Children's bicycles refer to bicycles suitable for children aged 4 to 8 to ride, with a maximum seat height of 435mm to 635mm, and are ridden by a driving mechanism acting on the rear wheel. Available in a variety of wheel diameters and styles, with or without balance wheels.


What bikes do children need?


If your child is 1-3 years old, you will definitely need a bicycle or tricycle with auxiliary wheels. If your child is 3 to 5 years old, you can choose a balance bike.


However, if your child is over 5 years old, it is best to buy him a regular bike.


Bikes with auxiliary wheels usually have more wheels in the rear. Suitable for children 1-3 years old.


When can the auxiliary wheel be removed?


When you see your child is not jumping from wheel to wheel very often and your child starts riding in a straight line. The next step is to try giving your child a balance bike.


Precautions for children riding bicycles.


1. Don't let your child learn to ride a bike too early, start slowly.


2. Strictly control the child's riding time, and don't let the child get too tired every time.


3. The structure of the stroller is improved, the distance between the pedals is shortened, and the distance between the seat and the pedals is adjusted, so that children feel less strenuous when riding.


4. If the child's leg has formed an "x" shape, it should be corrected as soon as possible. The correct way is: let the child practice sitting cross-legged, 1-3 times a day, 20-30 minutes each time.


Selection criteria for children's bicycles.


1. Feel and judge the weight of the child's bicycle.


The weight of the stroller is mainly determined by the thickness of the steel tube of the frame. To a certain extent, the heavier and more stable the stroller is, the safer it is.


2. Touch the surface of the child's bicycle to see if the child's hands and feet are touching sharp points, sharp edges and protrusions.


3. Scratch the coating. Scrape the coating with your fingernail to see if the surface coating peels off noticeably.


4. Take a look. See how the overall structure looks like.


5. View components. Check to see if the children's bike chain cover covers the outside surfaces and edges of the chain, sprocket, cassette, and the inside surfaces where the chain and sprocket mesh.


6. Look at the solder joints. Check whether the surface of the children's bicycle solder joints is flat and whether there are defects such as cracks, burn-through or lack of penetration.


7. Feel if the kids bike size is right for your child. In particular, the size of the brake handle is not suitable, which may cause the child to be unable to grasp the brake handle, and the car cannot brake when riding, which is prone to accidents.


8. Feel the firmness. Feel for adequate support in the welds on the child's bike and seat.


To protect your child, he needs a suitable helmet, knee pads and elbow pads. At the same time you need to find a safe place to teach your child to ride.