7 Road Bike Tech Trends We May See In 2025!

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We’ve made our predictions for the road cycling tech trends we may see in 2025. Road cycling trends are always changing however, you can expect to see everything from bigger tyres, more mechanical groupsets, more data data analysis, and lighter bikes. To help you navigate the ever changing world of road cycling, we’ve pulled together all the tech trends we expect to see over 2025. If you think we missed any, let us know down in the comments!

00:00 – Intro
00:26 – Lighter Bikes
02:01 – Bigger Tyres
03:30 – More Chinese Brands
05:20 – More Mechanical Groupsets
07:07 – System Efficiency
08:53 – Adaptive Pressure
10:20 – MORE Data!

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34 Comments

  1. i agree with most of this. Your UL bikes will achieve sub 5kgs by going back to rim brakes. I feel some of my customers will want a high quality, but no nonsense road bike at 1/3 of the price of the bikes we all see winning races. This will mean chorus, 105, alu frames and 28,30mm tyres. People are fed up with Livs etc.

  2. Cycling companies at first could not make disk brake bikes as light as an lightweight rim brake bike so sold them as "aero" bikes. Now they have spent loads and now can make them as light now it matters again.

    Lightweight always mattered just the marketers decided it didn't and all the magazines and YouTube reviews pushed this….until now they can make bikes light again it matters 😂

  3. The industry is just trying to compensate for the disc brakes being far to poweful, hence crashes. Why not just say this. Well, that wouldnt be a good idea, but it's the science. The limit of grip ois where thtyres fail pre cash, so we need bigger tyres. I don't think rim brakes will be making a comeback. A 19 mm tub has a smaller aera than a 30 mm tyre. The science won't change, but improving another area to make up for it slightly and improving the system drag to compensate.

  4. How can you lie so hard so early in the video?
    Brands trying to make bikes faster, lighter and more comfortable?
    Heck no, every new "innovation" is usually a huge step backwards to steal money from naive people.

  5. I'm really sick and tired of supposedly reputable channels such as this pedalling the bike industry propaganda uncritically. So much so that I'm tempted to cancel my long-term print subscription to Cycling Weekly! WHERE is this scientific evidence for wider tyres being faster that everyone keeps mentioning? 1) The actual independent rolling resistance tests show that width makes practically no difference once the tyre pressure is set to be the same for comfort level. The only limitation is when you can't lower pressure sufficiently for the desired comfort level on a given road surface without risking pinch flats. So the optimum width is dependent on comfort level required, weight of the bike/rider system and road surface, and 25mm will be optimally fast and comfortable for many. 2) Even with wheel width always optimised for tyre width, wider will always be less aerodynamic because there is a larger frontal area. Aerodynamic drag is the product of frontal area x drag coefficiient. Drag coefficient (Cd) is determined by the shape, frontal area by the width. So wider (even with the same shape scaled up) will always be less aerodynamic, pretty much linearly with width.

  6. 2024 was my year of serious bike investment. A Trek SL7 Emonda with ENVE 65s, an XT-soaked Trek Roscoe, and a Canyon Speedmax CF8 – all with all the trimmings and kit, shoes, and a helmet for each. Whatever they invent over the next few years, I’m actually comforted by the fact that I don’t need to know about it…… the wallet is closed 😂

  7. We can tell the world's gone mental when cyclocross riders use 35 mm wide tyres and people on the internet demand clearance for 40 mm or more on road bikes.

  8. We'll look back at premium mechanical groupsets like we do manual transmission supercars. There's that certain purity that nothing electronic can ever replicate.

  9. Damn, this video jumped on the marketing hype full throttle. People have now got their aero bikes, so now you need the lightweight one, again. All these sites pushed the marketing hype so they don't get left out. They're as big a part of the problem. SRAM, giving us something not needed or useful, but y'all will push it like it is. Oh, they've been incorporating the whole bike approach..

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