Type your answer here... In Florida can you drive a scooter at age 15?
Technically, you can operate a "scooter" without a valid license in Florida, IF the scooter is electric and meets the qualifications of being a motorized bike. If the scooter runs on gasoline, then no matter the size, you HAVE to have a valid driver's license. (By the way, the 49cc reference in the question actually does pertain to a certain restriction in Florida - with a gasoline powered scooter, 49cc is the maximum engine size a person can operate without a motorcycle endorsement on their driver's license). Oh, one last thing about the electric scooter - it has to have pedals which allow it to be pedaled just like a bicycle...hence meeting the guidelines of a "motorized bike."
Maybe. Why?
To drive a motorized scooter in Oklahoma, a person must be at least 14 years old. If under 16, the driver must take a motorized scooter training course.
You bet! It is a motorized vehicle.
Yes, since a scooter is a motorized vehicle.
13
The typical motorized scooters only has four gears usually. The gears are usually foot operated gears and the first motorized scooter was made in 1950.
No its not
The legal age to ride a motor scooter in the USA is 16. The driver is only allowed to drive a scooter up to 125cc in engine size.
For non-motorized scooters Walmart and Target are good retailers. For a motorized scooter Sports authority is a good place. If looking online for a scooter both Amazon and Ebay have a selection of both new and used scooters of all prices. They have both motorized and non-motorized scooters.
Under California Vehicle Code Section 21235, the operator of a moped [motorized scooter] cannot do any of the following: (a) Operate a motorized scooter unless it is equipped with a brake that will enable the operator to make a braked wheel skid on dry, level, clean pavement. (b) Operate a motorized scooter on a highway with a speed limit in excess of 25 miles per hour unless the motorized scooter is operated within a class II bicycle lane. (c) Operate a motorized scooter without wearing a properly fitted and fastened bicycle helmet that meets the standards described in Section 21212. (d) Operate a motorized scooter without a valid driver's license or instruction permit. (e) Operate a motorized scooter with any passengers in addition to the operator. (f) Operate a motorized scooter carrying any package, bundle, or article that prevents the operator from keeping at least one hand upon the handlebars. (g) Operate a motorized scooter upon a sidewalk, except as may be necessary to enter or leave adjacent property. (h) Operate a motorized scooter on the highway with the handlebars raised so that the operator must elevate his or her hands above the level of his or her shoulders in order to grasp the normal steering grip area. (i) Leave a motorized scooter lying on its side on any sidewalk, or park a motorized scooter on a sidewalk in any other position, so that there is not an adequate path for pedestrian traffic. (j) Attach the motorized scooter or himself or herself while on the roadway, by any means, to any other vehicle on the roadway. For more information on California law affecting motorized scooters, see the below link: