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Cycling in Edinburgh

Cyclesite editorial · Updated May 2026

Edinburgh sits in Scotland, with a local population of around 530,000. Scotland's cycling capital with strong commuter and leisure cycling The used bike market here reflects that. Typical prices for a solid mid-range bike sit in the £700-£1,400 range, and there are 678 bikes currently listed from sellers in and around the city. The bikes most often listed are road bikes, hybrid/commuter, and mountain bikes.

In practical terms, the infrastructure around Edinburgh includes quality cycle paths throughout, active Travel hub, quiet Routes network, strong cycling advocacy, and good bike parking. For most commuters this means a workable mix of on-road and off-road options, and for weekend riders it gives a sensible starting point for getting out of the city without spending an hour in traffic.

A few things worth knowing locally. hilly city - lower gears essential, quality bikes (affluent area), strong road cycling scene, pentland Hills for MTB, university market active, and scottish trails nearby. That kind of context affects what to buy. A bike set up for a flat commute in one part of the country is not the bike for a hilly climb into a neighbourhood on the outskirts. Ask local cyclists or a shop before committing to a bike you are not sure about.

Edinburgh has around 23 bike shops that cover servicing, sales and repairs. Most will inspect a used bike for twenty to thirty pounds, which is worth paying on anything over five hundred pounds before you hand over money. When you buy from a private seller, meet during daylight hours at a public location such as a station or a supermarket car park. A seller who insists on meeting only at an address they cannot demonstrate they live at is a red flag. Ask for receipts, warranty cards, or any service records. These are not always available on older bikes but when they are, they make the bike worth more and easier to verify later.

Every bike listed here is cross-checked against UK stolen-bike databases before the listing goes live. A clean history does not guarantee a bike was legitimately owned by the seller, so always photograph the frame number on collection and keep the image somewhere you can find later. The frame number is the one identifier that cannot be easily changed, and it is the record you will need if anything ever needs to be disputed.

For riders new to the area, Edinburgh has local cycling clubs and informal group rides that welcome new faces. Most clubs have a weekend social ride that runs at an easier pace and is designed to introduce new riders to the local roads and traffic-free routes. Joining a ride or two is one of the fastest ways to build up local knowledge, and most clubs will also point you to the best shops for servicing and used bikes.

Winter riding in Edinburgh follows the same sensible rules as anywhere else in the UK. Mudguards, waterproof kit, proper lights, and a bike that can handle grit and salt on the roads. Disc brakes are noticeably better than rim brakes in wet conditions, and a chain wiped and relubricated after every wet ride lasts multiple times longer than one that is ignored. Winter kit sells faster on the local used market in autumn than in spring, so plan ahead if you want to buy a winter bike for the colder months.

Location

Scotland

530,000 population

Bikes Available

678

Active listings

Retailers

23

Bike shops

Typical Prices

£700-£1,400

Average range

About Cycling in Edinburgh

Edinburgh is built on hills. That's the first thing you need to know, and it shapes every bike-buying decision in this city. The Old Town sits on a volcanic plug. The New Town drops steeply to the Water of Leith. Morningside, Bruntsfield, Marchmont — the student areas that should be cycling heartland — all involve gradients that turn a basic commute into interval training. If you're buying a bike for Edinburgh, you need gears. Low ones. A single-speed that works beautifully in Cambridge will have you walking up Dundas Street with your head down.

E-bikes make more sense in Edinburgh than in almost any other UK city. The hills that make regular cycling miserable are trivial with motor assist. Used e-bikes with Bosch or Shimano motors are increasingly common here, driven by commuters who tried a regular bike, met The Mound at 8am, and went back to the bus within a week. An e-bike solves the Edinburgh gradient problem completely. Expect to see more secondhand e-bikes from this city as the first wave of buyers start upgrading to newer models.

The road cycling is exceptional if you can handle climbs. The Pentland Hills start five miles south of the city centre. East Lothian has some of the quietest, most scenic lanes in Scotland — the coast road through Dunbar and North Berwick is world-class. The climb up Arthur's Seat from Duddingston village is a rite of passage for Edinburgh road cyclists. Secondhand road bikes with compact groupsets (50/34) sell noticeably faster than standard (52/36) here, because local riders know what gearing the terrain demands.

Mountain biking access from Edinburgh is genuinely world-class. Glentress and Innerleithen in the Tweed Valley are an hour south and offer some of the best trail riding in the UK — purpose-built reds and blacks on terrain that attracted the Enduro World Series. The result is a strong, knowledgeable secondhand MTB market. Edinburgh riders know their bikes, spec them properly, and price them realistically. You're unlikely to find an uninformed bargain, but you're also unlikely to get sold a lemon.

