DYU UK Summer E-Bike Sale: A1F Pro, T1, D3F
A good summer e-bike sale should do more than knock a few pounds off a product page. It should make the choice clearer. If you live in a UK flat, carry shopping through a narrow hallway, fold a bike into a car boot, or ride through a wet Manchester evening after work, the question is not simply "which bike is cheapest?" It is "which one will I actually use every week?"
The current DYU UK Summer Sale runs until 31 May 2026. Prices checked from the live UK product data show the DYU A1F Pro at £499, down from £599, the DYU T1 at £699, down from £949, and the DYU D3F at £359, down from £549. All three are folding e-bikes, all sit within the normal UK EAPC riding format, and all suit a different kind of summer routine.
The A1F Pro is the practical cargo choice because it includes both a front basket and rear rack. The T1 is the smoother premium folder because its torque sensor makes assistance feel more natural. The D3F is the lightest and most compact choice, and at £359 it is the easiest way into the sale if your rides are short, regular and storage-limited.
Summer Sale Snapshot Before 31 May
Here is the useful price view, without the noise of recommendations, pop-ups and related products. Current sale prices can change as stock moves, but these are the live product-data prices I found while preparing this article.
| Model | Current UK sale price | Was price | Best reason to choose it |
|---|---|---|---|
| DYU A1F Pro | £499 | £599 | Basket + rear rack included for errands and commuting bags |
| DYU T1 | £699 | £949 | Torque sensor, magnesium alloy frame and Shimano disc brakes |
| DYU D3F | £359 | £549 | Smallest, lightest folding choice with cruise control |
That gives the sale a neat three-step shape. The D3F is the budget and portability pick. The A1F Pro adds everyday carrying ability. The T1 costs more but gives the best ride feel. If you are buying before 31 May, the decision should start with your storage space, your route length and whether you carry things.
A1F Pro: Best for Bags, Errands and Short Shops
The A1F Pro is the one I would point at first for riders who do not travel light. A backpack is fine in March. In July, after a warm ride to work or a stop at the shop, it becomes much less charming. Having a front basket and rear rack already fitted changes how often you use the bike for ordinary jobs.
The UK product page lists a 250W motor, 36V 7.5Ah battery, 25 km/h maximum assist speed, 21 kg weight and up to 60 km range. DYU's product notes treat 40 km as the conservative range expectation, with 60 km possible in light pedal-assist conditions. That is the sensible way to read it: plenty for local errands and daily commuting, not a promise that every rider will see the top number in wind, hills and stop-start traffic.
Where the A1F Pro really earns its place is the basket-and-rack combination. A small food shop, office bag, light waterproof jacket, D-lock, charger or picnic blanket has somewhere to go. That makes it a strong fit for Bristol errands, London side streets, seaside routes and any rider who wants a compact folder but refuses to give up carrying capacity.
The compromise is refinement. The A1F Pro is practical and affordable, but it does not have the T1's torque sensor or 20-inch wheel comfort. At £499 in the current Summer Sale, that trade-off is reasonable if utility matters more than premium pedal feel.
Ready to upgrade your ride? Check out the DYU A1F Pro.
T1: Best for Smooth Pedalling and Longer City Rides
The T1 is the sale pick for riders who notice how a bike responds under their feet. Its torque sensor reads how hard you are pressing the pedals, then adjusts assistance more naturally than a basic on-off cadence sensor. On a shared cycle path, around roundabouts or when pulling away from lights, that smoother response makes the bike feel less jerky.
At £699 in the current UK sale, down from £949, the T1 is not the cheapest option here. It is the premium-feel option. DYU's product data highlights a 250W motor with torque sensor, 36V 10Ah battery, 55-60 km pedal-assist range, 22.5 kg weight, 120 kg load rating, magnesium alloy frame, 20-inch wheels, front and rear LED lights, and Shimano front and rear disc brakes.
The 20-inch wheel size is part of the appeal. Compared with a tiny folder, the T1 feels more settled over broken tarmac, drain covers and typical UK road edges. It still folds for storage, but it rides less like a last-mile gadget and more like a proper compact commuter. If your summer rides are 10-20 miles across mixed city streets and parks, the T1 is the one I would want under me.
The honest limit is carrying. The T1 can handle a rider and normal kit, but it is not the obvious basket-and-rack errand machine in this sale. Choose it for feel, frame quality and braking confidence. Choose the A1F Pro if your weekly ride includes shopping bags more often than long, smooth pedalling sections.
Ready to upgrade your ride? Check out the DYU T1.
D3F: Best for Lowest Price and Tight Storage
The D3F is the cleanest answer for someone who wants a small folding e-bike under £400. At £359 in the current sale, down from £549, it is the lowest-priced model in this UK Summer Sale group. It is also the lightest folding e-bike in the DYU line-up at 19 kg, which matters more than it sounds if you are dealing with a narrow hallway, a flat entrance or a car boot.
The D3F uses a 250W motor, 36V 10Ah battery, front and rear disc brakes, 14-inch wheels, LED lighting and a claimed 50 km pedal-assist range. It also has a cruise control function: hold the throttle at your chosen speed for around eight seconds, and the bike can maintain that speed until you brake or change input. On flat, predictable stretches, that can make a small folder feel calmer.
This is not the bike I would choose for the longest commute or roughest roads. The 14-inch wheels are compact and convenient, but they will not feel as settled as the T1's 20-inch wheels. The D3F also does not include the cargo setup that makes the A1F Pro so useful for shopping. Its job is different: be small, affordable and easy to store.
For students, occasional commuters, caravan trips, car-boot rides and short town errands, that job is enough. If the sale deadline has you deciding quickly, the D3F is the one to buy when your first priority is "will this fit into my life without taking over the hallway?"
Ready to upgrade your ride? Check out the DYU D3F.
Which DYU Folding E-Bike Should You Buy?
Use the route test first. If most of your rides are short and you mainly need something compact, the D3F is the sensible buy. If those same rides often involve groceries, work kit, a small bag or a stop on the way home, the A1F Pro is worth the extra money because the basket and rack solve a real problem. If your rides are longer and you care about natural pedal response, the T1 earns its higher sale price.
Use the storage test second. A narrow flat hallway favours the D3F. A storage room or lift gives the A1F Pro more room to make sense. A rider who can comfortably handle 22.5 kg and wants a more stable ride should look hard at the T1. None of these bikes is feather-light, so be honest about stairs before buying.
Use the budget test last. The D3F at £359 is the lowest-risk entry. The A1F Pro at £499 is the best everyday utility buy. The T1 at £699 is the ride-quality buy. Those are three different kinds of value, which is why the sale works better as a choice guide than a simple ranking.
Buying Before the 31 May Deadline
The 31 May deadline is useful because it forces the practical questions. Measure the folded storage area. Check whether your train operator allows folding e-bikes at the times you travel. Think about whether you need a basket and rear rack, or whether ride feel matters more. Also remember that UK EAPC rules limit standard e-bike assistance to 15.5 mph, with a 250W motor rating and a minimum rider age of 14. DYU's UK models are positioned for that normal commuter category, but local route rules and transport policies can still matter.
My verdict is straightforward. If you want the cheapest compact route into the DYU UK Summer Sale, buy the D3F. If you want the most useful everyday errand bike, buy the A1F Pro. If you want the smoothest and most premium-feeling folder in this sale group, buy the T1.
Frequently asked questions
When does the DYU UK Summer Sale end?
This campaign ends on 31 May 2026. Prices and stock can change before then, so check the UK product pages before ordering.
What is the current A1F Pro UK sale price?
The current UK product data lists the DYU A1F Pro at £499, with a crossed-out price of £599.
What is the current T1 UK sale price?
The current UK product data lists the DYU T1 at £699, with a crossed-out price of £949.
What is the current D3F UK sale price?
The current UK product data lists the DYU D3F at £359, with a crossed-out price of £549.
Which model is best for a UK flat?
For the tightest storage, choose the D3F. For a flat plus shopping errands, choose the A1F Pro. For smoother longer rides, choose the T1 if you can manage the 22.5 kg weight.
About the author: Emily Carter is a UK-based e-bike writer who tests folding bikes around flats, train plans, wet commutes and weekend errands. She focuses on the boring details that decide whether a bike gets used: storage, weight, carrying capacity and how natural the motor feels.

Hinterlasse einen Kommentar
Bitte beachten Sie, dass Kommentare vor der Veröffentlichung genehmigt werden müssen.