Folding Bikes: When They Make Sense
Folding bike skepticism has gotten complicated with all the improving designs flying around. As someone who was skeptical until I watched a commuter fold one up, walk into a coffee shop with it, and lean it against the wall like a piece of luggage — no lock required, no theft risk, no hunting for bike parking — I learned everything there is to know about when these actually make sense. Today, I’ll share the reality.
Who Actually Needs One
Probably should have led with this section, honestly.
Mixed-mode commuters: If your commute involves train, bus, or subway plus cycling, a folding bike solves the “last mile” problem without dealing with bike-on-transit rules.
Small-space dwellers: Apartments without bike storage, or shared spaces where a full-size bike is impractical.
Theft-concerned riders: That’s what makes these endearing to us city riders — folding bikes come inside with you. No need to trust locks.
Travelers: Some folding bikes fit in luggage, avoiding airline bike fees and hassle.
If none of these apply, a regular bike is probably better.
What to Consider
Smaller wheels mean different handling — takes adjustment. Folding mechanisms vary in speed and ease. Quality varies wildly — cheap folding bikes feel sketchy at speed. Brompton and Tern make excellent folders but cost accordingly.
The Honest Assessment
Folding bikes solve specific problems excellently. If you have those problems, they’re worth the tradeoffs. If you don’t, you’re giving up ride quality for features you won’t use.
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