Kona Coco HD Standard

Kona

Coco HDStandard

From$1,099
GroupsetShimano AltusShimano Altus 11-32t 8spd
WheelsWTB SX19; Shimano 100x9…WTB Horizon Comp 650x47c
Tire clearance47 mm

The Kona Coco HD is a straightforward, comfort-oriented hub-drive city e-bike built around a low-slung 6061 aluminum step-through frame and rigid Project Two aluminum fork. Rather than chasing performance-bike trends, this generation is aimed squarely at everyday urban riding: short commutes, errands, neighborhood loops, and casual pavement cruising. Its defining package is simple and coherent—an internal 418 Wh battery, SR Suntour HD 20 mph rear hub motor, 650b wheels with 47 mm tires, and hydraulic disc brakes with 180 mm rotors.

What distinguishes the Coco HD is how deliberately it prioritizes accessibility and calm handling. The step-through frame and upright cockpit make it easy to get on and off, while the rigid chassis avoids the weight and complexity of cheap suspension parts. Kona instead leans on high-volume 650b x 47c tires to add comfort and grip on rough pavement. In the market, that places the Coco HD as an entry-level to lower-mid-priced urban e-bike for riders who want a recognizable bike-brand frame, predictable assist, and practical city manners rather than maximum range, cargo capacity, or aggressive acceleration.

Kona Coco HD
Build
Size
$1,099
02 / Specifications

Spec sheet.

Every component shipped with this build.

01Frameset
1 component
ForkKona Project Two Aluminum Disc
02Drivetrain & brakes
10 components
Shift leversShimano Altus
Rear derailleurShimano TX
CassetteShimano Altus 11-32t 8spd
CranksetSuntour, 38t
Bottom bracketSuntour
Front rotorTektro TR180 180mm
Rear rotorTektro TR180 180mm
03Wheels & tires
4 components
Front wheelWTB SX19; Shimano 100x9mm; Stainless Black 14g/13g
Front tireWTB Horizon Comp 650x47c
Rear tireWTB Horizon Comp 650x47c
04Cockpit & contact
5 components
StemKona Commuter
HandlebarsKona Handplant
SaddleKona Commuter
SeatpostKona Commuter 27.2mm
Grips/TapeKona Key Grip Slip on
03 / Geometry

Geometry & fit.

3 sizes published.

The published geometry points clearly to a comfort-first city bike. Across all sizes, the Coco HD uses a 70.0° head tube angle, 450 mm chainstays, and a 60 mm bottom-bracket drop—numbers that favor stability and easy handling over quick steering. The long 450 mm rear end helps keep the bike planted, especially useful on an e-bike with a rear hub motor, while the 60 mm BB drop lowers the rider’s center of gravity for a secure, approachable feel at stops and in slow-speed traffic.

Fit is upright and size-scaled in a sensible way. Stack ranges from 591 mm in S to 643 mm in L, while reach stays moderate at 395 mm, 423 mm, and 439 mm, reinforcing a neutral, non-stretched riding position. Seat tube angle shifts from 75.0° in S to 73.0° in L, which helps keep smaller sizes from feeling too rearward while preserving balanced weight distribution for taller riders. Wheelbase grows from 1088 mm to 1150 mm across the range, again underscoring stable, predictable handling rather than nimble, sporty responses.

Reach × Stack · size Smm

Where the handlebar sits relative to the bottom bracket — the single most important fit pair.

660614568521475STACK ↑335365395425455REACH →ENDURANCERACE / AEROSize S395 · 591
01Fit geometry6 values
Stack591 mm
Reach395 mm
Top tube553 mm
Headtube length170 mm
Standover height584 mm
Seat tube length420 mm
03Handling geometry8 values
Headtube angle70°
Seat tube angle75°
BB height282 mm
BB drop60 mm
Offset50 mm
Front center644 mm
Wheelbase1088 mm
Chainstay length450 mm

Which size should I buy?

Slide your height to see the recommended size. GearWise's fit algorithm works from the published stack, reach, and ETT — the brand's own recommendation may differ.

Your height
5'8"173 cm
5'0"5'5"5'10"6'3"6'7"
Recommended sizeSBased on stack, reach & ETT for your height · score 43/100.

Calculated from GearWise's own stack / reach / ETT algorithm — the brand's size chart may recommend a different size, and a proper bike fit beats any calculator.

04 / Other builds

The lineup.

1 build, ranging $1,099.

The available data points to a single standard build rather than a multi-tier range, so the Coco HD’s buying proposition is mostly about whether this one spec sheet matches the rider’s priorities. Ride Review lists a Standard build at $1099, while review coverage also cites prices around $1,788, so pricing in the source material is inconsistent and should be treated cautiously. What is consistent is the component theme: an affordable, practical urban package centered on a rigid aluminum frame, SR Suntour HD hub-drive system, 418 Wh battery, Shimano Tourney/Altus drivetrain, and Tektro hydraulic disc brakes.

The notable spec choices are sensible for an entry-level city e-bike. Hydraulic brakes with 180 mm rotors are a meaningful upgrade over the mechanical systems often found at lower price points, and the 650b wheels with 47 mm WTB Horizon Comp tires are a major part of the bike’s comfort and handling. The Shimano 8-speed setup is basic, but it is inexpensive to service and well matched to the bike’s moderate-speed urban role. Overall, the spec sheet emphasizes dependable everyday function and ride comfort rather than premium electronics, long-range battery capacity, or performance-oriented parts.

01
Standard build
· Currently viewingStandard
$1,099On this page
05 / Reviews

From the press.

8 reviews from the cycling press.

Reviewers are largely aligned on the Coco HD’s character: it is a relaxed, stable urban cruiser with notably smooth motor tuning. Opticycles described it as feeling like a "sofa on wheels," praising the gentle, predictable assist from the SR Suntour HD system and the planted ride from the 650b wheels and 47 mm tires. Ebikes.org similarly highlighted the motor’s quiet operation, saying it was "whisper-quiet" and delivered a natural feel "like riding a conventional bike—only easier." Across reviews, the upright riding position, easy step-through layout, and hydraulic disc brakes are recurring positives for city use.

The strongest praise centers on comfort and composure rather than speed. Reviewers found that the big-volume tires do a convincing job of muting rough pavement, cobbles, and potholes despite the rigid fork, and several noted that the calm power delivery makes the bike easy to manage in traffic. Ebikes.org was especially positive about climbing for this category, calling it a "beach cruiser that was born to climb," while also noting that the 8-speed gearing works well with the motor’s 60 Nm torque.

Weaknesses are equally consistent. The 418 Wh battery is widely seen as modest, suitable for typical daily loops rather than long-range riding, and Opticycles explicitly noted that it "won't invite marathon days." Reviewers also cautioned that riders expecting brisk acceleration or strong performance on steep grades under heavy load may find the hub motor underpowered compared with stronger mid-drive systems. A few practical downsides also surfaced, including noisy fenders and the limits of a rigid bike on genuinely rough terrain.