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Cycling in Nottingham

Cyclesite editorial · Updated May 2026

Nottingham sits in East Midlands, with a local population of around local area. Active cycling community in Nottingham The used bike market here reflects that. Typical prices for a solid mid-range bike sit in the £500-£1,200 range, and the number of active listings varies with the season.

In practical terms, the infrastructure around Nottingham includes local cycle paths, bike parking available, and growing cycling community. 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. nottingham is part of Nottinghamshire, located in East Midlands, and check local cycling groups for route recommendations. 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.

For a pre-purchase inspection, the nearest independent bike shops typically charge twenty to thirty pounds, which is worth paying on any bike above five hundred pounds. 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, Nottingham 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 Nottingham 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

East Midlands

Local area population

Bikes Available

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Active listings

Retailers

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Bike shops

Typical Prices

£500-£1,200

Average range

About Cycling in Nottingham

Nottingham sits in a useful spot for cycling. It's flat enough in the Trent valley for comfortable commuting, hilly enough on the northern and western edges to provide decent road riding, and close enough to Sherwood Pines (45 minutes) and Cannock Chase (an hour) for mountain biking day trips. It's not a famous cycling city in the way that Sheffield or Bristol are, but the cycling infrastructure has been improving steadily and the secondhand market is active — driven by two universities (over 60,000 students), a growing tech sector, and the kind of steady, unremarkable cycling-as-transport culture that delivers more actual miles ridden than flashier scenes in other cities.

The city centre is relatively compact and mostly flat along the Trent valley floor. This makes hybrid bikes and single-speeds the practical commuter choices for most journeys. The university campuses (University of Nottingham at Beeston, Nottingham Trent at various city sites) generate a seasonal secondhand market — cheap bikes flood in during September arrivals and June departures, with prices dropping at the end of academic year when graduating students sell everything they own.

Road cycling out of Nottingham heads north into Sherwood Forest (rolling lanes, quiet villages, surprisingly good scenery for the East Midlands) or south towards the Vale of Belvoir (flatter, windier, excellent for time trial training). The terrain is gentler than Yorkshire or the Peak District, which means standard gearing works fine on most bikes. The Nottingham cycling scene is less tribal than some cities — road, MTB, and gravel riders mix in the same clubs and the secondhand market reflects that breadth.

Mountain biking requires a drive. Sherwood Pines (45 mins north) is the nearest trail centre with maintained trails — blues and reds through forest on sandy soil. Cannock Chase is an hour south-west. The Peak District is 45 minutes north-west. None are on the doorstep the way Wharncliffe is for Sheffield or Cathkin Braes is for Glasgow, but all are reasonable day trips from Nottingham.

The tram network and relatively flat terrain make Nottingham a practical city for regular commuter cycling. The Big Wheel cycling campaign has advocated for infrastructure improvements, and the city has responded with segregated lanes on some key routes (the tram corridor provides useful separation on several roads). Bike theft is a concern around the city centre and university areas — the usual advice about D-locks and verified purchases applies here.

Local Cycling Insights

Road cycling: Sherwood Forest and the Dukeries (north, quiet rolling lanes), Vale of Belvoir (south, flat and fast for TTs), Rutland Water circuit (1 hour east, classic training loop). MTB: Sherwood Pines (45 mins, purpose-built forest trails on sandy ground), Cannock Chase (1 hour south-west), Peak District (45 mins north-west). Bike shops: Cycle Inn (Ilkeston Road, secondhand and new), The Bicycle Works (Beeston, popular with university community), Halfords (multiple, for basics). The Beeston Canal towpath connects the city centre to Beeston and the university campus — flat, traffic-free, and practical for commuting.

Last updated: 5 April 2026

Price Trends in Nottingham

Road Bikes

1%

£1,100

Average price down 1% this month

View 0 listings →

Hybrid/Commuter

7%

£1,300

Average price up 7% this month

View 0 listings →

Mountain Bikes

4%

£1,500

Average price up 4% this month

View 0 listings →

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

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Click any bike marker to see details and photos. Markers show the seller's nearest town, not their exact address. All locations are approximate within Nottingham.

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  • Nottingham is part of Nottinghamshire
  • Located in East Midlands
  • Check local cycling groups for route recommendations

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best bike for commuting in Nottingham?

The city centre is flat, so gearing isn't critical. A single-speed or basic hybrid covers most Nottingham commutes under 5 miles. For longer commutes from suburbs like West Bridgford, Beeston, or Arnold (3–5 miles), a geared hybrid with disc brakes is the practical choice. The Beeston Canal towpath is a useful traffic-free route to the university campus — wider tyres (35mm+) handle the towpath surface better than narrow road tyres. Budget £100–£300 for a used commuter. Mudguards are essential year-round.

Where can I ride mountain bikes near Nottingham?

Sherwood Pines (45 mins north) is the nearest trail centre — purpose-built blues and reds through Forestry England woodland on sandy soil that drains well. Good for year-round riding. Cannock Chase (1 hour south-west) is bigger and more varied, with reds, blacks, and a skills area. The Peak District (45 mins north-west) has natural bridleway riding. None are as close as Sheffield's Wharncliffe or Glasgow's Cathkin Braes, but all are reasonable day trips. For a quick after-work blast, Bestwood Country Park (north Nottingham) has short woodland trails.

How much does a used bike cost in Nottingham?

Nottingham prices are among the most affordable for any major UK city. Student end-of-year sales drive prices down in June. A basic commuter hybrid costs £60–£200. Road bikes with 105 gears cost £350–£700. Mountain bikes: hardtails £150–£500, full-suspension £600–£1,500. E-bikes £700–£2,000. Prices are 10–20% below London and 5–10% below Manchester for equivalent bikes, reflecting lower demand rather than lower quality.

Is Nottingham good for cycling?

Decent and improving. The city centre is compact and flat, the tram corridors provide useful separation from traffic, and the canal towpaths offer traffic-free routes to several suburbs. The Big Wheel cycling campaign has pushed for infrastructure improvements that are gradually materialising. For recreational riding, the Sherwood Forest lanes and Vale of Belvoir are attractive without being dramatic. Nottingham is a practical cycling city rather than an exciting one — it gets the job done.

When is the best time to buy a bike in Nottingham?

June. When the academic year ends, graduating students and departing international students sell bikes in volume. Prices for basic commuters drop to £50–£100. Quality varies but genuine bargains exist among the rush to sell. September is the worst time — arriving students buy everything available and prices spike for basic bikes. For road and mountain bikes (not student transport), autumn (October–November) is good because summer riders sell bikes they won't use over winter.

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