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When cycling on roads on my mountain bike, I generally get around 10-12 miles per hour on a flat surface.

What sort of speeds can I expect to get on a road bike?

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    possible duplicate of Speed benchmarking
    – Unsliced
    Commented Oct 11, 2010 at 8:41
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    I think this is a slightly different question - it seems to be "If I can go X mph on bike A, and switch to bike B, what will my speed be?"
    – Gary.Ray
    Commented Oct 11, 2010 at 19:02
  • As @Gary.Ray points out, you seem to be asking how to estimate your road bike speed based on your mountain bike speed, but many answers seem to ignore this. Admittedly your title seemed to me to make it pretty clear, but I wonder if you might not emphasise this in the body of the question as well.
    – PJTraill
    Commented Jul 10, 2018 at 16:45

10 Answers 10

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On my reasonably flat commute I average around 16 mph on my road bike, but your average speed is dependent on many different factors. A general rule of thumb is that if you are switching from a mountain bike with knobbies to a road bike you will be between 15-20% faster at the same watts/effort. Typically that's only a change of 2-3 mph.

I teach a bike commuting workshop, and one of the most common questions is whether to switch from a mountain bike to a road bike in order to increase speed. Typically, I tell people to try three things first:

  1. Swap out your knobby tires for high pressure slicks. You can find 1.25" -1.5" slick tires that fit mountain bike rims and run at between 75 - 90 lbs of pressure. These will dramatically reduce rolling resistance.
  2. If you have a suspension either lock it out, or set it as stiff as you can. Locking out your suspension will cause more of your effort to be transferred directly through the drive-train and translate into less loss of momentum from shock absorption.
  3. Try clipless pedals. Your pedal stroke will be more efficient, again resulting in an increase in speed.

If you do those three things the only real differences between a road bike and your mountain bike will be the weight (which matters a lot more when accelerating than it does when you are already rolling) and surface area resistance from riding in the drops. But most road bikers don't spend much time in the drops.

Finally, your weight and fitness make a huge difference. I frequently pass road bike riders while on my commuter rigid frame mountain bike with high pressure slicks.

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    I would also add that in a road bike I find that you can put power into the pedals easier than on a mountain or especially a cruiser bike. Commented May 5, 2011 at 16:19
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    I suspect the difference is even greater for someone in good physical shape. My touring bike, unloaded, is about 25lb and has 26x2.0 slicks. I find I cruise at 15mph on it, whereas on my racing bike it feels like I do 20mph+ without even trying. Don't underestimate the effects of weight, stiffness, and rolling resistance. Commented Apr 23, 2012 at 15:43
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    This answer ignores the primary difference between a road bike and a mountain bike. That's fine, for commutes or solo rides, but not so good if you ride with someone who's on a road bike while you're on a mountain bike. The difference is gear ratio. For instance, the typical top end MTB gearing, with a 44t big ring and a 12t rear, and a typical cadence of 90 RPMs gives you a speed of 26 mph possible. The same cadence in the top gear of a compact double road bike, a 50 x 11 usually, gives a possible top speed of 33 mph, at the same level of effort. Standard 53 x 12 is about 32 mph.
    – zenbike
    Commented Apr 30, 2012 at 3:07
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    I first read your post and was like "clipless pedals", huh? But then I came across this article which explains why they're called "clipless" (when they do actually clip in)... gizmodo.com/5990381/why-you-should-switch-to-clipless-pedals
    – Simon East
    Commented Mar 26, 2014 at 4:35
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    One minor difference is the rider position. Most road bikes have drop bars so the rider is crouched over vs sitting somewhat upright. You can add drop bars to your mountain bike to help with that. I would say this is fairly important because at about 15 mph air resistance is a lot more dominant that rolling resistance.
    – Ronnie W
    Commented Apr 25, 2016 at 15:58
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Fitness is the biggest factor in how fast you can maintain. To provide a point of comparison, a local club here in the Seattle area holds an early spring Time Trial (race against the clock) every March. Looking at the results--and keep in mind, these are racers going all out, just short of barfing when they finish--those that competed averaged from 20 mph to 30 mph. Personally there is no way I can maintain 20 mph on the flats due to my lack of conditioning.

When The Fat Cyclist wrote about riding in the team car for a stage of the Tour of California, he got to follow one of Team Radio Shack's riders. His rider was planning on making it an 'easy' day, and was riding around 30 mph.

In conclusion...Your Mileage May Vary!

edit: btw, my personal speed (48-year-old dude, about 30 pounds overweight) is about 16.5 mph on smooth flats with no wind. Overall speed for a long ride, counting little stops to make a phone call, fill a water bottle, etc. averages about 13.5 mph.

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    Yeah, it's really about fitness. "Faster than without a road bike" is how fast you should go with a road bike. The exact numbers depend on you.
    – dee-see
    Commented Oct 11, 2010 at 14:05
  • This does not really help the questioner estimate his road bike speed based on his mountain bike speed, which is what he seems to want.
    – PJTraill
    Commented Jul 10, 2018 at 16:42
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Data points for your comparison: I switched from a 26" MTB with 3x7 speed to a 700 road bike, also with 3x7.

http://strava.com/ tells me that my ride speeds have increased by about 5 km/h on pretty much every segment.

