Buying an electric scooter is not only about speed and range. Reliability matters too, especially when safety notices or recall reports show up over time.
This tool helps you look up a specific model and see three things in one place. Recall mentions, recurring safety notices, and serviceability signals like repair or parts issues.
How to use it
- Type a model name in the search box.
- Pick the model from the suggestions if it appears.
- Click Search.
- Review the risk score and the 30 day trend line.
- Scroll to see the signal history list, plus recurring hazard families when they repeat.
Tip. Use the same model naming you see in product titles, for example “Segway Ninebot MAX G2” or “NIU KQi3 Max”.
What the signals mean
Recall mentions
A recall event or recall notice tied to the searched model. These are weighted more heavily in the risk score.
Safety notices
Non recall safety communications and recurring hazard type mentions. For example battery fire risk, brake issues, or structural failures.
Serviceability signals
Anything that points to repair friction. Parts unavailable, limited service options, refund only outcomes, or service center constraints.
How the risk score works
The tool assigns a risk score from 0 to 100 based on signal volume, signal severity, and recency. Newer signals matter more than older ones. Repeated hazard families in the last 180 days can increase the score.
This is not a defect prediction model and it is not a substitute for official recall notices. It is a summary layer that helps you spot patterns faster.
Share this widget
If you run a buyer guide or comparison post, you can embed the widget for a model using the built in iframe snippet that appears after you search. That embed can help readers verify signals quickly, and it can also earn natural backlinks when other sites reference your tool.
Model search
FAQ
Does every scooter model have results
No. If there are no matching public notices tied to the model, the tool may show an empty history.
Why does the risk trend change over time
The score uses a decay curve. If no new signals appear, the score can drop over time. If new notices appear, it can rise.
Can I compare models
Yes. Search one model, note the score and recent signals, then search another model.


