light enough at 13.2 kg to carry properly. The 600W motor is plenty for flat Saudi city roads β you won’t miss the extra wattage unless you’re fighting a headwind on an open stretch.
Do not buy the generic no-name scooters at this price. They look like a Xiaomi, cost less, and we spend a lot of time fixing them β or telling people we can’t, because the parts simply don’t exist in the region.
Best parts-to-price ratio of any budget scooter. When something fails, it’s a quick fix. Common issues: brake cable stretch after ~6 months (a cheap fix) and tyre wear faster than the Pro. Nothing alarming for the money.
- Best price for a reliable brand
- Light for its tier
- Same parts network as Xiaomi Pro
- ~35 km range only
- No cruise control
- IPX4 β careful in rain
The 4 Ultra is Xiaomi’s long-range flagship and it earns the title. Dual suspension front and rear, DuraGel self-healing tyres, and a battery that delivers a real 50β55 km in Gulf conditions β the most honest long-range number we’ve seen at this price. The 940W motor handles the occasional incline without complaint.
Versus the MAX G2: slightly heavier to carry, but the Xiaomi parts ecosystem means any repair is faster and cheaper. If you’re choosing between these two for a long daily commute, this is the Xiaomi answer.
Newer model, so less long-term data than the 4 Pro β but what we’ve seen is solid. Dual suspension means fewer frame stress points over time, and the DuraGel tyres genuinely work; we’ve seen zero punctures on units through our shop. Heavy at ~21 kg but manageable for most riders.
- Honest 50β55 km real range
- Self-healing DuraGel tyres
- Dual suspension = smooth ride
- Xiaomi parts ecosystem
- ~21 kg β heavy to carry
- IPX4 β not full rain proof
- Premium price vs 4 Pro
Saudi rain is rare, but when it comes it dumps β and an IPX4 scooter caught in a flash storm is an expensive afternoon. Just as relevant here is dust: the E2 Plus’s IPX5 sealing also helps against the fine grit that gets into everything in the Gulf. It’s the lightest fully sealed scooter at this price.
The 300W motor is the trade-off. Fine for flat commutes, but it struggles on any real incline. If your route has elevation, look at the MAX G2 instead.
We rarely see these for water or dust damage, which says the IPX5 rating holds up. Most repairs are brake-related after a year-plus. Parts availability is decent but not as quick as Xiaomi.
- IPX5 β rain and dust safe
- Lightweight for daily carry
- Solid Segway build
- 300W weak on inclines
- Range lower than rivals
The Mi Pro 2 is older now, but it earns its spot for one reason: if anything breaks, you can fix it cheaply almost anywhere. Parts are common, every repair tech knows it, and tutorials exist in Arabic, English and a dozen other languages. It’s the Toyota Corolla of e-scooters.
It’s not the best scooter on paper anymore. But if you want something you can ride hard and repair without drama, nothing at this price comes close. Stock is getting patchier as newer models take over, so grab it from a reputable seller if you find one.
We could rebuild this one blindfolded. It’s the most-repaired model we see β not because it’s unreliable, but because it’s everywhere and owners keep it for years. Best parts availability of any scooter, full stop.
- Best parts availability
- Proven long-term reliability
- Lowest repair costs
- Older tech vs newer models
- Heavier than Mi 4
- Stock getting patchy
The G30LP sits between the budget Xiaomi crowd and the premium MAX G2. IPX5 rated, a proper 10-inch pneumatic ride, and solid Segway build without the G2’s price and weight. A good pick if you want Segway quality at a mid-range budget. Keep it in the lower speed mode for designated-area use.
Solid, predictable repairs. Tyre punctures are the most common issue β pneumatic tyres on gritty roads do get punctured. Segway parts lead times are a few days versus same-day for Xiaomi.
- IPX5 at this price
- Comfortable pneumatic ride
- Good brand support
- 350W weak on steep ground
- Heavy for mid-range
- Parts slower than Xiaomi
The cheapest sensible entry point β for lighter adults, students (remember the 17+ minimum) or anyone who values folding and carrying over outright range. The 20 km/h cap also means it naturally sits at the designated-area speed ceiling with no fuss.
The smaller battery degrades faster in heat than larger packs. After two Gulf summers, expect real range to drop noticeably. Battery replacement is possible, but at that point most owners upgrade instead. Fine as a light-duty starter, not a heavy daily commuter.
