Micro
Micro offers a wide range of scooters and kickboards for every age group, from 18 months to grown-ups - mobility solutions that help you move faster through your daily...

Micro Scooters - for Kids and Adults
Micro offers a wide range of scooters and kickboards for every age group, from 18 months to grown-ups - mobility solutions that help you move faster through your daily routine. At Inlinex we stock the Micro range across all four categories: Mobility, Kids, Innovation and Freestyle.
Micro Mobility Scooters
Designed for long distances and everyday commuting, Micro mobility scooters get you across the city quickly and comfortably.
Micro Kids Scooters & Kickboards
From first-time scooters to young experts, there is a stable, safe Micro to suit every child - getting the whole family out and exploring.
Innovation & Freestyle
Clever folding designs and tougher freestyle builds round out the range for riders who want something a little different.
Filters
What’s your size?
Pick your usual EU shoe size — we’ll show every skate that fits.
New to skating? Start with a harder or carbon boot — the extra stiffness supports your ankles and helps you stand straighter while you find your balance. As you get more confident, a softer boot is lighter and comfier, letting you rely on your own balance and control.
Discipline is the style of skating a skate is built for. Fitness / recreational for cruising and exercise; urban / freeride for city skating, drops and slides; slalom / freestyle for cones and tricks; speed for racing on long, big-wheel frames; aggressive for skatepark grinds and jumps. Choose the one that matches how you want to skate.
Wheel size follows your skating style, not your skill — the smallest wheels aren’t the easiest. New to skating? A recreational skate with 76–84 mm wheels (around 80 mm) is the sweet spot: stable, smooth and forgiving. Only size up to 90–110 mm and beyond for speed and distance once you’re confident. Heads-up: the tiniest wheels (around 55–64 mm) are aggressive skatepark skates for grinds and tricks, not for learning. Within one style, smaller wheels are a little more stable and bigger ones roll faster.
Brand, frame & wheel specs — for shoppers who know exactly what they’re after.
The mount is the bolt pattern that fixes the frame to the boot — the frame and boot must share the same mount to fit together. Common standards are UFS (a flat mount used on most aggressive skates), 165mm and 195mm (the gap between the two bolts, found on most inline skates) and Trinity (Powerslide’s 3-point mount that sits lower for extra control). Always match your boot’s mount before changing frames.
Wheel hardness is the durometer — the “A” number. Higher (e.g. 100A) is harder: rolls faster but grips less and passes more buzz from the ground. Lower (e.g. 78A) is softer: more grip and a smoother ride, but it won’t roll as fast.
Frame length (in millimetres) sets your wheelbase. A longer frame is more stable and carries speed — better for fitness, distance and bigger wheels. A shorter frame is more nimble and easier to turn — better for slalom, freestyle, urban skating and smaller feet. It should also suit your boot size and wheel setup.