Become a mentor
Earn $100 per road test.
Not a rental. No training.
If you have a road-test-ready motorcycle in Toronto, you can help a test-taker show up calm, prepared, and on time for their Class 6 road test. This is not a rental business. It is not rider training. Mentors do not teach, coach, or provide lessons. You simply bring a road-test-ready bike, meet at the registry, support a smooth handoff, and get compensated for showing up prepared.
Riders in Toronto need reliable, road-test-ready motorcycles. Local mentors help reduce last-minute stress — and earn $100 per road test.
Founding partner opportunity — Toronto
We're highlighting a small number of trusted local businesses as we launch in Toronto.
Interested in this placement?
[email protected]
1) List your bike
Add your motorcycle, service area, and general availability in the app.
2) Accept only what works for you
You choose which requests to accept. No one is forced into anything.
3) Meet at the registry and get paid
Show up prepared, keep it professional, and earn $100 per road test.
Fast summary
What this is
- A road-test-day support service for people who do not have access to a suitable motorcycle
- A structured meetup at or near the registry for a government road test
- A way for experienced riders to help someone show up calm and prepared
What this is not
- Not a rental
- Not training
- Not a riding lesson
- Not open-ended borrowing
Compensation, live availability, and booking flow are handled inside BorrowMyBike.
What mentors actually do
- Bring a road-test-ready bike: lights, brakes, tires, mirrors, and no obvious issues
- Share road-test tips via in-app messaging after a booking is confirmed — help the test-taker stay calm and prepared
- Meet about 25–30 minutes early so the test-taker can get comfortable with the bike
- Allow time to adjust: mirrors, controls, clutch friction point, and brakes
- Optionally allow a short parking-lot lap to get familiar with the bike (not training or practice riding)
- Keep things professional and respectful — calm, predictable, and safety-focused
- Wait nearby during the test — grab a coffee while the road test is in progress
What mentors should NOT do
- Do not train the test-taker
- Do not provide riding lessons or “practice sessions”
- Do not promise a pass
- Do not argue with examiners or push unsafe choices
- Do not treat this like a rental or open-ended bike borrowing arrangement