E-Bike Rebates and Incentives in Canada 2026: A Province-by-Province Reality Check
Most "e-bike rebates Canada" articles online are out of date the day they are published. Programs open, run out of money, close to new applicants, and quietly disappear from government websites — but the blog posts about them stay up forever, pointing readers to forms that no longer accept submissions.
This is the May 2026 snapshot. Every program below has been verified active or paused as of this month, with the closure dates where they exist. We've also flagged the programs Canadian consumers are still asking about but that no longer exist — so you do not waste time chasing them.
If you are considering a Veemo SE or Veemo LT, the final section walks through which programs can actually be stacked on a Veemo purchase and the order to use them.
The Federal Picture: Nothing for E-Bikes
Start here so we can stop the search early. As of May 2026:
- There is no federal e-bike rebate or tax credit in Canada.
- The federal iZEV program covers electric cars, vans, and trucks — not e-bikes.
- The federal Zero Emission Vehicle Infrastructure Program (ZEVIP) covers chargers, not vehicles.
- No federal program is currently in announcement or proposal that would cover e-bikes specifically.
This is the gap most Canadian e-bike shoppers stumble on. Provinces and a handful of cities are doing all the work. Below is province-by-province.
British Columbia: PST Exemption + Scrap-It
BC is the most consequential province for e-bike incentives in 2026, by virtue of two stacking programs.
1. 7% PST Exemption (Permanent — Most Important Program)
BC's Provincial Sales Tax (PST) exemption on e-bikes is permanent and applies automatically at checkout for any retailer in BC. The exemption covers complete e-bikes (including e-trikes), conversion kits, and replacement batteries. On a $10,000 Veemo SE, this is roughly $700 off the sticker price — already calculated into the price displayed by BC retailers.
2. BC Scrap-It Program (Active, $750 for E-Bikes)
The BC Scrap-It program lets you trade in an older internal-combustion vehicle for a credit toward a new lower-emission vehicle. For e-bikes, the credit is currently $750, redeemable at participating BC retailers. The vehicle being scrapped must meet eligibility requirements (typically registered, insured, in working order, of a certain age). The program is funded through the BC Ministry of Transportation and supported by partner organizations.
Apply before you scrap. The program requires pre-approval; you cannot retroactively claim after sending an old car to the wrecker.
3. CleanBC E-Bike Rebate (Paused)
The CleanBC e-bike rebate, which at various points offered $350 to $1,400 to BC residents based on income tier, is paused as of May 2026. Funding from the prior allocation has been exhausted. The provincial government has signaled the program may return in future budgets but has not committed to a date.
If you are reading older articles claiming this program is open, they are out of date.
4. City of Nelson Interest-Free Loan
For Nelson, BC residents only, the city offers an interest-free loan up to $1,800 for e-bike or e-trike purchases, repayable through property tax assessment. This is a niche program but worth knowing for Kootenay residents.
Quebec: No E-Bike Rebate
This is the most common consumer misconception we hear. Quebec's Roulez vert program is generous — but it covers electric cars and trucks only. It does not cover e-bikes or e-trikes. No provincial e-bike rebate currently exists in Quebec.
Several Quebec cities (notably Montreal) have run pilot e-bike incentive programs through their sustainability offices. As of May 2026, none are open to new applications. Watch local municipal announcements if you are in Montreal, Quebec City, or Sherbrooke — pilot programs reappear periodically.
Ontario: No Provincial E-Bike Rebate, Some Municipal Programs
Ontario has no provincial e-bike rebate. The province has redirected its sustainability spending toward EV charging infrastructure and electric vehicle subsidies for trucks and commercial fleets.
At the municipal level:
- Some Ontario cities have piloted small e-bike rebates ($200–500) through climate action funds. These come and go quickly and are usually restricted to specific demographic groups (low-income, seniors).
- Toronto's Climate Advisory Group has proposed an e-bike incentive program in past budget cycles; none has been funded as of May 2026.
The bigger Ontario e-bike news in 2026 is the regulation rewrite (consultation closes June 7, 2026) — see our Ontario regulation explainer for details.
Prince Edward Island: $500 Flat Rebate
PEI offers a flat $500 rebate on new e-bike and e-trike purchases for PEI residents. The rebate runs through the province's sustainable transportation fund and has been continuously funded since launch. The application is straightforward — proof of residency, proof of purchase from a participating retailer.
