Blog

Shared micromobility company Bird launches two retail scooters, available at Target | TechCrunch

Bird, the shared micromobility company that recently went public by merging with a special purpose acquisition company, has launched two new kick scooters for sale. The Bird Flex, a foldable personal e-scooter costing $599, and the Birdie Glow, a three-wheel scooter for kids that costs $99, will add to the company’s small but growing suite of consumer micromobility vehicles.

These two new scooters, along with the Bird Bike the company launched back in August, will be available for direct-to-consumer purchases or through retail giant Target. The vehicles are only being sold in the U.S. at the moment, but Bird told TechCrunch it hopes to start selling the new scooters in Europe next year. electric scooters 4000w

Despite the fact that vehicle sales only made up a small percentage of Bird’s Q3 top line revenue at 2.1%, the company appears to be trying to build out its hardware sales unit at a time when sales of personal micromobility vehicles are on the rise. A December McKinsey study on micromobility found 70% of participants would be willing to ride a micromobility vehicle to work.

Bird would not share how many retail products it has sold so far, nor how much top line revenue it expects to receive from retail sales.

The Bird Flex, which is recommended for riders age 16 and up, follows in the footsteps of the Bird Air, Bird’s first personal electric kick scooter. The price point between them is the same, as are many metrics of the vehicles. In fact, the Flex has a marginally slower top speed at 15 miles per hour, versus Air’s 16 miles per hour, and less range at 15 miles of range, versus Air’s 16 miles of range, although a spokesperson for Bird told TechCrunch the battery is slightly larger in the Flex than the Air. Perhaps it’s the “larger and more rugged build” of the Flex that equates bigger battery to less range.

Flex specs include street-tested front-wheel suspension, a 350W brushless Hall motor, a wider base, longer platform and 10-inch diameter puncture-proof tires. It also comes with an integrated LED display which shows speed and battery life. The Flex is foldable, and it weighs just under 50 pounds.

The Birdie Glow is pretty much the same as Bird’s original Birdie, which the company launched in 2019, except that this one has light-up wheels. That’ll get the kiddos! It’s designed for children aged three to eight, and is thankfully not electric. The Birdie Glow will initially be available in Electric Rose but will soon be available in other colors like Sky Blue, Twilight and Jet Black.

Rebecca Bellan covers transportation for TechCrunch. She’s interested in all things micromobility, EVs, AVs, smart cities, AI, sustainability and more. Previously, she covered social media for Forbes.com, and her work has appeared in Bloomberg CityLab, The Atlantic, The Daily Beast, Mother Jones, i-D (Vice) and more. Rebecca studied journalism and history at Boston University. She has invested in Ethereum.

Perplexity acquires Carbon to connect AI search to your work files

Microsoft bought nearly 500K Nvidia Hopper chips this year

OpenAI brings ChatGPT to your landline

GitHub launches a free version of its Copilot

‘It’s dumb to IPO this year’: Databricks CEO explains why he’s waiting to go public

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

This fintech processed $1B in payments through word-of-mouth

Subscribe for the industry’s biggest tech news

Every weekday and Sunday, you can get the best of TechCrunch’s coverage.

TechCrunch's AI experts cover the latest news in the fast-moving field.

Every Monday, gets you up to speed on the latest advances in aerospace.

Startups are the core of TechCrunch, so get our best coverage delivered weekly.

fastest electric scooter By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice.