Three motor locations, three very different riding experiences. Here's how to pick the right motor architecture for your build.

The single biggest decision in e-bike conversion isn't the brand or the wattage — it's where the motor goes. Front hub, rear hub, and mid-drive are fundamentally different architectures, each with their own strengths, weaknesses, and ideal use cases. Get this decision right and everything else falls into place.

This guide compares all three side by side, with no brand favoritism. Whether you end up with a $200 Voilamart front hub or a $550 BBSHD mid-drive, the architecture choice matters more than the specific product.

Front Hub vs Rear Hub vs Mid-Drive

SpecFront HubRear HubMid-Drive
Install DifficultyEasy (30 min)Medium (60-90 min)Hard (2-3 hr)
Install ToolsAllen keys + 15mm wrench+ Cassette tools+ BB wrench + crank puller
Hill ClimbingPoor (traction-limited)FairExcellent (gear multiplied)
Torque at Wheel45-55 NĀ·m typical45-55 NĀ·m typical120-300 NĀ·m effective
Ride FeelPushed from frontPushed from behindPulled through pedals
Weight BalanceFront-heavyRear-heavyCentered (best)
Drivetrain WearNone (independent)None (independent)Higher (chain stress)
Tire ChangesEasy (front)Harder (cable)Easiest (no wheel cable)
MaintenanceLowLowMedium (chain/gears)
Cost$180-300$200-330$350-550
Best Use CaseFlat commutesCommuters with hillsHills, cargo, off-road

The Verdict

Front hub motors are the budget choice for flat-terrain commuters. They install in 30 minutes, cost under $250, and don't touch your drivetrain. Their weakness is traction — on wet roads or steep hills, a front hub motor will spin the tire. They're also weird to ride (feels like being pulled from the front).

Rear hub motors are the do-everything budget choice. Better traction than front hubs, more natural push feel, and still relatively easy to install. The trade-offs are harder tire changes (you have to disconnect the motor cable) and rear-weight bias that affects handling.

Mid-drive motors are the premium choice. They climb better, feel more natural, and preserve weight balance. The trade-offs are higher cost, harder installation, increased drivetrain wear, and the need for a quality chain. For any build facing real hills or hauling cargo, mid-drive is the right answer.

For first-time converters on flat terrain, get a front or rear hub motor. For everyone else, get a mid-drive. The performance difference on hills is enormous — a 500W mid-drive outclimbs a 1000W hub motor, period.