Eligibility: must be a PEI resident, purchased from a registered retailer, e-bike must meet federal "power-assisted bicycle" definition. Most enclosed e-trikes including the Veemo qualify.
Yukon: 25% Up to $750
Yukon's Good Energy Rebate program for e-bikes offers 25% of purchase price, up to $750, for Yukon residents. This is one of the more generous programs in Canada on a percentage basis. The program covers e-bikes, e-trikes, and conversion kits.
Yukon residency is required, and the rebate is applied as a post-purchase reimbursement (submit receipts after purchase). Like all Yukon energy rebates, funding is reviewed annually — confirm program status before purchasing if you are planning around it.
Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Atlantic Provinces (Other Than PEI): No Programs
As of May 2026, none of Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador, or any northern territory other than Yukon has an active provincial e-bike rebate program. Some have run pilots in past years; none are currently open.
Municipal programs occasionally surface — Edmonton, Calgary, Halifax, and Winnipeg have all piloted e-bike incentives at various points. Check city sustainability office websites for current status.
Quick Summary Table
| Province / Territory | Active Rebate | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| British Columbia | PST exemption + Scrap-It | 7% + $750 | Stack-able; permanent PST exemption |
| Yukon | Good Energy Rebate | 25% up to $750 | Yukon residents only |
| PEI | Sustainable Transportation | $500 flat | Continuously funded |
| Quebec | None (e-bike) | — | Roulez vert is car-only |
| Ontario | None provincial | — | Watch municipal programs |
| Alberta | None | — | Pilots have run in past |
| Saskatchewan | None | — | — |
| Manitoba | None | — | — |
| Nova Scotia | None | — | — |
| New Brunswick | None | — | — |
| Newfoundland | None | — | — |
| NWT, Nunavut | None | — | — |
Stacking Incentives for a Veemo Purchase
If you are buying a Veemo in BC, this is the order of operations to maximize savings:
- Confirm Veemo SE / LT eligibility. Veemo is sold by ENVO Drive Systems (Burnaby, BC) and qualifies as an e-bike under the federal "power-assisted bicycle" definition. PST exemption applies. Scrap-It applies (Veemo is a participating retailer for Scrap-It).
- Apply for Scrap-It pre-approval first. Do not scrap your old car before getting written pre-approval — you need an official voucher to apply at the time of e-bike purchase. Application is online through the BC Scrap-It website.
- Scrap the qualifying vehicle. Through a Scrap-It-approved recycler. You will get documentation.
- Purchase your Veemo with the Scrap-It voucher. The $750 is applied at the time of sale.
- PST exemption is automatic. Your invoice will show the 7% PST already removed.
- Confirm renter's / homeowner's insurance. Most policies cover an e-bike at home and in transit, but call to confirm. With UL 2849 certification now standard, this is straightforward.
Total savings on a $10,000 Veemo SE for a BC resident with an eligible scrap-vehicle: approximately $1,450 ($700 PST + $750 Scrap-It).
The biggest savings on a Veemo do not come from rebates — they come from eliminated car costs. A typical BC commuter who replaces a second car with a Veemo saves $8,000–$15,000 per year in fuel, insurance, parking, and maintenance. See our cost-of-commuting analysis for the detailed math. Rebates are gravy; the underlying economics are what actually pay for the vehicle.
What's Not a Rebate But Is Worth Knowing
Cycle-to-Work / Bike-to-Work Programs (Employer-Level)
Several Canadian employers offer monthly cycling allowances or one-time e-bike purchase support as part of sustainability or wellness programs. The amounts are usually modest ($50–200/month, or $1,000–2,500 one-time), but they are tax-advantaged in ways direct rebates are not. Ask HR.
RRSP First-Home Buyer's Workaround (Don't)
We see this floated in online forums. Withdrawing RRSP funds under the First-Home Buyer's Plan to buy an e-bike is not eligible. Withdrawing under the Lifelong Learning Plan is not eligible. A regular RRSP withdrawal is fully taxable.
Lease-to-Own Through Some Veemo Retailers
Some Veemo retailers offer lease-to-own financing that effectively spreads the purchase across 24–36 months. This is not a rebate, but it removes the up-front cash barrier that prevents many buyers from claiming the rebates they would otherwise be eligible for. Ask your local dealer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Save More Than the Rebate Gets You.
BC residents combine a 7% PST exemption with a $750 Scrap-It credit. The bigger savings come from eliminated car costs — $8K–15K per year.
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