Kids

S-Electro Stride Electric 27.5 9 SPEED

Hardtail | E Kids | Alloy

  • ★★★★★
    ★★★★★
  • 120mm Travel
  • 27.5" x 2.25" Wheels
  • 1x9 Speed Shimano
  • E5000 Shimano Motor
  • 40Nm Torque
  • 504Wh Battery
  • 21.9kg
  • €2.599,00

S-Electro Stride Electric 27.5 10 SPEED

Hardtail | E Kids | Alloy

  • ★★★★★
    ★★★★★
  • 120mm Travel
  • 27.5" x 2.25" Wheels
  • 1x10 Speed Shimano
  • E5000 Shimano Motor
  • 40Nm Torque
  • 504Wh Battery
  • 21.9kg
  • €2.599,00

SE:Series Trail 26D

Dual Suspension | Youth Trail | Alloy

SE:Series Trail 26D
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  • ★★★★★
    ★★★★★
  • 120/120mm Travel
  • 26" x 2.25" Wheels
  • 1x8 Speed Shimano
  • 15.5kg
  • €899,00

Spyke 24 SE (Gen4)

Hardtail | Kids | Alloy

Spyke 24 SE (Gen4)
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  • ★★★★★
    ★★★★★
  • 50mm Travel
  • 24"
  • 13.66kg
  • €599,00

Spyke 26 (Gen4)

Hardtail | Youth Trail | Alloy

Spyke 26 (Gen4)
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  • ★★★★★
    ★★★★★
  • 100mm Travel
  • 26" x 2.35" Wheels
  • 1x7 Speed Shimano
  • 13.82kg
  • €499,00

Spyke 24D (gen4)

Hardtail | Kids | Alloy

Spyke 24D (gen4)
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  • ★★★★★
    ★★★★★
  • 50mm Travel
  • 24"
  • 13.66kg
  • €499,00

Spyke 20 (Gen4)

Hardtail | Kids | Alloy

Spyke 20 (Gen4)
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  • ★★★★★
    ★★★★★
  • 40mm Travel
  • 20"
  • 12.64kg
  • €499,00

Spyke 20

Hardtail | Kids | Alloy

Kids Bikes Spyke 20
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  • ★★★★★
    ★★★★★
  • 40mm Travel
  • 20"
  • 12.64kg
  • €499,00

Spyke 26

Hardtail | Kids | Alloy

kids bikes Spyke 26
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  • ★★★★★
    ★★★★★
  • 100mm Travel
  • 26"
  • 13.82kg
  • €499,00
Skid 26
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  • ★★★★★
    ★★★★★
  • €499,00

FAQ's

Silverback kids’ bikes are designed for growing riders, from young beginners to confident teens. As a simple guide, smaller wheel sizes suit early riders, while larger 24 inch and 26 inch bikes are better for older children and teenagers who are ready for more control, gears, and longer rides. Age helps as a starting point, but the best choice always comes down to the child’s height, inseam, confidence, and how comfortably they can reach the brakes and handle the bike.

Match wheel size and frame size to your child’s height and inseam, and make sure they can comfortably stand over the bike and reach the brakes confidently. A lighter bike that fits is safer and more fun than a “grow into it” bike.

Yes, when they fit properly and have reliable brakes. Safety is mostly about correct sizing, brake reach, and a bike that isn’t too heavy for the child to control.

Not always. For younger kids and flatter areas, single‑speed is perfect and low‑maintenance. Gears become helpful as rides get longer, hills appear, or the child starts riding more independently.

Kids’ bicycles are usually available in wheel sizes such as 12 inch, 16 inch, 20 inch, 24 inch, and 26 inch, depending on the child’s age, height, and riding confidence. Smaller wheels are ideal for first riders and short, easy rides, while 24 inch and 26 inch bikes suit older kids and teens who need more speed, stability, and control. The right wheel size is the one that lets your child reach the brakes comfortably, stand over the bike safely, and handle it with confidence.

Not necessarily. Many children learn faster on a balance bike approach or by learning balance first. Training wheels can help some kids, but they can also delay learning real balance.

Good brakes with reachable levers, smooth edges, a properly fitting chain guard where appropriate, grippy tyres, and a lightweight frame. And of course: a properly fitted helmet.

Yes, that is exactly what we aim for. Silverback kids’ bikes are built to handle real everyday use, school rides, park paths, small bumps, and the occasional drop or scrape, while still staying light enough for children to control with confidence. A lighter bike is easier for a child to start, stop, steer, and enjoy, and a durable frame and sensible components help the bike keep up with growing riders and regular family use.

A child’s bike should be upgraded when it becomes clearly too small, for example knees are coming too high, the reach feels cramped, or the child can no longer stand over the bike safely. For many children, this happens every 2 to 3 years, but growth rate matters more than age.

Yes, kids’ bikes can be used for school commuting as long as the bike fits well and the child can brake confidently. Add proper lights, reflectors, a bell, and a good lock, and consider a small backpack or bag solution for school items. Comfort, visibility, and safe handling are the most important things for daily school rides.

The best kids’ bikes are lightweight, correctly sized, easy to control, and fitted with reliable brakes. Children enjoy riding more when the bike feels simple and fun, not heavy, awkward, or difficult to stop.

Choose the right size for your child now, instead of buying one size too big to “grow into.” Prioritize low weight, reachable brake levers, confident handling, and tyres that suit where they ride most, whether that is streets, park paths, school routes, or light trails.

For most 10 to 15 year olds, a 24 inch or 26 inch bike is usually the right direction, depending on height and confidence. A hardtail mountain bike is a great choice for mixed riding, school routes, park paths, and light trails, while a versatile hybrid or gravel-style bike works well for longer road and path riding.

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