A new multi-enzyme bioanode utilising starch, maltose, and glucose as fuels is demonstrated. The unique combination of αamylase, glucoamylase, mutarotase, and flavin-adenine dinucleotide-dependent glucose dehydrogenase enables the bioanode to utilise a polysaccharide, starch, as a fuel. Replacing αamylase and glucoamylase with β-amylase and maltase does not lead to effective starch degradation, possibly because of termination of the cleaving reaction by β-AMY at the branching point of the starch molecules. Furthermore, by using a reduced graphene oxide/multi-walled carbon nanotubes composite as the carbon support for enzyme immobilisation, the new bioanode demonstrates a high oxidation current density of 5.8 mA cm À 2 in neutral phosphate-buffered solution containing 0.8 % (w/v) starch. Finally, a bioanode containing the six enzymes, α-amylase, β-amylase, glucoamylase, maltase, mutarotase, and flavin adenine dependent glucose dehydrogenase, is fabricated. The fabricated bioanode is effective in degrading glucose, maltose, and starch. Thus, this study provides an important fundamental strategy for controlling the applicability of bioanodes by adjusting the loaded enzymes.