Electric moped comparison

Compare electric mopeds in NZ by the specs that matter.

Price is only one part of the decision. Motor power, battery energy, brakes, tyres, support and real-world range all affect how useful an electric moped will be day to day.

Strong rating

The Zoopa Nova is not recommended just because of the brand. In this comparison set, it rates strongly because it combines a 72V 40Ah battery, 2.88kWh stated energy, 3000W motor, hydraulic disc brakes and 120/70-12 tyres front and rear.

See why it rates strongly

Which Electric Moped is Right for You?

Compare key specs like power, battery, range and braking to find the electric moped that best suits your riding needs in New Zealand.

FeatureZoopa NovaHorwin EK1Niu NQi SportNiu MQi+ SportSuper Soco CUx
Price excl. ORC$4,995$4,995$4,699$4,499$3,790
Motor power3000W / 4000W peak2000W2400W2000W~2788W peak
Battery72V 40Ah72V 36Ah60V 26Ah48V 31Ah60V 30Ah
Energy2.88kWh2.59kWh1.56kWh1.49kWh1.8kWh
Top speed30 / 50km/h50km/h45–50km/h45–50km/h<50km/h
BrakesHydraulic disc, front and rearDiscHydraulic + EBSHydraulic + EBSDisc
Tyres120/70-12 front and rear100/80-14 front, 110/70-13 rear90/90-12 front, 120/70-12 rear90/90-10 front and rear90/90-12 front and rear
Claimed range~70kmUp to 80kmUp to 80kmUp to 90km~75km

Figures are based on the supplied comparison asset and should be verified before publication. Real-world range varies with rider weight, terrain, speed, wind, tyre pressure, temperature and riding style.

Why Zoopa Nova rates strongly in this comparison

Big battery

2.88kWh stated battery energy — the highest battery energy shown in this comparison table.

Strong motor

3000W motor, with 4000W peak stated — the highest stated motor rating shown in this comparison table.

Hydraulic brakes

Hydraulic disc brakes front and rear.

Wide tyres

120mm front and rear tyres for a planted feel.

Next step

If the Zoopa Nova specs match your riding needs, check the current price, colour availability and on-road costs directly with Zoopa.

Check current availability