Amsterdam
prepares to ‘ban the fatbikes’ amid rise in serious accidents
Experts
say souped-up e-bikes pose big risk for children aged from 12 to 15, who
account for many A&E cases
Senay
Boztas
Senay
Boztas in Amsterdam
Sun 25
Jan 2026 17.29 CET
On a busy
lunchtime, thick-tyred electric bikes zoom through the leafy lanes of the
Vondelpark in Amsterdam. But after a marked rise in accidents – particularly
involving children – these vehicles the Dutch call “fatbikes” are to be banned
in some parts of the Netherlands.
“It’s
nonsense!” said Henk Hendrik Wolthers, 69, from the saddle of his wide-tyred,
electric Mate bike. “I drive a car, I ride a motorbike, I’ve had a moped and
now I ride a fatbike. This is the quickest means of transport in the city and
you should be able to use it.”
An
increasing number of road safety experts, doctors and politicians in the
Netherlands disagree. Although motor assistance on e-bikes is limited to just
over 15mph, many fatbike riders modify the factory settings to reach speeds of
25mph in this busy park.
The
safety organisation VeiligheidNL estimates that 5,000 fatbike riders are
treated in A&E departments each year, on the basis of a recent sample of
hospitals. “And we also see that especially these young people aged from 12 to
15 have the most accidents,” said the spokesperson Tom de Beus.
Now
Amsterdam’s head of transport, Melanie van der Horst, has said “unorthodox
measures” are needed and has announced that she will ban these heavy electric
bikes from city parks, starting in the Vondelpark. Like the city of Enschede,
which is also drawing up a city centre ban, she is acting on a stream of
requests “begging me to ban the fatbikes”.
In the
park, her plans stirred mixed reactions. While four in five fatbike riders who
whizzed past said they were “too busy” to talk, 31-year-old Joost was
sceptical. “It will be senseless,” he said. “Normal bicycles use the park, city
vehicles use it. It’s all about having the appropriate speed.”
But
Muriel Winkel, 33, running with her dog, Joop, was enthusiastic. “They are all
souped-up, which people don’t do with evil intentions, but they often ride
carelessly, without watching out,” she said. “Sometimes, my dog really gets a
fright.”
Some
point out that the tensions around electric bikes will soon reach other
countries, especially with more political interest in stimulating active
mobility.
In this
land of early adopters, 48% of bicycles sold in 2024 were electric and another
13% were fatbikes, according to figures from RAI Vereniging and BOVAG motoring
associations. In Amsterdam, a third of journeys are made by cycling.
The
roadside assistance organisation ANWB said that the problem was not necessarily
with the wide-tyred bike model – but the ease with which people could speed it
up to use like a moped, “combined with risky behaviour”.
Florrie
de Pater, the chair of the Fietsersbond Amsterdam cycling association, said
that the rise of illegal bikes, plus a lack of enforcement, was scaring old
people and children off the roads. “Because of the dangers of those who are
cycling fast, especially older people over 55 or 60 simply leave their bikes at
home,” she said. “We also hear that parents no longer dare to let their
children cycle to school.”
The brain
injury specialist Marcel Aries, a consultant at Maastricht University Medical
Center, said more authorities needed to consider controversial bans, alongside
the helmet requirement for children on electric bikes from 2027. “It is
reasonable for governments and municipalities to consider measures that may be
unpopular,” he said. “They are public health responses to increasingly
congested streets and widening speed gaps between cars, cyclists and
pedestrians.”
His view
is shared by Marlies Schijven, a professor of surgery at the Amsterdam
University Medical Center, whose frustrated LinkedIn post on dangerous riders
in 2024 has been viewed 2.9m times. “It is a good step, but a baby step, only
in one Amsterdam park,” she said. “The problem is much larger. We still see
pain, misery and death every day at our morning meeting in the hospital.”
Wolthers,
the fatbike owner, agreed that the problem was in letting children ride these
powerful vehicles. “Children go through red, they don’t signal and they also
can’t assess the traffic,” he said. “Hospitals have a chilling term for them:
potential donors.”

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