My climbing times have dropped by 10%-20% but it wasn't any easier.

The aluminium road bike is 11 KG vs the 17 KG of the steel MTB.


Climb https://www.strava.com/segments/3265928

Rank Date           Speed       Time
1    Dec 7, 2015    13.2km/h    1:11   <-- Road bike
2    Jul 18, 2015   9.7km/h     1:37   <-- Steel MTB
3    Jun 13, 2015   8.9km/h     1:45   <-- Steel MTB
4    Nov 23, 2015   8.3km/h     1:53   <-- Road bike-I stopped for some reason.

Flat bit https://www.strava.com/segments/9200895

Rank Date           Speed       Time
1    Sep 24, 2015   37.3km/h    1:27   <-- Road bike
2    Dec 24, 2015   35.7km/h    1:31   <-- Road bike
3    Dec 22, 2015   35.3km/h    1:32   <-- Road bike
4    Mar 14, 2015   30.6km/h    1:46   <-- Steel MTB
5    Apr 18, 2015   29.0km/h    1:52   <-- Steel MTB
6    Jul 19, 2014   28.2km/h    1:55   <-- Steel MTB

EDIT Additionally - the MTB's bottom gear was 26/38 whereas the road bike is 26/27. Both are triples. So in the MTB its easier to drop another gear when the going gets tough, but on the road bike you have to keep going but at a lower cadence.

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    Did you MTB have knobbies or slick tires?
    – Ronnie W
    Commented Apr 29, 2016 at 16:56
  • @Danielson the MTB had "combo" tyres, where the center was a long smooth bump all the way around the outside, and the shoulders had small blocks to the same height. So while riding straight ahead it was a slick, and while hard cornering it was a small block tyre. Pretend it was a road slick and you're close enough.
    – Criggie
    Commented Apr 29, 2016 at 22:05
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    I am not surprised the large differences in average speed, especially on the flats as body position can have very large impact on your drag coefficient. You better be careful careful with these types of comparisons, before you know it you will start seriously looking at aero wheels, and slipstream kit for every advantage! Its a slippery slope.
    – Rider_X
    Commented Apr 29, 2016 at 22:14
  • @Rider_X Correct and accurate - I find the wind has a highly variable effect, and two or three times for each is probably insufficient data for a comparison. I have segments with 300 times, but the traffic lights make the data comparison less obvious. The two segments above are free of lights.
    – Criggie
    Commented Apr 30, 2016 at 2:59
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    ▲ for actually giving your speeds on both bikes, as too many answers just say how fast they are on their road bikes!
    – PJTraill
    Commented Jul 10, 2018 at 16:39
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The biggest difference between a mountain bike and a road bike is gear ratio.

Any other difference can be overcome. You can change tires, increase pressure, lock out your suspension, and use clipless pedals, but if you are on a typical mountain bike, your gearing will still limit you to a speed which is roughly 30% slower than the same effort will produce on a road bike.

For instance, the typical top end MTB gearing, with a 44t big ring and a 12t rear, and a typical cadence of 90 RPMs gives you a speed of 26 mph possible. See the chart below for the speed of each gear combination with a typical MTB gearing.

Standard MTB gearing and Speed Chart @ 90RPM

The same cadence in the top gear of a compact double road bike, a 50 x 11 usually, gives a possible top speed of 33 mph, at the same level of effort.

Compact Double gearing and Speed Chart @ 90RPM

Standard 53 x 12 is about 32 mph, with all else equal.

Standard Double gearing and Speed Chart @ 90RPM

Of course, you need to be fit enough to maintain that pace. But since you're comparing the same levels of effort, that's a bit more than 2-3 miles an hour. More like 9 mph faster.

Which on a 20 mile commute = 46 minutes on the MTB, versus 33 minutes on a road bike, at the same level of effort.

This is strictly a matter of gearing and mechanical advantage, for a roughly 30% increase in speed.

BTW, all of the math here assumes the same tire diameter, which is not typical. (See the Charts for complete and accurate differences, with crank lengths, tire size, and gear spread accounted for)

The difference in wheel size alone, assuming high pressure slicks, is worth the 2 mph difference that @Gary.Ray claims in his answer above. This last chart is identical to the MTB chart above, except I've changed the wheel and tire size to match a road bike. RPMs, gearing, and pressure are identical to the first MTB chart. The difference in gearing from the wheel size change is 2 MPH.

MTB with 700c Wheels gearing and Speed Chart @ 90RPM

By the way, the app I used to do the calculations and the charts here is called Gear Head, it's on the app store for iPhone and iPad, and it's the best tool I've found for these kinds of calculations. I like it, but I don't have any other connection to it, just for the record.

