
Closet-Sized Cargo Bike Carries 250 lbs, Replaces Your Car
A new electric cargo bike folds to just 8 inches wide and weighs only 55 pounds, yet hauls a week's groceries, your kids, or even another adult. Apartment dwellers finally have a car alternative that doesn't demand a garage.
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Most families skip cargo bikes for one simple reason: they can't fit them anywhere. JackRabbit just solved that problem with a bike that collapses to the width of a shoebox but carries as much as models twice its weight.
The MG Cargo folds to precisely 8 inches wide, slim enough to tuck in a closet or hallway. At 55 pounds, it's the lightest electric cargo bike that can haul serious loads, making it manageable for one person to lift onto a car rack or carry up apartment stairs.
Don't let the compact design fool you. The rear rack holds up to 250 pounds of real-world cargo, whether that's two kids in seats, a week's worth of groceries, or an adult passenger. The bike supports a combined rider and cargo weight of 500 pounds, a nearly 10-to-one strength ratio that doubles the category average.
JackRabbit built the frame from aerospace-grade aluminum, the same heat-treated alloy used in aircraft construction. The 749-watt motor prioritizes pulling power over speed, tackling hills and heavy loads without struggle.
The battery delivers over 48 miles per charge, covering most city commutes with range to spare. A hot-swap battery slot means riders can carry a spare for longer days without hunting for outlets.

The bike uses what mountain bikers call a "mullet" setup: a larger 24-inch front wheel rolls smoothly over rough pavement while a smaller 20-inch rear wheel lowers the cargo platform for better stability when loaded. Three-inch-wide tires on both wheels grip securely in rain or shine.
Setup takes under a minute with zero tools required. Pop off the front wheel and handlebars, and the bike fits in an SUV trunk, campervan storage bay, or sailboat hold.
The Ripple Effect
Car-dependent families are discovering they don't actually need a second vehicle for errands and school runs. Cities where parking costs more than rent suddenly become navigable on two wheels. Parents who thought cargo bikes were only for homeowners with garages now have options that work in 600-square-foot apartments.
JackRabbit launched ModRabbit alongside the bike, an open platform connecting riders with compatible accessories from brands like Thule, Ortlieb, and Burley. The Copilot Kit transforms the rear rack into a passenger seat rated to 150 pounds and accepts standard child seats.
At $2,499, the MG Cargo costs more than basic cargo bikes but less than comparable lightweight models. For families weighing the cost of a second car payment, insurance, and parking against bike infrastructure, the math increasingly favors pedals over pistons.
The first units ship in mid-May through JackRabbit's website and over 200 US retailers. One closet-sized revolution at a time, the future of urban family transportation is folding into place.
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Based on reporting by New Atlas
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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