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Suggestions for woman touring ebike

pagheca

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Hi @Greg Watts,

I wanted to ask you for advice, and of course I’d be happy if anyone with real experience could chime in.

I’m thinking about buying a touring e-bike as a gift for my wife, so we can ride together this spring. My requirements, in order of priority, are:
  • An e-bike suited to a woman, not very sporty (but healthy and in good physical conditions)
  • Touring e-bike for gravel and mixed terrain
  • Long range
  • Not too heavy (she’s still new to cycling and only recently got used to ride a non-electric bike)
  • Budget: up to €4,500
Thanks in advance!
 
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Hi @Greg Watts, I wanted to ask you for advice, and of course I’d be happy if anyone with real experience could chime in. I’m thinking about buying a touring e-bike as a gift for my wife, so we can ride together this spring. My requirements, in order of priority, are: An e-bike suited to a woman, no...
@pagheca, a touring e-bike for gravel and mixed terrain is a nice departure from your Powerfly 7 FS world. Since your wife is relatively new to cycling, the priorities here are comfort, manageable weight, and a battery that won't leave her stranded halfway through a Dolomites valley. Let me pull together some options.

For this category you're looking at step-through or low-standover mixte frames with relaxed geometry, wider tyres (40-50mm), integrated lights, mudguards, and a rack. Essentially a proper utility/touring machine rather than anything that belongs on singletrack. At €4,500 you've got solid options.

A few bikes worth investigating:
BikeMotorBatteryWeight (approx)Price (approx)Notes
Specialized Turbo Como 3.0Specialized 1.2 CE530Wh~22kg~€3,500Step-through, very upright, smooth motor
Trek Verve+ 3 LowstepBosch Active Plus500Wh~23kg~€3,300You know the Trek ecosystem already, easy servicing
Cannondale Tesoro Neo X 2Bosch CX625Wh~25kg~€4,000More capable off-road, bigger battery, but heavier
Cube Touring Hybrid One 625Bosch CX625Wh~25kg~€3,800Full touring spec with rack, lights, mudguards
Scott Sub eRIDE EVOBosch CX625Wh~24kg~€4,200Good mixed-terrain capability, integrated accessories
A few things to weigh up. The Bosch Active Plus motor (as on the Trek Verve+) is lighter and quieter than the CX, which matters on a touring bike where she won't need 85Nm of torque. But the CX-equipped bikes come with bigger 625Wh batteries, which is significant for range. On mixed terrain in Eco/Tour mode, a 625Wh battery should comfortably deliver 80-100km+ for a lighter rider, which is genuine touring range. A 500Wh pack will do 60-80km under similar conditions, still very respectable but worth noting if you're planning longer days.

Since she's new to cycling, I'd prioritise: low standover height (step-through or lowstep frame), an upright riding position, and something that comes fully kitted with mudguards, rack, and lights so she doesn't have to fuss with accessories. Weight-wise, anything under 23kg would be ideal but that tends to push you toward smaller batteries or lighter (less powerful) motors. The sweet spot for touring is probably 23-25kg with a 625Wh battery and full accessories.

Being based in Northern Italy, you'll have good access to both Italian and German dealers, and Cube and Scott in particular tend to be well-priced on the continent. Bike-Discount.de often has competitive pricing on Cube models if your local dealers aren't offering much. I'd also suggest she test-rides a couple before you commit, since handlebar width, saddle comfort, and overall feel matter enormously for someone who's just getting into cycling. A bike that feels too big or aggressive will gather dust.

I should note those specs and prices above are approximate, as touring e-bike models refresh frequently and availability varies by region. Worth checking current 2026 model year availability with your local dealers. I can dig deeper into any of those specific models, or look at other brands like Riese & Müller or Gazelle if you want to go full premium touring.
 
nothing available with a 700-800 Wh battery? We leave on a pretty hilly area. And can you add the nominal range to that table? Thanks!
 
nothing available with a 700-800 Wh battery? We leave on a pretty hilly area. And can you add the nominal range to that table? Thanks!
@pagheca, fair point on the battery. Living in a hilly area of Northern Italy, 625Wh might feel a bit thin on longer days, especially with climbing. Good news: the 700-800Wh bracket has filled out nicely for touring bikes.

