Inokim OX Super vs Dualtron Mini Special
These are ScootFinder's two single motor private-land performance scooters, both sitting below the dual motor flagships on price and power. The short version: the Inokim OX Super goes further and comes with a firm, confirmed price, the Dualtron Mini Special is lighter and quicker but currently has no published Australian price.
Last reviewed 16 Jul 2026
Close-up of an electric scooter's deck, backlit. Photo for illustration.
Key points
- The Inokim OX Super has meaningfully longer range, 70 km realistic against the Dualtron Mini Special's 45 km realistic.
- The Dualtron Mini Special is lighter at 24 kg against the OX Super's 29 kg, and slightly faster at 50 km/h against 45 km/h.
- The OX Super has a confirmed Australian price, $2,399. The Mini Special's current price isn't published, confirm with a Dualtron retailer.
- Only the OX Super offers a seat option, useful for longer private land sessions.
- Neither is legal for public riding in Australia, both exceed the 25 km/h device ceiling and are private land devices regardless of state.
Below ScootFinder's dual motor flagships sit two single motor performance scooters aimed at a similar rider, someone with private land access who wants more speed and range than a legal-class commuter, without stepping all the way up to a dual motor superscooter's price and weight.
Range and comfort
The Inokim OX Super is built around distance and comfort: a claimed 97 km, 70 km realistic, front and rear adjustable suspension, and an optional seat, the only scooter in this comparison with one. The Dualtron Mini Special trades that range for a more compact package, 65 km claimed, 45 km realistic, still with adjustable suspension but no seat option.
Weight and speed
The Mini Special is the lighter of the two at 24 kg against the OX Super's 29 kg, and slightly faster too, 50 km/h against 45 km/h unrestricted. Neither difference changes their legal status in Australia, both remain private land devices regardless, but if you're moving the scooter around a property often, the Mini Special's lighter weight is a genuine everyday advantage.
Price
This is currently the clearest differentiator. The OX Super has a confirmed Australian price of $2,399 through Inokim Australia. The Mini Special's Australian retail price isn't published anywhere we could independently verify, we list it as price on application rather than guess, confirm current pricing with a Dualtron retailer before comparing the two on cost.
Which one to buy
If range and comfort over longer private land sessions matter most, and you want a seat option, the OX Super is the stronger case, read our full review. If a lighter, slightly quicker, more compact scooter appeals and you're comfortable confirming pricing directly with a retailer, the Mini Special is worth a closer look, see our Mini Special review. Both are private land purchases in Australia regardless of which you choose, confirm your situation against are electric scooters legal in Australia before buying either with a specific use in mind.
Head to head
| Inokim OX Super | Dualtron Mini Special | |
|---|---|---|
| Price (AUD) | $2,399 | Confirm with retailer |
| Top speed | 45 km/h | 50 km/h |
| 25 km/h legal class | No | No |
| Claimed range | 97 km | 65 km |
| Real world range | 70 km | 45 km |
| Weight | 29 kg | 24 kg |
| Seat option | Yes | No |
| Suspension | Front and rear, adjustable | Front and rear, adjustable |
Neither of these is trying to be the fastest or longest range scooter in the catalogue, they're both aimed at a rider who wants more than a commuter without the price and bulk of a full dual motor flagship, just from two different angles.
Frequently asked questions
Which has longer range, the OX Super or the Mini Special?
The Inokim OX Super, with a claimed 97 km (70 km realistic) against the Dualtron Mini Special's claimed 65 km (45 km realistic).
Which is lighter, the OX Super or the Mini Special?
The Dualtron Mini Special, at 24 kg against the OX Super's 29 kg, a meaningful difference if you ever need to lift or move it.
Which is faster, the OX Super or the Mini Special?
The Dualtron Mini Special, at 50 km/h unrestricted against the OX Super's 45 km/h. Neither is close to Australia's 25 km/h legal class.
Are the OX Super and Mini Special legal to ride in Australia?
Not on public paths. Both exceed the 25 km/h device ceiling and are private land devices everywhere in Australia, regardless of state.
Sources
- Inokim Australia (checked 16 Jul 2026)
- Minimotors / Dualtron Australia (checked 16 Jul 2026)
- ScootFinder.au verified catalogue (lib/scooters/data/inokim.ts, minimotors.ts) (checked 16 Jul 2026)