By Matthew Loveridge

Published: Wednesday, 28 September 2022 at 12:00 am


Are you thinking about building or buying a bike for winter road riding?

BikeRadar’s experts have an immense combined experience of winter riding and in this guide, we’ll discuss some different approaches to choosing a bike for winter road riding, and which components and accessories matter the most.

Whether you’re looking to buy a whole new bike, revive an old one or adapt your current machine, this is the guide for you.

Before we go on, I’m sure comments are already brewing to the effect of “that wouldn’t work for my winter”, and that’s fair enough. We’re talking here about a UK-style winter, where the main obstacles to riding for most of us are relentless wet weather, cold, darkness and road salt.

It’s fair to say that in many parts of the world (and indeed more northern parts of the UK), conditions are far more extreme and riding through the winter is a completely different proposition.

Other readers who live in hotter climes may look forward to winter for its cooler temperatures.

Here’s our pick of the road bikes for winter riding we’ve tested. They’re not all billed as winter bikes and not all come with mudguards, but all have the mounting points to let you add them and set them up for all-weather riding.

Scroll down further for our buyer’s guide to bikes for winter road riding, what to look out for and the different approaches you might take to set yourself up for winter riding.

Best road bikes for winter as rated by our testers

Kinesis Tripster AT

4.5 out of 5 star rating
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The AT in the Kinesis Tripster AT’s name stands for all-terrain.
Robert Smith / Immediate Media
  • £1,850 as tested
  • Great protection from extra-long mudguards
  • Robust but sprightly

Kinesis adds big mudguards to big gravel tyres for a go-anywhere winter build for its versatile alloy bike. There’s clearance for 45mm tyres and bolting points for luggage, extra bottles and a rack. You can alter the steering geometry to change the handling to suit your riding style too.

At 11kg and with a frame that weighs 1.9kg, the Tripster AT is built tough, but it doesn’t feel that way to ride, thanks to its stiffness, which gives a responsive ride feel. The quality wheels and tyres provide comfort, along with a lively ride.

We rated the Apex 1 drivetrain and the Fend-Off Wide mudguards highlights for a winter bike – the latter amazed us with how clean they kept both us and following riders.

Ribble Endurance Ti Disc

4.5 out of 5 star rating
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The Endurance Ti Disc is available in three models: the ‘Pro’, ‘Sport’ and ‘Enthusiast’.
Robert Smith / Immediate Media
  • £3,299 / $4,568 / €3,843 as tested
  • Quality, corrosion-proof titanium frameset
  • Good component spec for all-weather riding

Ribble’s titanium mile muncher has discreet mudguard mounts, enabling you to spec guards via Ribble’s Bike Builder. It’s really well finished and the full internal cable routing makes for easier cleaning.

We liked the slightly racy ride position and the backsweep of the Level bars, as well as the well-built wheels and wide Continental Grand Prix GT tyres. The Ultegra groupset is an asset too.

The Endurance Ti Disc handles poor surfaces well and is built to last, whatever the weather. The flaps on Ribble’s mudguards are a little short to keep your shoes clean though.

Triban RC520 Disc

4.5 out of 5 star rating
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Shimano 105 and TRP’s HY/RD brakes make the Triban unbelievably good value.
David Caudery / Immediate Media
  • £850 / $1,400 / €850 as tested
  • High spec for the price with Shimano 105 and TRP disc brakes
  • Tyre clearance up to 36mm without mudguards

The Triban RC520 Disc, sold by Decathlon, offers a great spec for your cash. It doesn’t come fitted with mudguards, but there are mounting points on the alloy frame, and carbon fork legs and plenty of clearance around the 28mm tyres, which are mounted on tubeless-ready rims.

It has an 11-speed Shimano 105 groupset with an 11-32t Microshift cassette, so you’re not losing gear ratios on your winter rides, while the TRP HY/RD disc brakes combine cable operation with hydraulic actuation of the calipers.

We’ve also tested the Triban RC500 with the same frame but equipped with 9-speed Shimano Sora, which shaves £200 off the price tag.