"Buying a Scooter You Can't Ride"
The UK has a strange situation on its hands. Walk into an Argos or browse Amazon UK and you'll find e-scooters advertised for "commuting" and "urban riding" β complete with photos of people zipping down bike lanes in business casual. But here's the thing: if you actually ride that scooter on a public road in the UK, you're breaking the law. Private e-scooters are only legal on private land. The only ones allowed on streets and bike paths are the rental ones from approved operators.
A Press Association investigation caught Amazon, Argos, Currys, and a handful of independent sellers doing exactly this β marketing private e-scooters for uses that are explicitly illegal. When contacted, the big retailers updated their listings to add disclaimers and warnings. But the smaller sellers largely haven't bothered.
The surface-level take is "retailers are being shady," and sure, there's some of that. But I think what's actually happening here is more interesting, and it's something we've seen play out in Portland with our own scooter program.
The gap between what technology enables and what the law permits isn't a bug β in a weird way, it's how complex systems self-regulate. When e-scooters first started appearing in cities around 2017-2018, nobody had rules for them. Were they bikes? Motor vehicles? Toys? Cities didn't know, so they either banned them outright or looked the other way. The gray zone created exactly the kind of real-world data regulators needed: where do people actually ride these things? How dangerous are they? Do they replace car trips or walking trips?
Portland ran one of the first structured e-scooter pilot programs in the US back in 2018, and the city has iterated on it ever since. We now have a permanent program with Lime and Lyft operating a combined fleet that just expanded to 4,300 scooters. The rules evolved too β the newest requirement is that scooters must be locked to a bike rack or signpost when you're done, which emerged directly from the observed problem of scooters littering sidewalks. That rule didn't exist on day one because the problem didn't exist on day one. You have to see the behavior before you can regulate it.
This is the pattern, and it's not unique to scooters. Uber and Lyft operated in legal gray zones for years before most cities codified ride-sharing regulations. Drone delivery is currently in exactly the same phase β technically possible, legally ambiguous, with companies quietly testing while lawmakers figure out airspace rules. Even AI is running this playbook right now: the technology is moving fast enough that by the time a regulatory framework lands, the thing it was designed to govern has already evolved into something else.
What makes the UK scooter situation particularly messy is that it's not a complete ban β it's a two-tier system where rental scooters are legal and private ones aren't. That distinction makes some sense from an enforcement perspective (rental companies carry insurance, limit speeds, track usage), but it creates a genuinely confusing consumer landscape. You can walk into a major retailer and buy a vehicle that's effectively unusable for the thing it's marketed for, and the only thing stopping you is a terms-and-conditions disclaimer you probably didn't read.
I'm not defending deceptive advertising β the retailers should absolutely be clearer about the law. But I also think the UK government is going to have to reconcile this eventually. You can't have a consumer product being sold openly by major chains while its primary use case is illegal, and expect the situation to hold. Either ban the sale of private e-scooters entirely, or legalize their use with reasonable restrictions. The current middle ground is the worst of both worlds.
What Portland got right was moving from pilot to permanent program relatively quickly, and building the rules around observed behavior rather than imagined fears. The e-scooter isn't going away. Cities that figure out how to integrate them will be better off than cities that spend another five years pretending they don't exist.
Sources: The Press Association investigation was covered by the BBC. Portland's e-scooter program details are on the city's website.
Comments
The UK scooter situation is a perfect case study in what happens when you try to regulate a new mode before you've built the infrastructure for it. The rental-only distinction isn't about safety β it's about control. Rental companies cap speeds at 12.5 mph, require a license scan, and pass insurance costs to the user. But the real problem is that neither private nor rental scooters have anywhere safe to ride.
Portland's pilot worked because they treated scooters as a piece of the transportation system, not a novelty. They didn't just legalize them and walk away β they added bike lanes, adjusted speed zones, and eventually required dock-locking because they watched how people actually used them. That's induced demand working in reverse: you create the infrastructure, the behavior follows.
The UK has three cities with proper cycle infrastructure worth mentioning. Three. In a country of 67 million. Until the network exists for scooters to slot into, no amount of disclaimers or rental licenses will fix the fundamental problem. You can't solve a missing-bike-lane problem with a terms-and-conditions page.
And honestly, if I could wave a wand, I'd rather see the UK legalize both classes and spend the enforcement budget on protected bike lanes instead. A scooter on a stroad with no bike lane is dangerous whether it's rented or privately owned. Build the network. The rest follows.
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