Lectric XPress 750 vs Aventon Level 4 REC
This is a commuter-value matchup, not just a spec matchup. The XPress 750 makes its case when you want speed and capability per dollar. The Level 4 REC makes its case when you want a more complete commuter package with more security and fewer add-ons to figure out later.

XPress 750 is stronger when…
- price pressure is real
- you want a lighter-buy-in commuter with strong power claims
- you are comfortable adding utility items later if needed
Level 4 REC is stronger when…
- you want the commuter package to feel complete out of the box
- security features, rack, and fenders matter from day one
- you care more about polish and less about squeezing every dollar
Best quick rule
- Pick XPress 750 when budget-first commuter value is the real goal.
- Pick Level 4 REC when you want a daily-use commuter that already feels sorted.
| Decision factor | Usually better pick | Usually weaker side |
|---|---|---|
| Up-front commuter value | Lectric XPress 750 | Aventon Level 4 REC |
| Out-of-box commuter readiness | Aventon Level 4 REC | Lectric XPress 750 |
| Security and anti-theft tech | Aventon Level 4 REC | Lectric XPress 750 |
| Buy-it-and-ride-it simplicity | Aventon Level 4 REC | Lectric XPress 750 |
| Budget commuter with room to accessorize | Lectric XPress 750 | Aventon Level 4 REC |
The real split
This comparison is mostly about value versus polish in the commuter category. The XPress 750 usually appeals to buyers who want stronger price discipline and plenty of speed and utility without climbing into a pricier commuter ecosystem. The Level 4 Rec usually makes more sense for buyers who want the more refined daily package and are willing to pay for it.
Where the XPress 750 makes the strongest case
- Budget-first commuting: you want a quick bike for everyday miles without paying for extra refinement.
- Route difficulty: you expect more hills, longer distances, or harder acceleration demands.
- Value tolerance: you are comfortable trading some polish for more bike per dollar.
Where the Level 4 Rec makes the stronger case
- Everyday comfort: the commuter fit and finish matter to you as much as the motor.
- Ownership feel: you want a bike that feels calmer, tidier, and easier to defend as a long-term daily tool.
- Less performance chasing: you care more about steady real-life commuting than headline punch.
What owners feel after a few weeks
The XPress tends to feel like the rational power-value answer. The Level tends to feel like the more complete commuter answer. If your route is demanding and budget matters, the XPress argument gets stronger. If your commute is steady and you want the nicer day-to-day ownership experience, the Level looks better over time.
Who should buy each one
Choose the XPress 750 if you want a faster value-minded commuter and you are comfortable with a little more compromise in polish.
Choose the Aventon Level 4 Rec if you want the more settled commuter package and can justify the higher buy-in.
What the current product pages suggest
Lectric positions the XPress 750 as a value-forward commuter with strong acceleration and a simpler price story. Aventon positions the Level 4 REC as a more feature-rich commuter with a 750W hub motor, up to 75 miles of range, 80 Nm of torque, a 733Wh removable battery, regenerative braking, Sensor Switch modes, 4G/GPS tracking, and an integrated rear wheel lock. In practical terms, that means the Level 4 REC is trying to justify a higher price through security features, commuter polish, and more complete day-one equipment, while the XPress 750 is easier to justify when price discipline still matters.
Which rider each one fits
XPress 750: better for riders who want a strong commuter without drifting into premium pricing and who can accept a slightly more value-first ownership feel. Level 4 REC: better for riders who want a calmer daily-transport package, stronger built-in security features, and a bike that arrives sounding more finished rather than merely good enough.
The better tie-breaker
Do not break this tie with motor headlines alone. Break it with commute reality. If the bike will live outside work, if built-in security and tracking would reduce stress, or if you ride in all weather and want the calmer commuter package, the Aventon case gets stronger. If your parking is safer, your route is simpler, and you mainly want strong daily transportation for less money, the Lectric case stays compelling.
Bottom line
Buy the XPress 750 for stronger value and a more aggressive commuter argument. Buy the Level 4 Rec when daily polish, comfort, and overall ownership feel matter more than squeezing the most performance per dollar.
Still stuck on the commuter question?
These pages help if the bigger issue is whether you need a value-first commuter, a more complete commuter package, or a different category entirely.
How to use this page
This page is reviewed under ElectricBikeCompare editorial standards and published by Nofo Times LLC. The goal is to help you choose around fit, storage, charging, support, safety, and day-to-day ownership, not just the best-looking spec sheet. Where a page leans on manufacturer claims, we cross-check them against the practical tradeoffs buyers usually run into after purchase.
For the full site method, read How We Evaluate E-Bikes or contact info@electricbikecompare.com.