Quick Answer: The best INOKIM scooter in 2026 is the Quick 4 Super — 600W nominal (1,100W peak), a 52V 16Ah Samsung pack, and 23.8 mph with 24.6 real miles in Rider Guide’s test — but only at its street price near $850, not INOKIM’s $2,000 list. The OXO is the flagship: 35.9 mph measured by Electric Scooter Guide (not the advertised 40) with the best braking we’ve seen quoted for any scooter, 8.6 ft from 15 mph per Rider Guide. The Light 2 Max is the 31 lb commuter, UL 2272 certified per INOKIM. The one rule that governs this whole brand: ignore inokim.com’s sticker prices — they run two to three times above real street prices.

INOKIM is the most misunderstood premium brand in electric scooters. Its machines are beautifully built — reviewers reach for words like “zero creaks” and “best-in-class suspension” — and its brakes are genuinely class-leading. But its spec sheets are optimistic, its list prices are fantasy, and its warranty is half what NIU offers. This page ranks every current INOKIM on independently tested numbers and the prices people actually pay.

Best INOKIM scooters at a glance

ModelBest forRated speedTested speedRated rangeTested rangeWeightStreet price
Quick 4 / Quick 4 SuperBest overall INOKIM25 mph23.8–25 mph34–44 mi24.6–28 mi46–47 lb~$850–1,995
OXOBest performance flagship40 mph35.9–36.7 mph~60–68 mi33.1–36.6 mi74 lb~$1,999 (list $3,500)
OX SuperBest ride comfort28 mph28 mph56 mi33 mi55–61 lb~$1,999–2,250
Light 2 MaxBest lightweight commuter21 mph27 mi31 lb~$995–1,500
KIX (2026)Cheapest INOKIM15–20 mi claimed30 lb~$1,100

Two caveats that make this table honest. Rider Guide tests with a 165 lb rider and Electric Scooter Insider with a 197 lb rider, so their range figures are not directly comparable — the spread you see above is partly rider weight. And the Light 2 Max and KIX have no independent test data at all; their columns are blank on purpose rather than filled with the older Light 2’s numbers.

INOKIM Quick 4 Super — best INOKIM overall

Why it wins

  • The best-balanced INOKIM: 600W nominal with 1,100W peak, a 52V 16Ah Samsung pack (832Wh), 10×2.5-inch pneumatic tires and front spring plus rear rubber suspension, at 46–47 lb.
  • Rider Guide measured 23.8 mph and 24.6 real miles against a 25 mph / 34–44 mile rating; Electric Scooter Insider hit the full 25 mph and 28 miles with a heavier 197 lb rider.
  • Electric Scooter Insider praised "superior build quality oozing out of every joint, lever and switch," and Electroheads called the Super "the most exhilarating electric scooter I've had the joy of riding so far."
  • It is the INOKIM that actually shows up on discount — Walmart has listed the Quick4 Super at $849.99, which is where this scooter goes from overpriced to genuinely good.

Watch for: the deck is only 15.5 inches long, and Rider Guide reported "poor stability over 20 mph" plus stem wobble, concluding it "suits smaller riders best at speeds of 20 mph or less." Brakes changed by model year — dual drum on 2020–21 units, front drum plus rear Tektro disc on the 2023 review car — so date any listing you buy. Max load is quoted as 220 lb by both Rider Guide and ESI, despite some dealer pages claiming 265 lb.

Check Quick 4 price on Amazon →

A scooter with a 15.5-inch deck and a 12-hour charge habit means your helmet, gloves and a spare tube should already be at the door — try Amazon Prime free for 30 days and get the riding gear there before the scooter is.

INOKIM OXO — best INOKIM for performance

Why it wins

  • Dual 1,000W motors (2,000W nominal, INOKIM claims 2,600W peak), hydraulic disc brakes front and rear, adjustable rubber-torsion suspension, 10×2.5-inch pneumatics, 74 lb.
  • The best braking figure in scooters: Rider Guide measured 8.6 feet from 15 mph and called it "the best braking that we've ever tested." For scale, it recorded 11–12 ft on most of the rest of the INOKIM range.
  • Real-world fast: Electric Scooter Guide measured 35.9 mph and 33.1 miles on a hilly course; Rider Guide's earlier unit did 36.7 mph and 36.6 miles.
  • The 2023 refresh dropped from $2,599 to $1,999, added a rubber deck and an IPX4 rating, and cut roughly a second off 0–30 mph.

Watch for: the 40 mph claim is a speedometer artifact — ESG measured 35.9. INOKIM's own site listed the OXO 2026 at $3,500 and out of stock on July 19, 2026, so buy on the street price or not at all. Battery specs conflict between sources (57.6V 26Ah / ~1,498Wh on INOKIM's compare page vs 60V 25.6Ah / 1,536Wh on dealer charts), cells switched from LG to Greenway between generations, and Rider Guide flagged "the worst traction in both wet and dry conditions" from the older hard plastic deck. Charging takes 10–13.5 hours. More top-end options in our fastest electric scooter rankings.

