The best road bike mudguards (or ‘fenders’, for our friends across the Pond) make cycling a more pleasant experience in wet and changeable weather – and that’s much of the time in the UK – by preventing a lot of the spray created by your tyres from turning you into a soggy mess.
Best full-length mudguards: SKS Chromoplastics Mudguard Set 65mm 28
Best full-length road mudguards for easy fitting: M:Part Primoplastics mudguards
Best for gravel bikes and wider tyres: SKS Speedrocker mudguard set
Best clip-on mudguards: Flinger Race Pro Clip Mudguards
Best clip-on mudguards for length and coverage: Crud Roadracer Mk3 mudguards
Best clip-on mini rear mudguard: Ass Savers Win Wing 2 Gravel
If you've never used mudguards, you’ll probably be surprised at how much difference they make. A lot of the water that covers you when you ride in the rain doesn’t come directly from the clouds, it’s thrown up from the road surface by your tyres, especially in lovely British drizzle.
Mudguards are key to keeping dry – or drier than you’d otherwise be – in typical British conditions. That’s especially true in winter when water tends to stay on the roads for longer. If you’re riding year-round, make sure you have some of the best bike lights to keep you safe too.
Mudguards are also a vital courtesy on group rides. Sit directly behind a bike that’s not fitted with mudguards on a wet ride and you’ll soon realise just how much water tyres can spray up. A long rear mudguard, preferably with a flap, keeps spray out of the face of the rider behind you. Many clubs and riding groups demand mudguards over the winter.
Full-coverage bolt-on guards are the most effective option on any bike that can take them and that will be used all year round. If you want some of the best road bike mudguards and your bike lacks mudguard eyelets, there are lots of options from full-length guards designed to squeeze into the limited space to clip-ons that at least keep your bum drier.
How we review mudguards
road.cc reviewers keep hold of a product for at least a month before we publish their findings, and in the case of mudguards, that obviously means we send them out in less-than-perfect conditions! Usually that'll mean a lot of mudguards that come in get reviewed in the autumn and winter months, when the weather is the most unpredictable.
Mudguards are rated for performance, quality of construction, durability and how easy they are to fit. We'll always compare apples to apples, so won't be slamming a set of full-length guards because they take longer to fit than an ass saver. Likewise, an expensive product won't be compared to something much cheaper in the value section and marked down unfairly if there's a gulf between them in terms of quality and construction.
Why you can trust us
All the mudguards that feature in this guide got good, very good or excellent scores. If it doesn't score well it doesn't make it in, and we take plenty of steps to ensure no one influences our reviewer's opinion or decisions.
All our reviewers have plenty of riding experience, and those of us tasked with putting these guides together for you are avid riders too. You can be sure our recommendations are based on first-hand experiences, and the aim is to include our genuine picks of the best mudguards around; not just stuff we can make a commission from, or products that someone in sales was keen for us to push. Them's aren't the rules when it comes to road.cc buyer's guides, unfortunately for our sales team!
Now, to our selections. We've split our top picks into numerous categories: first off you'll find our very top choices in various styles and for different use cases, followed by full-length, clip-on and finally some mountain bike/gravel-style and micro mudguard recommendations. Some of these do cross over, in that one of our full-length picks doesn't actually require eyelets and a lot of our clip-on selections do provide quite a lot of coverage, so be sure to check them all out before deciding what's right for you.
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16 comments
I've the previous generation of the M'Part guards (mine are a little less refined the the stay ends, just tradditional bolts). I got them because I was sick of SKS guards always cracking and/or their seat stay bridge mount breaking. The MPart ones eventually developed a rattle their chains stay bridge bracket developed play (Ive closed that with gas tape and fingers crossed its silence again) but crucially for me they've not cracked despite the state of our roads.
Fenders ? They're mudguards.
This really could start a flame war the likes of which not seen since Swift.
Also, we eat biscuits we don't eat cookies.
For a bike where the mudguards are fitted permanently, I reckon the best available are the Berthoud stainless steel guards. They seem to last forever (my commute bike has had the same pair installed for more than 20 years, and they look the same as the day I installed them), they have a rolled edge, which helps prevent water coming out of the side of the guard, they're available in multiple sizes (26" 650B, 700c) and widths (40mm, 50mm, 60mm), and are available with a good mudflap for the front, which gives a substantial reduction in the amount of spray your feet get off the front tyre. Come in either polished metal or matte black.
Here's one of the front guards newly fitted to a touring bike.
I think I've tried every plastic guard on the market, and they all rattled, scraped and scuffed, and then broke.
The Kinesis are a complete game changer for me - I now have them on 3 bikes, and would only ever buy metal guards in future. They are rock solid, never move, and never make a sound.
Best mudguards?
Largest possible, longest possible, uninterrupted interior (stays on the outside), rolled edges.
I have the SKS raceblade longs. They work well to keep riders dry but direct all the road crap directly onto the brakes and headset bearings with the inevitable result that rims wear badly.
I really rate the Bontrager full mudguards for ease of fit. The stays have a sliding adjustment so you don't have to take a hacksaw to them to adjust them to size. Means they can be swapped to another bike easier
I'll second that - I can't believe these didn't make the list. They are also great for adjustablility when swapping from road tyres to gravel tyres, as all you need to do is get the hex key out and move them in or out to suit. Plus they come in a few different sizes depending on how big you want to go, tyre-wise.
Agreed. The stays are slightly flimsy but are mounted outside the guard giving a clear water drainage path. It's easy to find cheap used guards to extend the Bontragers to give better coverage. Sadly 26" versions are getting harder to find.
I despair at some of these reviews.As the 2 people have said Bontrager guards rate highly.I have tried a few pairs in the review and they ended up in the bin.The Bontragers are in their 4 th year now.They also have an Integrated rear Blendr light mount for use with Bontrager Flare lights,which I find perfect.Not too mention mudflaps to front and rear.
I guess they aren't in the review as Road CC mustn't have got a pair FREE 😇 🤣
Mudguards can significantly reduce spray thrown up onto the rider, but unless they pretty much go down to the ground they are of very limited benefit to following riders. It seems that the tyre pattern is far more important in that regard, some tyres certainly seem more prone to picking up water and flinginging it upwards rather than sideways.
My flaps are legendary, in Withington Wheelers. You missed the Cheshire Mavericks drop in flap surgery too, just before the clocks changed, when most clubs round here introduce the mandatory mudguards rule.
I gave the ass-savers win wing a try though I was very sceptical. To my surprise, the contraption works just fine. Very minimalist, stays in place perfectly, doesn't require cutting metal and easily removeable. Won't do anything for the guy riding behind you though. They have a front wheel solution as well but on that one I'm a bit less enthusiastic.
On a commuter or when riding in a group they're pretty much indispensable, though I don't like the esthetics.
Honjo (SimWorks / Rene Herse) mudguards? Quality.
Choose Life. Choose a job. Choose a career. Choose a family. Choose fenders.
I prefer a Les Paul ,Bob