An e-scooter can feel like a cheaper bridge before car keys. For Houston families, the first question is not price. It is whether your teen can legally ride it where you live, whether the battery is safe, and whether the insurance contract will respond if someone gets hurt.
The parent answer
Before you buy a teen an e-scooter, check the local rule, the battery standard, and the insurance contract. Texas law allows motor-assisted scooters in limited places, but Houston is stricter for riders under sixteen and added a citywide micromobility curfew in 2025. TDI also warns that home and auto policies often do not cover electric scooter accidents the way families assume.
I understand why parents look at scooters. I got a bike before I got keys, and I remember that feeling of freedom. Now I watch my own daughter and her friends grow up around scooters, bikes, phones, traffic, and real Houston streets. I am not trying to take the joy out of it. I am trying to keep a family from finding out after the fact that the local rule, the battery, or the policy was not what they thought it was.
Charles McDade, LUTCF
Texas law calls the usual stand-up scooter a motor-assisted scooter. The legal definition requires at least two wheels, a braking system, a motor not exceeding 40 cubic centimeters, a deck designed for standing or sitting, and the ability to be propelled by human power alone. Pocket bikes and minimotorbikes are not the same thing.
Under Texas Transportation Code Section 551.352, a motor-assisted scooter may operate only on a street or highway posted at 35 miles per hour or less, though it may cross a faster road at an intersection. State law also allows operation on a bicycle path or sidewalk unless a county, city, or the state prohibits it for safety.
State law is only the floor. Houston rules can make the answer stricter, especially for riders under sixteen and nighttime riding.
Houston's published Code of Ordinances defines a minor as a person under sixteen. Section 45-18 says it is unlawful for a minor to operate a motor-assisted scooter on any public roadway, street, alley, sidewalk, or city park within city limits. It also says a parent or guardian may not allow the minor to do so. That is the kind of local rule that turns a simple birthday gift into a very different family decision.
Houston also approved a citywide curfew in November 2025 that prohibits renting and operating micromobility devices from 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. within city limits. The city's announcement says personal e-scooters are not exempt, with exceptions for direct travel to or from school or work, emergencies, and limited official or special-event uses.
If you live outside Houston city limits, check your city. The state gives local governments room to restrict scooter use for safety, which means Tomball, Cypress, The Woodlands, Katy, Humble, League City, Sugar Land, and other communities may not answer this the same way.
Start with the city rule and the route. A scooter that is legal under state law may still be restricted by Houston or another local government.
Look for UL 2272 for the scooter's electrical system and UL 2271 for the battery. Avoid cheap replacement batteries and chargers.
The CDC's Austin study found less than one percent of injured riders wore a helmet. McDade's family answer is helmet every ride.
TDI warns that home and auto policies probably do not cover the scooter accident the way many parents assume.
Do not charge near exits, overnight, or with aftermarket parts. The device belongs somewhere it cannot trap the family if a battery fails.
A scooter may delay the auto premium conversation. It does not replace the plan for learner permits, first cars, and liability limits.
TDI's electric scooter guidance is plain. Rental agreements often leave the rider assuming liability, home policies do not usually cover damage caused by motorized vehicles, and an auto policy probably will not cover an electric scooter. TDI also says health insurance may cover your injuries, but it will not cover injuries to someone in your path.
That is why McDade treats the scooter as a contract question, not a toy question. We look at the home policy, the personal liability language, the umbrella policy, the deductible, and whether the carrier has any endorsement or separate option for the device.
The damage to the scooter may sting. The bigger concern is a pedestrian injury, a neighbor's child, a fall on a public path, or a claim where the contract says motorized vehicles are out. We translate the contract before claim time because that is when the answer is still useful.
UL Standards and Engagement identifies UL 2272, UL 2271, and UL 2849 as key standards for e-bikes and e-scooters. For scooters, UL 2272 applies to personal e-mobility devices and UL 2271 applies to batteries used in light electric vehicles. UL explains that certification tests the batteries, chargers, electrical systems, and more against conditions such as heat, water exposure, vibration, drops, and overcharging.
This article uses public source material from Texas Transportation Code, Houston city materials, the Texas Department of Insurance, UL Standards and Engagement, and CDC's Austin e-scooter injury study. The purpose is not to replace local law, legal counsel, a manufacturer's manual, or the insurance contract. The purpose is to help parents ask better questions first.
Start with the local rule, not the sale price. Texas allows motor-assisted scooters on certain streets, bike paths, and sidewalks unless a local government restricts them. Houston is stricter for riders under sixteen. Its published code says a minor may not operate a motor-assisted scooter on public roadways, streets, alleys, sidewalks, or city parks, and Houston added a citywide 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. micromobility curfew in 2025. After that, check the battery certification, helmet plan, and insurance gap.
Texas Transportation Code Section 551.351 defines a motor-assisted scooter as a self-propelled device with at least two wheels, a braking system, a gas or electric motor not exceeding 40 cubic centimeters, a deck designed for standing or sitting, and the ability to be propelled by human power alone. Pocket bikes and minimotorbikes are not included.
Texas Transportation Code Section 551.352 says a motor-assisted scooter may operate only on a street or highway posted at 35 miles per hour or less, though it may cross a faster road at an intersection. State law also allows use on a bicycle path or sidewalk unless a county, municipality, or the state prohibits it for safety.
Houston's published Code of Ordinances defines a minor as a person under sixteen. Section 45-18 says it is unlawful for a minor to operate a motor-assisted scooter on any public roadway, street, alley, sidewalk, or city park within city limits, and it is unlawful for a parent or guardian to allow it. That makes the city-limit answer very different from the general Texas answer. Check the current Houston code before buying.
Often not the way parents assume. TDI warns that home policies do not usually cover damage caused by motorized vehicles, and an electric scooter is usually not covered by an auto policy either. Some carriers may offer an endorsement or a separate policy, so the smart move is to ask before the scooter is ridden.
Look for UL 2272 for the scooter's electrical system and UL 2271 for the battery. UL Standards and Engagement says UL 2272 applies to personal e-mobility devices, including e-scooters, and that certified devices are tested for conditions such as heat, water exposure, vibration, drops, and overcharging. Use the manufacturer charger and do not charge near exits.
The McDade answer is yes, every ride. The CDC's Austin e-scooter injury study found that less than one percent of injured riders were wearing a helmet, and the study emphasized helmet use as a way to reduce head and brain injury risk. Legal minimums are not the same as family standards.
It can feel cheaper right now, but it does not erase the driver conversation. A scooter may delay the auto premium increase, but it creates a different legal, safety, and insurance problem. If your child will eventually drive, compare the scooter risk, the coverage gap, and the future auto plan together.
Send us the home renewal or talk to a McDade broker. We will check whether the scooter exposure is excluded, whether an endorsement exists, and how the home, umbrella, health, and future auto conversation fit together.
Local broker. National bench. We translate the contract before claim time.
General insurance education only. Policy language, underwriting eligibility, local law, manufacturer requirements, and the final contract govern. McDade Insurance is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.