Although the category of gravel bikes is still relatively new to cycling, there are already sub-divisions, world championships, and even professional gravel athletes – so you know it’s a genre that’s sticking around. In this buyer’s guide, you can find out about the best gravel bikes and adventure road bikes available. We’ve ridden and tested these bikes in real conditions, and this is our pick of the bunch.
Gravel bikes have gone very quickly from the latest craze to a significant part of most bike companies’ ranges. These bikes are tailored for long-distance comfort, with disc brakes, big tyre clearance and geometry honed to excel both on the road and off, whether it’s a gravel, forest or dirt track.
Descended from touring bikes, endurance road bikes and cyclo-cross bikes, gravel bikes and adventure bikes are go-almost-anywhere machines for riders who want to explore and race on dirt roads, and ride tarmac to get there.
> How much slower is a gravel bike on the road?
Disc brakes allow frame clearances for fatter tyres, making for a bike that can cope with a very wide range of surfaces.
If you’re working with a budget ranging from £1,000 to £2,000 for a gravel bike, be sure to check out our best gravel bikes under £2000, and if you’re planning on sticking to the roads then you’ll want to start with our guide to the best road bikes instead. In this guide, hopefully you should be able to find a gravel bike that is to your liking whatever you budget or riding style.
If you want to know more before choosing your ideal bike, head on down to our Q&A section where we answer some common FAQs about gravel bikes.
How we review gravel bikes
With our bike reviews, we make sure that our reviewers have at least a month with each test bike to thoroughly evaluate it before delivering their final verdict.
Most importantly, our gravel bike reviews assess how the bike riders in our usual riding environment, and compare the bike to similar products on the market when generating a value score. Other parts of the bike test report include ratings for the components, efficiency of power transfer, stiffness, handling and finishing kit. We believe this comprehensive evaluation offers valuable insights into what it’s like to ride a gravel bike regularly across various conditions.
Why you can trust us
Our reviewers are experienced cyclists, as are those of us who put together these buyer’s guides, ensuring that our recommendations are based on first-hand experiences. We only ever recommend bikes that fared well in reviews in our buyer’s guides, so you’re not just seeing a list we’ve plucked from thin air.
Without further ado…

19 thoughts on “Best gravel bikes 2026 — off-road and adventure-ready steeds to take you from tarmac to trail”
It’s a Fairlight Secan for me
It’s a Fairlight Secan for me, although I’ve put it off to early 27 while I get on with reinvigorating the £650 gas pipe tubing Vitus Substance, which has served me so well, with Cues. And yes, I have been influenced by the road.cc review.
Campagnolo’s Ekar is probably the most sophisticated single-chainring system, with a gear range to rival double-ring systems from its 9-42 13-speed cassette
9 tooth cog? No Way, José. I’d have 12 or 13 minimum if I could
I’m shocked!
I do a lot of light off-road cycling – trails, canal tow-paths and the occasional bridelway. I have ridden bikes made from aluminium, steel, carbon and titanium. Titanium is an excellent material – it soaks up bumps, is light and it is inert. I have a Reilly Gradient and decided to try a titanium road bike – the Planet-X Hurricane is very close to the Reilly, but is much cheaper. Pair either of these bikes with tubeless tyres and you will experience a sublime ride.
It looks like Planet-X no longer builds titanium bikes but a quick search found some Ribble bikes which look very similar, around £3K.
https://www.ribblecycles.co.uk/bikes/road-bikes/titanium-road-bikes/
To date I have ridden some 65,000 miles and for me it’s titanium all the way. Why did you not even consider one bike with a titanium frame?
the first titanium frame i’ve
the first titanium frame i’ve owned and ridden was destroyed by a 4×4. Will be replaced by a steel frame as I just discovered UK bike maker Cotic – look to be exceptional value and superb bikes. And I can’t tell much (any?) difference between Ti and Steel
Steel and a daily commute on
Steel and a daily commute on wet, icy and salted roads do not good friends make. 2 seasons and trust me, you’ll be able to tell the difference with Ti.
Nah. My steel commuter has been through endless cold winters with grit on the road. The original paint job is holding up well. Ti would be nice, but steel is fine for me.
So good to see that some
So good to see that some gravel bikes do not have the mounting points on the forks so good to have options to consider.
I’ve ridden a couple of these
I’ve ridden a couple of these:
Canyon Grail (previous version): unbeatable spec for the price, except by Rose bikes. But for me, too stable. Felt like riding a tractor at times albeit a fast one. And yeah, that double decker bar did nothing.
Scott Addict Gravel: rode the RC. Very fast, reasonbly comfy.
S-works Crux: very light but non-aero, dated design and $$$$.
There are plenty of good gravel bikes, e.g. if you’ve got the coin and want to ride style and go fast at the expense of all else: Pinarello Dogma GR. Go fast at the expense of all else but with industrial looks and a lack of style but at half the Pina price: Rose backroad. Or BMC Kaius 01 one.
Etc. Totally depends on priorities, disposable cash and personal preference. This type of article is a bit pointless, would be better to offer a relative comparison.
This is Road CC. So this review doesn’t belong here. Put it on Gravel CC or whatever the website is.
Splitter!
This is Road CC. So this review doesn’t belong here
An unreasonable view which will, doubtless, be ignored by Big Management! In the last week, I have cycled 105 km each way to Leeds with a fairly heavy trailer, several 15km commuting-type days and, yesterday, 42km each way from home to Southport without the trailer- all on the same ‘gravel’ bike, and almost all on the rutted and potholed ways we call roads. I think that entitles me to read about gravel bikes, even though I’m still Set on the Secan – see superior!
Nothing unreasonable about it. This is a road cycling website. The key words are road and cycling.
@surreyrider All these new-fangled categories… but isn’t the idea of a “gravel bike” that it is rideable on the road with reasonable efficiency but also will handle light off-road duties?
So shurely “put it on road.cc AND Gravel CC” or “put it on road.cc some of the time, and also not some of the time”?
Don’t put it on gravel.cc – they’ll object to you polluting their building materials site with unwanted bicycles.
As said above, this is Road CC, so a website about road cycling. This belongs on Gravel CC.
As said above, it doesn’t, because that has nothing to do with bikes.
Some good bikes but… Such a random smattering of bikes, a ‘best of’ doesn’t make. So many brands and models untested, un-acknowledged. It’s not the best gravel bikes of 2026, it’s just a random grouping of reviews.
As always, and as the editorial staff frequently make clear, any road.cc “best of” is the best of the bikes/equipment they’ve been given to test, which is fair enough; it would be unreasonable for us to expect, and I doubt they would have the budget, for them to go out buying and testing everything available on the market.
Nothing unreasonable about it. This is a road cycling website. The key words are road and cycling.
Wing mirror.