The Rad Power Bankruptcy: Why the E-Bike King is Falling—and Why Their Website is Still Live
The Rad Power Bankruptcy: Why the E-Bike King is Falling—and Why Their Website is Still Live
If you visit Rad Power Bikes’ website today, everything looks remarkably normal. The banners are bright, the “Add to Cart” buttons are functional, and the marketing emails are still hitting inboxes. But behind this digital facade of "business as usual," a financial controlled demolition is underway.
But the real story isn't just about a bank balance; it’s about a high-stakes game of chicken between shareholders and predatory capital.
1. The Silent War: Why Capital Let Rad "Starve"
The deadlock was simple: No one wanted to buy the baggage. Between the $8.3 million owed in unpaid U.S. import tariffs and millions more owed to Chinese and Thai manufacturers, the company was "too expensive to save" in its current form.

In the cold logic of venture capital, the decision was made to let the company "die a little more." By forcing Rad into Chapter 11, the current stakeholders are essentially performing a legal "debt-wash." This allows a buyer to potentially swoop in during the next 45–60 days to pick up the brand and intellectual property for pennies on the dollar, leaving the creditors and suppliers to fight over the scraps.
2. The Consumer Trap: Warranty in the Vacuum
While Rad says they are “not giving up,” the reality for the consumer is far more precarious. In a Chapter 11 reorganization, warranty claims often fall into a legal gray area. There is no guarantee that a future buyer will honor the promises made by the current entity.
For a detailed breakdown of which models are affected, you should check out this guide: Is My Rad Power Battery Safe? CPSC Warning.
3. The Post-Mortem: A Perfect Storm of Failures
How did the "Amazon of E-bikes" lose its way? It was a combination of hubris and a failure to adapt to a changing global landscape:
The "China Speed" Squeeze
For years, Rad acted as a middleman between Chinese manufacturing and Western branding. But the tide turned. New-age Chinese brands like Aventon, Lectric, and Velotric cut out the middleman, offering higher specs (torque sensors and hydraulic brakes) at prices Rad simply couldn't match.
Strategic Overreach in Europe
Rad attempted a massive European expansion without the localized service backbone to support it. Trying to fight a two-front war against premium European brands and budget Asian imports led to a resource drain that they never recovered from.
The Innovation Gap
While the market shifted toward mid-drive motors and smart system integration, Rad stayed too long with aging designs and proprietary parts that were difficult for local shops to service.
Supply Chain Hubris
During the pandemic boom, Rad famously chartered their own cargo ships to bypass port congestion. It was a bold move that backfired, leaving them with a mountain of high-cost inventory just as the market began to cool and competitors began a price-cutting war.
4. Branding is a Ghost Without Quality
Rad Power Bikes proved that you can build a $1.65 billion valuation on branding and marketing alone—but you can’t sustain it without a rock-solid hardware foundation. The lesson for the industry is clear: a "cool" brand name is worthless if the product reliability fails and the supply chain is a house of cards.
The brands that survive won't be the ones with the loudest marketing, but the ones with the tightest control over their manufacturing and an obsession with quality control. For now, if you're a Rad owner, hold onto your tools. If you're a buyer, look closely at who actually owns the factory making your bike. The e-bike wars of 2026 have just begun.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Rad Power website still safe to buy from?
While the website is operational, the company is in a legal reorganization. Orders may be fulfilled, but post-purchase support and long-term warranty reliability are currently uncertain due to the Chapter 11 filing.
What happens to my current Rad Power warranty?
Warranty claims during Chapter 11 can be complicated. While the company operates normally for now, any potential new owner is not legally obligated to honor existing warranties unless negotiated during the sale of the business.