Gravel riding is where Edinburgh has its strongest advantage over every English city except possibly Bristol. The network of old railway lines, forestry roads, drovers' paths, and estate tracks across the Scottish Borders gives hundreds of miles of off-road riding that most English cyclists can only dream about. A gravel bike with 42–45mm tyres is arguably the perfect Edinburgh all-rounder — it handles the tarmac commute, the weekend road ride through East Lothian, and the cross-country gravel adventure in the Borders without you needing to own three separate bikes.

Local Cycling Insights

Key trails: Glentress (1 hour south, UK's most-visited trail centre, flowing reds to challenging blacks), Innerleithen (1 hour south, steeper and more technical, Enduro World Series venue), Dalbeattie (2 hours south-west, rocky natural terrain). Road climbing: Arthur's Seat from Duddingston, Pentland Hills (multiple routes), Lammermuir Hills, East Lothian coast. Gravel: Pencaitland Railway Path, Water of Leith walkway, the Borders abbeys route (Melrose–Dryburgh–Kelso). Bike shops: The Bicycle Works (Bruntsfield — outstanding workshop and advice), Alpine Bikes (Leith Walk — MTB and gravel specialists), Edinburgh Bicycle Co-operative (Bruntsfield — wide range). The Innocent Railway tunnel (Holyrood to Duddingston) is a useful traffic-free route through the east side.

Last updated: 5 April 2026

Price Trends in Edinburgh

Road Bikes

8%

£1,070

Average price up 8% this month

View 234 listings →

Hybrid/Commuter

6%

£1,270

Average price up 6% this month

View 198 listings →

Mountain Bikes

3%

£1,470

Average price down 3% this month

View 156 listings →

Price trends based on sold prices and active listings in Edinburgh. Updated weekly.

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Local Cycling Scene

  • Hilly city - lower gears essential
  • Quality bikes (affluent area)
  • Strong road cycling scene
  • Pentland Hills for MTB
  • University market active
  • Scottish trails nearby

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best bike for Edinburgh?

A geared bike with low gearing. Edinburgh's hills rule out single-speeds for anyone who values their knees and dignity. For commuting, a hybrid with disc brakes and a compact gear range handles the gradients. An e-bike is the most practical option if you commute across the city centre — it flattens the hills entirely and you arrive at work without needing a shower. For weekend riding, a gravel bike with 42mm+ tyres is the most versatile single bike you can own in Edinburgh — it handles roads, towpaths, railway paths, and Borders gravel tracks without compromise.

Where can I ride mountain bikes near Edinburgh?

Glentress (Tweed Valley, 1 hour south) is the UK's most-visited trail centre — flowing trails from blue to black through Forestry and Land Scotland woodland. Innerleithen (next to Glentress) has steeper, more technical trails including tracks used for the Enduro World Series. Both are free to ride with paid parking. Closer to the city, Dalkeith Country Park has a short skills loop suitable for beginners. The Pentland Hills have bridleway trails but they're natural and unmaintained. For serious mountain biking, the Tweed Valley is the destination — and it's the reason Edinburgh has such a strong secondhand MTB market.

Is Edinburgh good for cycling?

For recreational cycling, it's outstanding — the riding out of Edinburgh is among the best in the UK. East Lothian roads, Pentland Hills, Borders gravel, Tweed Valley trails — all within an hour. For daily commuting, the picture is mixed. The council has added segregated lanes on some main routes (Leith Walk, parts of George IV Bridge) and the off-road paths (Water of Leith, Innocent Railway, canal towpath to Falkirk) provide traffic-free alternatives. But the hills, cobbles in the Old Town, and some poorly designed junctions make certain routes genuinely hard work. If your commute avoids the steepest gradients, Edinburgh is a good cycling city. If it doesn't, an e-bike is the honest answer.

How much does a used bike cost in Edinburgh?

Edinburgh prices are similar to Manchester — slightly below London, roughly on par with Bristol. A used commuter hybrid costs £100–£300. Road bikes with 105 gears cost £400–£900. Mountain bikes: trail hardtails £250–£600, full-suspension £800–£2,000. E-bikes cost £800–£2,500. Gravel bikes hold value well here because demand is genuinely strong — budget £500–£1,200 for a decent used gravel bike. The Tweed Valley proximity means the MTB market is competitive, well-stocked, and accurately priced.

Do I need an e-bike in Edinburgh?

If you commute across the city and your route includes serious hills (The Mound, Dundas Street, Morningside Road, Easter Road), an e-bike transforms the journey from a sweaty slog into a pleasant ride. Edinburgh is one of the UK cities where e-bikes deliver the biggest practical difference because the terrain, not the distance, is the main barrier to cycling. For recreational road cycling in the Pentlands or along the East Lothian coast, a regular road bike is fine — you choose to ride those hills for fun. For getting to work on time without arriving drenched, the motor earns its keep.

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