Bosch's current Smart System lineup now includes 600Wh and 800Wh PowerTube options, and the 800Wh PowerTube uses 21700 cell technology and weighs just 3.9kg, which is actually 500g lighter than the old 750Wh battery. So bigger battery doesn't necessarily mean heavier bike anymore.

It's also compatible with the Bosch PowerMore 250Wh Range Extender, which gives you a potential 1,050Wh total if you ever want to go truly ridiculous distances.

On the touring side, a couple of specific options stand out. The Trek Verve+ 4 has a step-through frame and an upgraded 800Wh battery, which would be a natural fit given you already know the Trek ecosystem from your Powerfly. Then there's the Riese & Müller Charger4, which packs a 750Wh Bosch PowerTube and is range extender compatible, so you could add the PowerMore 250 for a total of 1,000Wh. That one's a premium product and will push your budget, mind you. The Merida eBIG Tour 675 EQ has a low step-through frame with a Shimano EP6 motor and 750Wh battery, estimated at around 120km of assisted riding. It comes comprehensively equipped with full-length mudguards, integrated lights, a café wheel lock, kickstand and a sturdy rear rack, which is basically everything your wife needs out of the box.

Here's the updated table with larger battery options and nominal range estimates. Bear in mind these are manufacturer estimates in Eco/Tour mode for a lighter rider, so real-world hilly terrain will bring them down, but your wife will be lighter than you at 90kg, which helps considerably:

BikeMotorBatteryNominal Range (Eco)Weight (approx)Price (approx)Notes
Trek Verve+ 4 LowstepBosch Performance800Wh~130km~23kg~€4,200Step-through, 800Wh, Trek ecosystem
Riese & Müller Charger4 MixteBosch CX750Wh (+250Wh RE)~120km (up to 170km with RE)~27kg~€5,000+Premium, over budget but expandable
Merida eBIG Tour 675 EQShimano EP6750Wh~120km~25kg~€3,500Low step, full touring spec
Cube Touring Hybrid One 800Bosch CX800Wh~130km~26kg~€4,200Full touring kit, big battery
Scott Sub eRIDE EVO 800Bosch CX800Wh~130km~25kg~€4,500Good mixed-terrain capability

A couple of things worth noting. Those nominal range figures assume relatively flat Eco mode riding. On properly hilly Northern Italian terrain, I'd realistically expect 60-80km from a 750Wh and 70-100km from an 800Wh for a lighter rider in Tour mode with significant climbing. Still very respectable for a day's touring. The R&M Charger4 is over budget at base price, but I've included it because the dual battery option (750Wh + 250Wh range extender) is genuinely useful if range anxiety is a concern in your area.

The Merida eBIG Tour is probably the best value in that list, fully kitted and well under budget. The Trek Verve+ 4 with the 800Wh pack is the one I'd look at most closely given your existing Trek relationship and dealer access. Worth verifying current 2026 model year specs and pricing with your local dealers, as these models refresh frequently and Italian availability can differ from the wider European market.
 
is the power supply of the 3 bosch-powered ebike in your list compatible with mine? This would help because I can bring with me just one for recharging at night or over lunch (restaurant permitting...)
 
is the power supply of the 3 bosch-powered ebike in your list compatible with mine? This would help because I can bring with me just one for recharging at night or over lunch (restaurant permitting...)
Good news and slightly-less-good news, @pagheca. The good news: all Bosch Smart System chargers use the same connector and are universally compatible across the Smart System battery range, including the PowerTube 625 on your Powerfly, the 750Wh, and the 800Wh batteries. So yes, one charger covers both bikes. You can pack a single unit and charge whichever battery needs it that evening.

The slight wrinkle is a generational one. The Smart System is not compatible with the older Bosch eBike System 2.

Your Trek Powerfly 7 FS, depending on its year, may be running the older system rather than Smart System. If it's a 2021-2022 model (which your forum posts suggest), it's almost certainly not on Smart System, and in that case your existing charger and your wife's new bike's charger would not be interchangeable.

Worth checking which generation your Powerfly is on. If the display is a Kiox 300 or Kiox 500 with a round port, that's Smart System. If it's the older Kiox or Intuvia with a square port, that's the legacy system and you'd need two separate chargers on tour. The connector physically differs between generations, so there's no workaround.

If you do end up on mismatched systems, the Bosch 4A Smart System charger is compact and lightweight, making it a practical travel companion. Two of them wouldn't exactly break the bank or your luggage limit.
 
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