Hi there, have many people had experience flying with easyjet with an ebike that has the battery removed? I have a Kenevo SL which pedals fine without the battery, but easyjet technically specify "no ebikes" in their policy rather than "no bike with a battery". I am wondering if anyone has had any d...
Right, search results back up the picture and add a useful real-world data point. One forum member reported flying 9 ebikes out to Cyprus with EasyJet from Manchester Airport over a 5-month period with no problems whatsoever, telling staff there were ebikes inside, and confirming the boxes do get scanned and they will find a battery if it's in there.
So bike-frame-only with the battery genuinely left at home has worked in practice for some.
However, the airline has the final say, not security at the airport, and EasyJet's official policy states "Electric bicycles are not permitted for travel" - note that the wording doesn't distinguish eBike batteries, it just says eBikes.
EasyJet's press office have confirmed in writing that electric bicycles aren't permitted, citing dangerous goods regulations on the batteries - even though, technically, no battery means no dangerous good.
The Kenevo SL plays in your favour here because it's already light, looks much more like a regular bike than a full-fat eMTB, and pedals normally without the battery. The risks: a check-in agent who Googles the model, or a baggage handler flagging it. Mitigations worth doing: remove the motor cover/any obvious branding if practical, have the bike box weighed under 32kg, and don't volunteer "it's an ebike" unless asked directly. Some have, some say nothing. Your call on the ethics.