Mihogo ONE vs Auloor NXB: How These Two 20" Fat-Tire Utility Bikes Compare

At RideRow we carry every brand, so we have no dog in this fight — our job is to lay the numbers side by side and let the specs talk. Below we compare the Mihogo ONE Utility EBIKE ($999, list $1,699) against the Auloor NXB (list price $999, currently selling for $749–$799 depending on color). Both share the same 750W/1000W-peak motor class and 20" fat-tire format, but the ONE adds a second battery and a heavier-duty frame while the NXB stays closer to a standard single-battery commuter build.

Every number below is pulled from the manufacturer's own product listing (mihogo.com for the ONE, euybike.com for the Auloor NXB). Where a brand does not publish a spec, we mark it 待核 (unverified) rather than guess — a spec we cannot source, we do not print.

Spec-by-spec comparison

Spec Mihogo ONE ($999) Auloor NXB (list $999, sale ~$749–799)
Motor 750W (sustained), 1000W (peak), 48V 750W brushless (rated), 1000W peak
Torque 85 Nm 72 Nm
Battery 48V, 12.8Ah (614.4Wh) + 16Ah (768Wh) dual battery — 1382Wh combined 48V, 12.8Ah (615Wh) single battery
Claimed range Up to 167 miles 28–30 miles (throttle only); 42–60 miles (pedal-assist)
Top speed 28 MPH 28 MPH
Class Class II (pedal-assist + throttle) Class 3
Frame Magnesium Alloy MIHOGO-20, 45mm 6061 aluminum
Bike weight 80 lbs 66.1 lbs with battery (53.8 lbs without)
Payload capacity 400 lbs max load (brand also lists a 330 lbs "total weight limit" elsewhere on the same page — both figures as published) 300 lbs
Wheels / tires 20", 20"x4.0" Chaoyang high-end color tire 23" wheel diameter, 20"x3.0" fat tire
Brakes Oil disc, 180mm front / 160mm rear rotors 180mm mechanical disc
Suspension Front fork, adjustable (brand describes it as "adjustable software and hardware"; travel figure 待核) Front fork, 80mm travel, aluminum alloy
Display 2.4" IPS color smart display LCD with USB charging
Charger 48V, 2A fast charger 48V, 2A
Pedal assist levels 5 7-speed drivetrain (Shimano); PAS level count 待核

What the numbers actually say

  • Range and battery. The ONE's dual-battery 1382Wh combined pack and claimed 167-mile range dwarf the NXB's single 615Wh pack and its published 42–60 mile pedal-assist range. This is the single biggest gap between the two bikes.
  • Motor and torque. Both run the same 750W-sustained/1000W-peak motor class and hit the same 28 MPH top speed, but the ONE's motor is rated at a higher 85 Nm versus the NXB's 72 Nm.
  • Weight and brakes. The NXB is the lighter bike at 66.1 lbs with its battery installed, versus the ONE's 80 lbs — a meaningful difference given the ONE is also carrying a second battery pack. The NXB uses mechanical disc brakes where the ONE uses oil (hydraulic) disc brakes, a component-tier difference worth noting for stopping-power feel.
  • Payload and tires. The ONE's published payload (400 lbs, with a conflicting 330 lbs figure elsewhere on its own listing) is higher than the NXB's 300 lbs. Both run 20"x tires in a similar fat-tire format, though the ONE's is listed at 4.0" width versus the NXB's 3.0".

Objective takeaway

These two share a motor class and wheel format but diverge sharply on battery strategy. The Mihogo ONE stands out on range, torque, payload, and brake tier — a dual-battery 1382Wh system, 85 Nm motor, and hydraulic disc brakes — which suits a rider who ranks maximum range and stopping power highest. The Auloor NXB is the lighter, lower-cost bike at its current sale price, which suits a rider prioritizing curb weight and up-front cost over maximum range.

Before purchase, a buyer should ask Mihogo to clarify the ONE's conflicting payload figures and unspecified suspension travel, and confirm the NXB's exact pedal-assist level count with Auloor. For warranty terms and coverage, check each manufacturer's official site directly — RideRow does not set or represent either brand's warranty.

Sources: Mihogo ONE specs — mihogo.com product listing. Auloor NXB specs — euybike.com product listing. Prices are manufacturer list prices as observed 2026-07-15 and may change. Fields marked 待核 (unverified) were not published by the manufacturer at the time of writing.