Let me guess: The pandemic has you reconsidering your staid life choices and you’ve decided that now’s the time, at long last, to ride a motorcycle. You’re in good company, as motorcycle sales have been stronger than at any time in the last decade. So, probably, you’re reading this guide to familiarize yourself with the whole moto space, right?
Actually, more than perhaps most product categories, motorcycles are remarkably consistent; what a new rider (or newly returning one) should look for in a bike hasn’t changed dramatically. This guide will familiarize you with several example bikes across multiple categories, but the keys for you aren’t radically different from what we would’ve advised a decade ago.
What to Look for When Buying a New Motorcycle
Riding Position: New riders need to feel comfortable. Think: toes, knees and nose, all in alignment — the “athletic” posture you’re in when you’re throwing a baseball or doing a squat. The foot pegs of a motorcycle and the handlebars alter that posture somewhat, however, the more advanced you become, the more comfortable you’ll be on bikes that change this alignment up. Still, riding a motorcycle takes more strength than, say, driving a car; you’ll need to use those muscles, and aligning your body is one step of that.
Having a Bike Size You Can Handle: Simply, the taller and heavier you are, the more you can heft — and the heavier and taller bike you can ride, even as a relative novice. Bigger bikes can be fine for learning if you’re 6’3” and 220 pounds — but they’re not great if you’re 5’6” and 145 pounds.
Seat Height: Whether you’re shorter or taller, when you’re new to riding, you need to be able to stand over a bike as close to flat-footed as possible or no worse than standing on the balls of your feet. A bike with a seat height that forces you to tip the machine significantly over to one side or the other to get control at a stoplight is going to feel way too lopsided for you to control, and since a lot of the hazards of riding come down to slow-speed maneuvers, you need to be able to easily dab a foot to regain control at a light, and then take off again from a standstill, or crawl through stop-and-go traffic, “paddling” your feet along at times to navigate tight spots.