Switzerland saw a high number of serious accidents involving e-bikes and e-scooters last year, with 27 fatalities recorded. The Swiss Council for Accident Prevention is urging users to adapt their speed and anticipate road situations amid the rising risks.

"The BFU cites the higher speeds, which increase braking distances and shorten reaction times, as the reason for the high risk."
"Other road users often recognise the narrow silhouettes too late or misjudge the speed."
Switzerland confronts a grim reality on its roads as the convenience of e-mobility clashes violently with safety. A staggering 27 lives were extinguished last year in accidents involving e-bikes and e-scooters, a figure that demands immediate attention from policymakers and the public alike. The Swiss Council for Accident Prevention (BFU) has issued a critical warning: the surge in popularity for these vehicles is correlating directly with a rise in severe trauma.
This is not merely a statistical blip; it is a trend that threatens to undermine Switzerland's reputation for transport safety. While e-vehicles offer a greener alternative for urban commuting, the cost in human life is becoming unacceptably high. The data paints a brutal picture of vulnerability, where riders are increasingly exposed to fatal risks in mixed traffic. As the BFU sounds the alarm, the message is clear: the current approach to e-mobility safety is insufficient, and without urgent behavioral changes, the death toll will likely continue its upward trajectory.
The statistics for e-bike riders are particularly harrowing. Last year alone, 586 individuals suffered serious injuries, and 24 riders never made it home. This represents the lion's share of the casualties, highlighting a critical vulnerability in how these powerful machines are operated. Unlike cars, which cocoon drivers in steel and airbags, e-bikes offer zero crumple zones. When a collision occurs, the rider's body absorbs the full force of the impact.
E-scooters, while accounting for fewer fatalities with 3 deaths recorded, still contributed to 152 serious injuries, proving that size does not mitigate danger. The disparity in fatalities suggests that the higher speeds and longer distances traveled by e-bikes amplify the risk significantly. We are witnessing a disconnect between the capabilities of these vehicles and the protective measures employed by their users. The allure of effortless speed is blinding riders to the kinetic energy they are managing—energy that turns deadly the moment control is lost.
The BFU identifies a lethal combination of factors driving these accidents: excessive speed and invisibility. Higher speeds inevitably lead to extended braking distances and drastically shortened reaction times. In the split second required to avoid a collision, physics is unforgiving. A rider traveling at 45 km/h covers significant ground before their fingers even tighten on the brakes.
Furthermore, the narrow silhouette of an e-bike or e-scooter creates a dangerous optical illusion for other road users. Drivers often recognize these vehicles too late or catastrophically misjudge their approach speed, mistaking a fast-moving e-bike for a conventional bicycle. This perceptual gap is proving fatal. The BFU emphasizes that riders must proactively anticipate this "invisibility" by adapting their speed and assuming they have not been seen. It is a harsh lesson in defensive riding: in a collision between a car and an e-bike, the laws of mass ensure the rider always loses.
Compliance is no longer optional; it is a matter of survival. Swiss law mandates that helmets are compulsory for fast e-bikes, yet the BFU urges all riders to gear up, regardless of their bike's class. Beyond protective gear, visibility is paramount—lights must be functioning and active even during the day, and light-colored clothing is strongly recommended to combat the silhouette issue.
Strict regulations are already in place to curb reckless behavior. An alcohol limit of 0.5 per mille applies strictly to all e-vehicles, dismantling the myth that e-scooters are a safe way to return from a night out. Furthermore, age restrictions—14 with a moped license, 16 without—aim to ensure a baseline of maturity and road knowledge. However, rules on paper cannot stop accidents on asphalt. The BFU's call to action is urgent: use clear hand signals, anticipate the errors of others, and respect the power of the machine under your feet. The era of casual e-mobility is over; serious caution is the new standard.