E-Bike Range Calculator

Estimate how far an e-bike can go on one charge. Enter your battery capacity in watt-hours and pick an assist level, and this calculator divides capacity by typical energy use to project your range in miles or kilometres. Treat the number as a ballpark — real range swings widely with terrain, rider weight, wind, tyre pressure and temperature. To compare your own pedalling power, try the FTP calculator and power-to-weight ratio; to plan gearing for hills that drain the battery faster, use the gear inches calculator. Logging non-assisted miles too? The running pace calculator is next door.

BatteryRiding
Assist mode Higher assist drains the battery faster. Pick how you usually ride.
Show range in Miles or kilometres for the result.
Estimated range42 mi
Range in km67 km
Assumed consumption12 Wh/mi
Estimate only — real range variesSolid range — good for most day rides

500 Wh · Trail (~12 Wh/mi) · miles

How it works

range = battery capacity (Wh) ÷ average consumption (Wh per mile or km)

An e-bike battery stores energy measured in watt-hours (Wh). If you do not know your Wh figure, multiply the battery’s voltage by its amp-hours: a 36 V, 14 Ah pack is 36 × 14 = 504 Wh. Range is simply that stored energy divided by how fast you spend it. Energy use is dominated by the assist mode: pedalling along in a low-power Eco mode might draw around 7 Wh per mile, a balanced Trail/Normal mode about 12 Wh per mile, and full Turbo assist roughly 20 Wh per mile on mixed terrain — figures in line with Bosch and Shimano STEPS range data for mid-drive pedelecs. So a 500 Wh battery covers roughly 70 miles in Eco but only about 25 in Turbo. These are honest averages, not guarantees: climbing, headwind, a heavy load, cold weather, knobbly tyres and frequent stops all push consumption up and range down. Use the estimate to plan, then learn your own bike’s real numbers over a few rides.

Sources

FAQ

How accurate is this e-bike range estimate?

It is a planning ballpark, not a guarantee. The formula assumes a steady average consumption, but real range depends on terrain, your weight, wind, temperature, tyre pressure, tyre type and how often you stop and start. Expect your true range to vary by 30% or more around the estimate.

How do I find my battery capacity in watt-hours?

It is often printed on the battery. If you only see voltage and amp-hours, multiply them: watt-hours = volts × amp-hours. A 48 V, 10.4 Ah battery is about 500 Wh.

Which assist level should I choose?

Eco assumes light assistance (about 7 Wh per mile) and gives the longest range; Trail/Normal is a balanced everyday mode (about 12 Wh per mile); Turbo is full power (about 20 Wh per mile) for the shortest range. Pick the one closest to how you actually ride.

What drains an e-bike battery the fastest?

Climbing and high assist levels are the biggest drains, followed by headwind, heavy loads, low tyre pressure, cold temperatures and lots of stop-start riding. Smooth, flat, warm conditions in a lower assist mode maximise range.

Does cold weather reduce e-bike range?

Yes. Lithium batteries deliver less usable energy in the cold, so winter range can drop noticeably. Storing the battery indoors and only fitting it before you ride helps preserve capacity.

Can I extend my range on a ride?

Drop to a lower assist mode, keep tyres at the recommended pressure, pedal smoothly, avoid unnecessary stops, and carry a charger or spare battery for long days. Lighter loads and tucking out of the wind help too.

Range figures are estimates based on typical per-mile consumption, not your specific bike. Actual range depends on terrain, rider and cargo weight, wind, temperature, tyre choice, battery age and riding style, and can differ substantially. Use as a planning guide only.

Embed this calculator

Add the e-bike range calculator to your website or club page — free, no sign-up. Paste this snippet where you want the calculator to appear:

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