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    If he is running 10-12 mph, he is probably in the middle of the gear range. Yes, the gear limited top speed will be lower due to lower gearing, but he has the gears he needs for his cruising speed. Commented Jul 29, 2014 at 22:32
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    You keep saying "the same level of effort". I don't think I understand your definition of "effort". The same cadence at different gearing is maintained by different pedalling wattages.
    – Vorac
    Commented Nov 24, 2014 at 8:02
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    Yes. Wattage = Power = Work = Effort.
    – zenbike
    Commented Dec 20, 2014 at 8:49
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    Resurrecting an old question and not really a bike pro, but my engineering guts say your "same level of effort" argument makes no sense. If you're riding the same bike at the same constant speed, your power output is the same no matter which gear ratio you use (equal to the sum of drag and other inefficiencies plus the climb). So aren't they only useful if you are already fit enough to max out the MTB? The gears just allow you to put in even more effort and they don't reduce the required amount of effort, unlike tires, riding position and stiff frame. Commented Jul 15, 2019 at 17:35
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    This is nonsense. Most people on road bikes spend little time above 26 mph. The impact of that time on an average speed is small. Most time is spent riding well within the range of the mountain bike gearing you quote. Commented Dec 21, 2020 at 3:17
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On my hybrid (think Mountain bike style but with thinner wheels) I average about 12-14 mph around Bolton (lots of hills) when I go out at my in-laws (in Doncaster where it's fairly flat) I average 15-18mph.

On a road bike you'll be faster still as it's lighter and built for speed.

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    This does not really help the questioner estimate his road bike speed based on his mountain bike speed, which is what he asks for: perhaps you should add your road bike speed.
    – PJTraill
    Commented Jul 10, 2018 at 16:50
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As noted...It's mostly the motor... On nice flat roads with a good roadster...20+ even at my age. However, throw in some hills and a headwind and the average plummets. I have a 2-mile road course around the local park that incorporates 2 hills on each leg. When I was 15 years younger and in good shape, I could maintain 18 around that.
Not now...

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At those speeds on flat terrain there are other factors that will impact average speed far more than bicycle type.

In particular, stopping at intersections in an urban area will cause your average speed to plummet. 12mph average is actually reasonable for a dense city area and is not much slower than what cars average.

If you're talking about riding in areas without stopping, getting faster than 12mph average is easy with a little more experience.

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The average speeds that can be attained on a road bike (or any bike) are determined by several factors:

  • Distance covered
  • Road surface
  • Wind
  • Equipment, meaning the bike and components
  • Terrain
  • Age and fitness of the cyclist
  • Teamwork

Based on observation and considering all that, on primarily flat, non-windy, terrain, on a decent road bike, my estimates would be:

  • Novice cyclist - a short distance (10-15 mi): 10 - 12 mph
  • Casual, fit, cyclist - a short/medium distance (~25 mi): 15 - 16 mph
  • Average club cyclist/fitness cyclist - a medium distance (+/-40 mi): 16 - 19 mph
  • Experienced club cyclist/amateur racer - a medium/long distance (+/-55 mi): 20+ mph
  • Pro cyclist - long distances: 25+ mph

Anecdotally... on one of my frequent rides through some farmland, there is a 12 mile, mostly flat stretch. With a tailwind, I'm a pro. A headwind, I'm a novice. With no wind, I'm somewhere in between, depending on the day.

Another anecdote... In my area I frequently use a particular paved bike path on both a road and mtn bike, mainly because it leads to a park full of single-track, and beyond that to nice countryside for road cycling. Anyway, I have 8 years of ride data for that route. Along that path there is a 6 mile, flat open, stretch that was repaved 2 years ago; originally it was very rough, chunky asphalt and upon repaving it was converted to very smooth asphalt. Lo and behold, after the repaving, my average speed on both bikes jumped up ~4 mph.

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  • This does not really help the questioner estimate his road bike speed based on his mountain bike speed, which is what he asks for.
    – PJTraill
    Commented Jul 10, 2018 at 16:52
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20 to 22 mph (32 to 35 kph) average over 40 miles (64 km) with a light road bicycle, bicycle shorts, clipless pedals, proper bicycling shoes, a helmet, excellent fitness, and a lot of practice. Peak speeds can be as high as 30 to 35 mph (48-60 kph) on the flats in a tight group of 6 or eight riders or so.

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    A slight exaggeration, I think!
    – andy256
    Commented Jan 31, 2017 at 10:52
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    This does not really help the questioner estimate his road bike speed based on his mountain bike speed, which is what he asks for: perhaps you should add your mountain bike speed.
    – PJTraill
    Commented Jul 10, 2018 at 16:49
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It strongly depends on what bikes we are talking about. Modern "gravel bikes" are an excellent choice for many cyclists just looking to have fun on the open roads, but may be noticeably slower than a racier road bike. With mountain bikes, it becomes even more varied. Are we talking about a <25 pound XC hardtail? An older MTB with 60mm of suspension and relatively narrow 26" tires? A 40+ pound downhill bike that you slapped some stickers onto for +10% speed? You will get wildly different results depending on what bikes we are looking at, so it's hard to just say "oh yea, a MTB will be exactly 20.5748% faster than a road bike at STP".

Personally, I can hold ~24km/h on my MTB (modern trail hardtail with intermediately aggressive tires), and ~33km/h on my gravel bike (with road tires on).

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