To pinch Juicy Bike’s own tag line for the Ticket e-bike: it’s a bike that looks like a bike. So what?
It’s not just a bike though – it’s a fully-fledged e-bike with all the trimmings of an electric flat-bar commuter, but you’d have the devil’s job telling were it not for the LCD data screen fitted to the bars.

Incorporating a 6061-T6 aluminium frame with a narrow urban-friendly flat bar front end, the Ticket manages to look like an ordinary flat bar bike because it uses an integrated 280wh Samsung battery that slots into the normal-sized down tube, as well as a hub-based motor from Aikema.
That puts out a maximum of 250w of assistance and 50nm of torque, and Juicy Bikes tells us that the Ticket can achieve a range of 18 miles, with scope for more if you’re easy on the five available assist modes. Naturally, it’s limited to 25km/h, and it features a handy walk-assist mode too.
An 8-speed Shimano Acera drivetrain with a single chainring transfers the power through the bike, while Tektro provides hydraulic disc brakes for great all-weather stopping. The wheels are sturdy double-walled alloy fare, wrapped in tough Kenda tyres.
The bike looks very sleek, helped by internal cable routing, but that also belies its potential practicality. There are mountings for mudguards and pannier racks and there’s clearance for tyres that would be at home on a gravel e-bike, let alone an urban/city commuter and workhorse.

Juicy Bike claims that the bike sneaks under 15kg, but our test machine has the trusty eBikeTips scales reading 16.48kg. And, it’ll set you back £1,549 – although, you can apply for varying lengths of interest-free finance through Juicy Bike’s website, which will appeal to some.
Can the Ticket be just that? We’ll give you the lowdown soon.