In the era of modern road bikes, it can be incredibly confusing to figure out what you want. There are so many different types of bikes available all within the 'road' category, that it's easy to feel overwhelmed. Long gone are the days where round tubed steel frames make up the majority of road bikes on offer.
Best money-no-object race bike: Specialized S-Works Tarmac SL8 - SRAM Red eTap AXS
Best endurance road bike: Lauf Úthald
Best aero road bike: Giant Propel Advanced Pro 1
Best women's road bike: Liv Avail Advanced Pro 0
Best road bike under £1,000: Boardman SLR 8.8
Best lightweight climbing road bike: Factor O2 VAM
Here on road.cc alone we have separate categories for endurance road bikes, aero road bikes, sportive bikes, carbon road bikes… the list is endless, and now there are also all-road bikes that blend the borders of all categories by excelling at almost anything!
It's arguably true that road bike prices have crept up over the years, but there are still some very good value bikes on the market, and in this buyer's guide we've featured a range of bikes suitable for different budgets. You might also want to have a look at all of the best road bikes we've reviewed recently - there are some very good bikes there that didn't make it to this guide, because we've got to draw the line somewhere.
The road bike market can be a confusing one, with frame materials, geometry and components all influencing road bike design. Whereas endurance road bikes might have a more relaxed geometry for many comfortable miles in the saddle, the best aero road bikes will have a greater focus on cutting drag and boosting speed by using aero tubing, and will often come with deeper wheels for more aero gains.
You need to ask yourself many questions on your road bike-buying journey. The biggest one, of course, is what’s your budget? Then it’s questions like: what will I be using my road bike for? Commuting, long Sunday morning rides, the occasional shorter midweek sojourn with friends? Is weight important? Do you need disc brakes? Is a carbon frame a need or a must?
We're under no illusions that crowning the 'best road bike' is pretty much impossible, because as we've explained already, the road bike genre is a very broad one. If you're just dipping your toe into cycling, then consider this guide as a useful introduction to road bikes with a wide selection of top picks from our bulging reviews archive, plus some handy advice under our selections. Some might be wildly out of your price range, others you may not like the look of... but whatever you're after, we're hoping there should be something here for you. If you want to search according to your budget, you can always check out our guides to the best road bikes under £3,000, under £2,000 and (you guessed it) under £1,000 instead.
Check out our choices and hopefully, the perfect road bike for you is amongst them!
How we review road bikes
We take bike reviews seriously here at road.cc (although we have a lot of fun riding them) and make sure reviewers have full access to their test bikes for at least a month, ideally longer, to ensure they can come up with detailed and thorough observations about their experience.
We'll never publish a full review based off a test ride or two in an exotic location. Instead, we prefer to allow reviewers to ride test bikes in their usual riding environment. The test report asks reviewers to assess quality, comfort, stiffness, value and numerous other metrics, before asking for a final score.
When it comes to the best road bikes, we're looking at a pretty broad range of bikes here - from lightweight to endurance to aero. Each of which have been tested specifically to their category, and special attention paid to how they compare to other bikes within that segment.
Why you can trust us
Our reviewers are all experienced cyclists, and so are the road.cc team members who put these guides together, which means you can be sure the product selections are our genuine top picks, not just a round-up of things we can make a commission from.
When it comes to road.cc buyer's guides, we will only ever recommend products that fared well in reviews. All of the bikes featured here scored 4 out of 5 stars or more overall from our reviewers, indicating very good, excellent or exceptional quality according to our reviewers' opinions.
Disclaimer though, there are so many road bikes on the market these days that it is truly impossible to include all of "the best". So we've done what we can and rounded up a selection of the best we've reviewed in full.
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12 comments
Russ's latest video gives some pespective.
Road CC puts the Orro in the best bike category, Mapdec (Cycle Works) puts it in the bin (for the poor quality frame). Who to believe? Strange having the Lauf (with the fugly seat tube) as the best endurance bike when the new Defy rides very high in the superbike list.
Isn't that Mapdec video from a sample size of one though?
What a stupid response. Every frame is a sample size of one. Anyway, best of luck with buying an Orro now.
I don't think you understand how things work. If they tested 10 or 100 frames and found most of them were poor quality, that'd be a problem. They looked at one frame a customer brought in because they were having issues, then acted like those problems must exist on every frame they make.
That could be correct, it could also be an anomaly. It's not complicated.
In terms of value titanium bike, the Ribble Endurance Ti Sport (with 12 speed mechanical 105) is currently on sale at £2k - https://www.ribblecycles.co.uk/ribble-endurance-ti-disc-105-r7100/
Which is less than paid for the 11 speed version three years ago. Lovely bike, though.
I don't think I want my carbon frame to be "snappy" 😬
I cannot understand how people allow themselves to pay such huge prices for bikes when the cheapest Boardman presented here seems like a really really good bike. A smooth welded frame with a carbon tapered fork, disc brakes and 2024 Tiagra would make a dream bike for me. Yes it is heavy, but I guess it will be able take more punishment than other lighter proposals here.
I have great respect for Specialized for the research they put when designing products, but 12K seems crazy to me for a mass produced 7kg item with limited electronics.
I'd go for the Strael, and with two fits for each size, there's more chance of finding an excellent fit.
Having owned a Strael I'd love to ride some of these bikes back to back. Maybe the Strael, the Definition/Resolution and the Kinesis and my Gradient in place of the Van Nicolas. Not the fugly Specialised though. Those welds only a mother could love.
I ordered a Strael 3.0 with 12 speed Ultegra di2 a few months back, having been convinced by all the rave reviews across the board. I received the bike a few weeks ago and have to say after a few hundred miles of riding, it's an awesome bike and (enhanced by the GBP/USD exchange) a fantastic value. Coming from carbon bikes (S-Works Roubaix, Boardman SLS 9.2) and only having experience with much lower end steel previously, I wasn't exactly sure what to expect.
If it gives up anything in outright performance, it's very minimal. Power transfer is super solid, even in an all out sprint. It's stable while still being very nimble and able to dive into corners. As a non-racer who doesn't need the smallest of marginal gains from a carbon race machine, this bike really gets so many things just right and makes me want to ride. It's beautifully designed and built with everything from the CNC parts to the paint quality being beautifully done. I find it compares very favorable against top carbon endurance bikes, and worthy of praise beyond just the steel category.
Mine arrived recently too. Have to say it's the most comfortable bike I've ever owned - it just feels so right mile after mile. Perfect amount of feedback form the road, and I never feel like I don't know what it's doing. Not as light as my carbon summer bike but don't seem to notice and it rides with so much character. Early days but quietly excited it might be the best bike I've ever owned.