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Dutch cities want to ban scooters from bike paths
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Dutch cities want to ban scooters from bike paths

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© 2025 IamExpat Media B.V.
© 2025 IamExpat Media B.V.
Dec 11, 2013
Alexandra Gowling
Alexandra is an Australian citizen and an experienced expat, having spent (quite a bit of) time in Asia before coming to the Netherlands a year ago. She enjoys writing, reading and talking to people, occasionally in Dutch.Read more

The four biggest cities in the Netherlands are asking the Dutch government to take action on scooters, by taking them off bike paths and making riders wear helmets.

Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and Utrecht together wrote a letter outlining their requests to the two responsible ministers.

Now, scooters with supposedly maximum speeds of 30 km per hour are permitted to ride on bike paths and their riders do not have to wear helmets.

Recently, Dutch political parties have called for tougher penalties on hooligan road users, including those who soup-up their scooters over the maximum permitted speeds.

Scooter accidents

The breadth of scooters, according to the Foundation for Road Safety Research (SWOV), frequently puts cyclists at risk on bike paths.

According to SWOV’s research, if scooters were relegated to the road it would save around 260 victims a year in Amsterdam alone from ending up in a hospital or emergency centre. That is a 30 per cent decrease from current levels.

In 2012, there were 689 victims of scooter accidents in the four cities, with 53 per cent of those just in Amsterdam, usually on the bike path. Further, almost half of all traffic fatalities in Amsterdam were moped riders.

Speeding mopeds

In the letter, the cities also want to know if they are able to do more to tackle speeding scooters.

They estimate the 77 per cent of scooter drivers go over the permitted speed of 25 km an hour.

The cities want to be able to take people’s licences away based on speed measurements from radar or laser devices.

Currently, they depend on roller bank measurements, which determine a vehicle’s speed by showing how fast its wheels are turning.

Testing the new rules

SWOV proposed that Amsterdam could conduct a test with obligatory helmets and scooters on the road in Stadsdeel Noord.

This area has a natural boundary of water and rural land, which reduces the chance that scooter riders would be confused about where the trial would and would not apply.

Sources: Trouw, Parool

By Alexandra Gowling