- Cheapest proper scooter here
- 20 km/h stays in legal zone
- Easy to carry & store
- Short real range
- Battery fades faster in heat
- Not for heavy commuting
At 60+ km/h this is far beyond the ~20 km/h designated-area limit. It is not legal to ride on cycle tracks, scooter lanes or public roads as a normal e-scooter. Treat it as a private-land / off-road machine and check requirements with the local authority before riding anywhere public.
This is the scooter for people who’ve outgrown city commuting and want something that can take desert tracks and gravel. Dual 1200W motors, full suspension and 11-inch tyres make it genuinely capable off asphalt. At 38 kg you’re not folding and carrying this β it lives locked up or in the back of a vehicle.
We can work on these, but parts take weeks to arrive. The dual-motor system generates real heat β we’ve seen thermal throttling on long summer runs. Keep firmware updated and don’t hammer it on a 45Β°C afternoon.
- Full suspension, any surface
- Huge range for long rides
- Built for serious use
- Not legal on public paths
- Parts hard to source
- 38 kg β not portable
The Dualtron Thunder 3 is here because the Gulf has a real population of performance-scooter buyers, and this is the benchmark. Dual 2700W motors, 90+ km real range, hydraulic disc brakes, and build quality that makes everything else feel like a toy.
Be completely clear on the legal reality: at 80+ km/h capability, this is nowhere near a designated-area scooter. You cannot ride it on cycle tracks or public roads in Saudi Arabia as a normal e-scooter β it’s a private-land / track machine. Buy it knowing that.
We service these but pre-order most parts β multi-week lead times for serious components. The hydraulic brakes need periodic bleeding; don’t skip it in Gulf heat. The build quality is genuinely exceptional for the money. Just know exactly what you’re buying.
- Best build quality on the market
- Extraordinary range and power
- Hydraulic brakes β best stopping
- Not legal on public paths
- 50 kg β cannot carry
- Parts very limited
- Serious investment

All 10 Scooters: Head-to-Head Comparison
Full Comparison β Top 10 Electric Scooters Saudi Arabia 2026
Indicative SAR Prices| Model | ~Price (SAR) | Real Range | Weight | IP | Legal on paths? | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xiaomi 4 Pro π₯ | ~1,799 | 32β36 km | 14.4 kg | IPX4 | Yes | 9.0 |
| Ninebot MAX G2 | ~2,399 | 50β55 km | 23.2 kg | IPX5 | Yes* | 8.8 |
| Xiaomi 4 | ~1,099 | 28β32 km | 13.2 kg | IPX4 | Yes | 8.6 |
| Xiaomi 4 Ultra | ~2,599 | 50β55 km | 21.0 kg | IPX4 | Yes | 8.5 |
| Ninebot E2 Plus | ~1,399 | 28β32 km | 13.0 kg | IPX5 | Yes | 8.3 |
| Xiaomi Mi Pro 2 | ~899 | 35β40 km | 14.2 kg | IPX4 | Yes | 8.2 |
| Ninebot MAX G30LP | ~1,899 | 35β38 km | 18.7 kg | IPX5 | Yes* | 8.0 |
| Xiaomi 4 Lite | ~749 | 16β20 km | ~13 kg | IPX4 | Yes | 7.7 |
| Kaabo Wolf Warrior 11 | ~5,999+ | 70β80 km | 38 kg | IPX4 | No | 7.5 |
| Dualtron Thunder 3 | ~9,999+ | 85β95 km | 50 kg | IPX5 | No | 7.2 |
*Capable of more than 25 km/h β keep it in the lower speed mode to stay within designated-area limits. Prices are indicative and include the effect of KSA VAT; confirm live before buying.
What to Avoid: The Workshop Blacklist
Here’s the part nobody tells you…
Every week we turn away customers with scooters we genuinely can’t help. Not because we don’t want to β because the parts don’t exist in the region, the makers publish no repair info, and the components match no standard.
No-name imports under SAR 700 β They look like Xiaomis. They’re not. When the battery management board fails β and it will, in summer β you’ve got a doorstop. No parts, no support, no fix.
“1000W” mystery scooters from marketplace third-parties β Power ratings are often fiction; the real motor is far weaker than the listing claims, and range numbers are invented. The most honest one we ever tested was off by 60%.
Any brand with no Gulf distributor β If you can’t reach a local service contact when something breaks, you’re on your own.