Check OXO price on Amazon →

INOKIM OX Super — best ride comfort

Why it wins

  • The single-sided adjustable swingarm suspension (OSAP) front and rear is INOKIM's signature, and it earns the praise: Electric Scooter Insider called the OX Super "one of the most comfortable scooters we've tested" with "best-in-class suspension."
  • ESI's testing hit the full rated 28 mph and 33 real miles from the 60V ~1,250Wh LG pack, with a 265 lb max load and 10-inch pneumatic tires.
  • Rider Guide's verdict on the OX platform still stands: "This electric scooter has literally ZERO creaks or annoying sounds" — a rarity in a 55–61 lb folding machine.

Watch for: acceleration is the weak point across the whole OX line — ESI called it "slow and sluggish" and said it "lacks bite," while Rider Guide said the OX "accelerates unenthusiastically under 15 mph." ESI also reported no water-resistance rating on its test unit despite INOKIM marketing IPX4, and motor output is quoted as 800W by both ESI and Rider Guide against INOKIM's 1,000W. The rated 56 miles became 33 in testing — a 41% shortfall. If suspension comfort is the goal, cross-shop our best electric scooter with suspension picks.

Check OX Super price on Amazon →

INOKIM Light 2 Max — best lightweight INOKIM

Why it wins

  • 31 lb with a 350W motor (650W peak), a 36V 12.8Ah pack (~461Wh) rated for 27 miles at 21 mph, and a 3–5 hour charge — the only INOKIM that charges over a lunch break instead of overnight.
  • UL 2272 certified per INOKIM (SGS-certified, in its wording) — the credential that matters for battery safety in apartment buildings and on transit, though no INOKIM model appears in Electric Scooter Guide's UL-certified database, so take it as a manufacturer claim.
  • The previous Light 2 is the proof point: Rider Guide measured 20.7 mph and 16.0 miles, and rated its 11.9 ft braking distance the best of any ultra-portable it had tested — on drum brakes, with no maintenance.
  • Street price has been as low as ~$995 at INOKIM's own NYC store against a $1,500 list.

Watch for: no suspension at all, an 8.5-inch pneumatic front paired with a solid never-flat rear, and a 220 lb max load. Nobody independent has tested the Max specifically, so treat the 27-mile rating with the same 25–40% haircut the rest of the lineup earned. It showed out of stock on inokim.com in July 2026. Lighter and cheaper alternatives sit in our best lightweight electric scooter roundup.

Check Light 2 price on Amazon →

Models to skip or approach carefully

INOKIM by the numbers

Which INOKIM should you buy?

Buy the Quick 4 Super if you want one answer — it is the most balanced machine INOKIM makes and the only one that regularly hits a defensible price. Buy the OXO if you want speed and the best brakes in the category, and only at its ~$1,999 street price. Buy the OX Super if comfort over bad pavement outranks acceleration. Buy the Light 2 Max if you carry your scooter and want UL 2272 certification in a 31 lb package. Skip the KIX until someone tests it.

One more thing to weigh that no spec sheet shows: support. US distribution for this brand is thinning — Fluid FreeRide, the original US importer, has its whole INOKIM parts catalogue sold out, and its Better Business Bureau file shows 28 complaints in three years with 14 of them unanswered, several about warranty parts that never arrived. INOKIM’s parts range is genuinely deep on paper; getting hold of it in 2026 is the harder problem.

And be clear-eyed about the competition. A $699.99 Segway Ninebot MAX G2 returned 29.8 tested miles for ERideHero and a $999 EMOVE Cruiser S returned 43.6 tested miles for Electric Scooter Guide — both beat the OX Super’s 33 miles at a fraction of its price. INOKIM’s defensible ground is fit, finish and braking, not numbers per dollar. See how the field ranks in our best electric scooter brands overview and the best commuter electric scooter roundup.

Bottom line

The INOKIM Quick 4 Super is the best INOKIM of 2026 — 23.8 tested mph, 24.6 tested miles, and a build quality reviewers keep singling out — provided you buy it near $850 rather than $2,000. The OXO is the performance halo with genuinely exceptional brakes, the OX Super is the comfort pick, and the Light 2 Max is the certified 31 lb commuter. Whatever you choose, apply the two INOKIM rules: never pay the inokim.com list price, and cut every rated range by a quarter to a third — that is what independent testing found on every single model.

Still shortlisting? Start with the best electric scooter pillar, or compare the tier directly in best electric scooter under $1,000. And whatever you ride, add a certified scooter helmet — the cheapest safety upgrade on this page.