
Seamless e-bikes for confident, connected rides
Built to take the shortcut through the forest after a skinny dip in the lake
Used for errands two streets away
Available Models
11-Speed
Pinion 1.9

Sleek urban e-bikes for riders who love the city
Built for weaving through the city like it owes you something
Used for picking up bread on the way home
Available Models
Pinion 1.9

Long-range e-bikes built for riders who refuse to slow down
Built for riders who chase the horizon
Used for Tuesdays
Available Models
Pinion 1.9
11-Speed
Smart Shift

Long-range e-bikes built for riders who refuse to slow down
Built for riders who chase the horizon
Used for Tuesdays
Available Models
11-Speed
Smart.Shift
12-Speed DROP
DESIKNIO started where the road gets interesting - steep climbs, tight alleys, and gravel tracks just outside the city limits. A place that demanded a bike light enough to climb, smooth enough for the streets, and tough enough for whatever came next.
That's still how we build. Lightweight, rugged, and refined - bikes that are ready for more than everyday life asks of them, and effortless when it doesn't.
From the morning commute to the road that doesn't have a name yet, every DESIKNIO is built for the same thing: the freedom to go wherever the day takes you.
DESIKNIO is crafted in Switzerland - home to some of the most precise and demanding manufacturing in the world. Through our connection to Stromer, one of Europe's leading e-bike makers, we build with the kind of engineering rigour that doesn't announce itself. It's simply there, in every joint, every component, every ride.
But Swiss precision alone doesn't make a DESIKNIO. What makes it ours is what we bring to it - the warmth of Granada, the contrast of everyday and extraordinary, the belief that a bike should feel effortless before it feels impressive.
Swiss-made gives us the foundation. Everything else is DESIKNIO.
DESIKNIO didn't just adopt new technology - we helped shape it. We were the first e-bike to combine Pinion and Mahle systems simultaneously in a single bike, an integration nobody had attempted before. But we went further than that. We worked directly with Mahle to engineer parts of the motor itself - which means the frame and the drive system weren't designed to fit each other. They were designed as one.
That's not a technical detail. It's a different way of thinking about what a bike is. Not a collection of parts assembled together, but a single object engineered from the inside out.
When everything is built to belong together, the ride feels like it too.