Used scooters bought unseen from social media β We’ve seen swapped batteries, painted-over corrosion and reset odometers. Get any second-hand scooter inspected before paying.
Where to Actually Buy in Saudi Arabia
Noon Saudi & Amazon.sa β Widest selection and usually the best prices on Xiaomi and Segway. Check the listing is the official store or “fulfilled by” the platform, not a random third-party seller β warranty and returns are far cleaner that way.
Jarir Bookstore β Carries Segway and other mainstream scooters in-store across Riyadh, Jeddah and beyond. Great when you want to see the sealed box and have a simple warranty path.
Extra (eXtra) β Another solid Saudi electronics retailer for mainstream models, in-store and online.
Official brand channels (Xiaomi Saudi, Segway) β Warranty is real, returns work, and pricing is often the same as resellers.
Specialty dealers for performance brands β For Kaabo or Dualtron, use an established dealer who stocks and services. If they only sell and never repair, that’s a yellow flag.
SAR prices in this guide are indicative β Saudi pricing moves with promotions, stock and VAT, so always confirm the live figure before buying. And if a social-media seller offers a current Xiaomi 4 Pro for half the going rate, something is wrong: it’s likely fake, water-damaged or has a swapped battery. Below the normal floor price, ask hard questions before paying anyone.
Make sure you’re road-legal first: Are Electric Scooters Legal in Saudi Arabia? Laws, Speed Limits & Fines 2026
For most people in Saudi Arabia: Xiaomi 4 Pro, around SAR 1,799. Best all-rounder β good range, strong heat tolerance, mainstream parts, and well inside designated-area speed limits.
Daily long-distance commuter: Segway MAX G2, around SAR 2,399. The self-healing tyres and honest range justify the extra over twelve months.
Budget under SAR 1,200: Xiaomi 4 β not a no-name brand. That few-hundred-riyal gap is the difference between a scooter you can repair and one you throw away.
Maximum range on a Xiaomi: Xiaomi 4 Ultra, around SAR 2,599 β dual suspension and 50β55 km real range.
Performance riders: Kaabo or Dualtron β only for private/off-road use, never the cycle paths.

Before You Buy: 2-Minute Checklist
- Confirm the scooter’s top speed β a 25 km/h-class model keeps you within designated-area limits; high-speed models don’t
- Stick to brands with a Gulf distributor (Xiaomi, Segway β yes; random brands β check first)
- Check the IP rating β IPX4 minimum, IPX5 if you want rain and dust protection
- Match real weight to your needs β folding, carrying, car boot, apartment storage
- Use real-world range, not the spec sheet β subtract 20β25% for Saudi heat
- Buy from Noon Saudi/Amazon.sa official listings, or Jarir/Extra in-store for the cleanest warranty
- Confirm the live SAR price β figures here are indicative and move often
- Know the rules: 17+ minimum age, designated areas only, ~20 km/h ceiling
- If buying used, get it inspected first β a small inspection fee beats a big surprise
Ready to Pick Your Scooter?
Prices on Noon Saudi and Amazon.sa change daily. Check both before you buy β the gap can be a few hundred riyals on the same model.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Xiaomi Electric Scooter 4 Pro (around SAR 1,799) is our top overall pick β best balance of heat tolerance, reliability, mainstream parts and value, and its 25 km/h class fits Saudi’s designated-area limits. For long daily commutes, step up to the Segway MAX G2.
Noon Saudi and Amazon.sa for the widest choice and best prices, or Jarir and Extra in-store for easy warranty. Always confirm you’re buying from the official store or platform-fulfilled listing, not a random third party.
A reliable entry-level scooter starts around SAR 1,000β1,200 (Xiaomi 4). A strong all-rounder (Xiaomi 4 Pro) is roughly SAR 1,700β1,900. Premium long-range commuters (MAX G2, 4 Ultra) run SAR 2,300β2,700. Prices fluctuate β verify live before buying.
The mainstream 25 km/h-class Xiaomi and Segway models are legal to ride β but only in designated areas, at the local speed limit, by riders 17+. The high-performance Kaabo and Dualtron are far too fast for public paths and should be treated as private/off-road only. See our full Saudi e-scooter law guide.
The Segway MAX G2 and Xiaomi 4 Pro β both have well-calibrated battery management for high ambient temperatures. Inland Riyadh summers are brutal, so ride early or late and never charge or store a scooter in direct sun. Avoid no-name budget scooters; their battery management often fails in Gulf heat.




