Handlebars

  1. 49N Steel Rise Handlebar

    $19.99 - $22.99
    0
  2. Easton EC90 ALX Drop Handlebar

    $389.99
    0
  3. OneUp Components Carbon E-BAR Handlebar - 1C0702

    $214.99
    0
  4. 49N Fondo Handlebar

    $39.99
    0
  5. Zipp Service Course SL-80 Ergo Drop Handlebar

    $181.99
    0
  6. Race Face Chester MTB Handlebar - HB12CHE31.8X740BLK

    $59.99
    2
  7. Deity Ridgeline 35 MTB Handlebar

    $124.99
    0
  8. 49N Alloy Riser 25.4 mm Handlebar - 258460-01

    $27.99
    1
  9. Zipp Service Course 70 XPLR Drop Handlebar

    $89.99
    3
  10. Easton EC70 Aero Drop Handlebar

    $379.99 - $434.99
    0
  11. Race Face Aeffect 35 MTB Handlebar

    $64.99
    0
  12. Wolf Tooth Handlebar Clamp Mount

    $35.99
  13. Ritchey Classic Kyote Handlebar - 30475457003

    $108.99
  14. Ritchey Comp ErgoMax Drop Handlebar

    $109.99
  15. 49N Classic Handlebar - 258463-01

    $31.99
    0
  16. 49N Trekking Handlebar - 258464-01

    $39.99
    0
  17. Spank Spoon 800 MTB Handlebar

    $76.99 - $91.99
    2
  18. Spank Wing 12 Vibrocore Drop Handlebar

    $151.99
    0
  19. Spank Flare 25 Vibrocore Drop Handlebar

    $144.99 - $151.99
    0
  20. Truvativ Atmos Carbon Flat MTB Handlebar - 00.6618.205.000

    $286.99
    0
  21. Truvativ Descendant DH Riser MTB Handlebar

    $104.99 - $117.99
    0
  22. Truvativ Descendant DH Carbon Riser MTB Handlebar

    $213.99 - $264.99
    0
  23. Zipp Service Course 80 Ergo Drop Handlebar

    $89.99
    0
  24. Zipp Service Course SL-70 Ergo Drop Handlebar

    $164.99 - $181.99
    0
  25. Easton EA50 Drop Handlebar

    $71.99
    0
  26. Easton EC90 AX Drop Handlebar

    $389.99
    0
  27. Race Face Atlas MTB Handlebar

    $99.99 - $104.99
    0
  28. FSA Omega Compact Drop Handlebar

    $86.99 - $87.99
  29. 25% off

    Joystick Components 8-Bit Alloy 31.8 MTB Handlebar

    $87.99 - $98.99
    $73.99 - $87.99
    2
  30. Renthal Fatbar Carbon35 MTB Handlebar

    $194.99 - $309.99
    0
  31. Deity Skyline MTB Handlebar

    $124.99
    0
  32. 49N 31.8 Handlebar

    $27.99
    1
  33. Truvativ Hussefelt Riser MTB Handlebar

    $71.99 - $77.99
    0
  34. Truvativ Atmos 7K Riser MTB Handlebar

    $117.99 - $122.99
    0
  35. Zipp Service Course SL-70 XPLR Drop Handlebar

    $181.99
    0
  36. SDG Slater 650 mm MTB Handlebar - 00050

    $80.99
    0
  37. Easton EA50 AX Drop Handlebar

    $71.99
    0
  38. Easton EA70 AX Drop Handlebar

    $129.99 - $144.99
    0
  39. Race Face Aeffect R MTB Handlebar - HB17AER2035X780BLK

    $69.99
    0
  40. 25% off

    Joystick Components 8-Bit Alloy 35 MTB Handlebar

    $87.99 - $98.99
    $73.99 - $87.99
  41. Burgtec Ride Wide Alloy Enduro MTB Handlebar

    $155.99
  42. Deda Elementi Speciale 26 Drop Handlebar

    $85.99
  43. Ritchey Classic Butano Drop Handlebar

    $104.99 - $109.99
  44. Ritchey RL1 Venturemax Drop Handlebar

    $82.99
  45. Ritchey Comp Flat Handlebar

    $70.99
    1
  46. Ritchey WCS Beacon Drop Handlebar

    $202.99 - $209.99
  47. 23% off

    Surly Truck Stop Handlebar

    $82.99 - $99.99
    $76.99 - $84.99
  48. Deity Highside 35/OS MTB Handlebar

    $114.99
    1

About Handlebars

This mountain bike handlebars buyer guide is for riders who want clear, purchase-ready direction. Mountain bike handlebars affect steering feel, rider fit, and control, so choosing the right handlebar style for your riding discipline matters more than the logo.

1. Mountain Bike Handlebar Types & Where Each One Fits

Handlebar typeWhere it is commonChoose this whenWhat you are trading away
Flat or low rise mountain barCross country, marathon XC, smoother trailYou want efficient climbing, a low front end, and quick weight shifts over the front tireLess leverage and less “chest up” stability when descents get steep and fast
Trail riser mountain barTrail, all mountain, general mixed ridingYou want a balanced stance for long rides that include both climbing and descendingIt is rarely perfect at either extreme. Pure XC and pure park riders usually want something more specialized
Gravity riser mountain barEnduro, downhill, bike park, freeride, dirt jumpYou want maximum leverage, stability, and impact tolerance when the front wheel is getting abusedAdded height and width can punish climbing, tight trees, and long seated mileage
Traditional drop barRoad endurance, road racing, criterium, cyclocrossYou want multiple hand positions, wind reduction, and stable control at sustained speedLess outright leverage than a wide flat bar in slow technical terrain. Also, fit mistakes get amplified fast
Flared drop barGravel, all road, adventure riding, some cyclocross, some drop bar MTB buildsYou want the road benefits of drops, plus more control in the drops on rough surfacesFlare can feel weird on pavement sprinting, and it can complicate hood comfort if the shape is extreme

2. Mountain Bike Handlebar Features & What You Trade Off

FeatureBenefit in real ridingDownside you pay for
Width (flat bars)More leverage, more stability, more ability to muscle the front wheel through impactsMore shoulder load, more tree strikes, more fatigue on long seated miles
Width (drop bars)Wider gives more control in the drops and calmer steering on rough surfacesToo wide hurts aerodynamics, can stress shoulders, and can make road handling feel slow
Rise (flat bars)Easier to get into a strong descending stance, reduces back strain for many ridersToo much rise can unload the front tire on climbs and reduce bite in flat corners
Backsweep and upsweep (flat bars)Can put wrists closer to neutral and reduce numb handsToo much sweep can reduce steering precision when you are really pushing
Reach and drop (drop bars)Sets how stretched you are and how usable the drops areToo long or too deep turns “multiple hand positions” into “two positions you can tolerate”
Flare (drop bars)More control in the drops on gravel, rough roads, and cyclocrossCan feel awkward for sprinting and can change wrist angle on the hoods if extreme
Clamp diameter and compatibilityModern stems and bars mostly live around 31.8 mm, with some mountain setups at 35 mmClamp size locks you into a matching stem. Older road setups often used 26 mm, which is a compatibility trap
Material (alloy vs carbon)Alloy tends to survive day to day abuse with less drama. Carbon can be light and can be tuned for comfortCarbon hates impact damage and over torque. Alloy can bend without warning signs too, just usually more gradually
Shape (round vs aero tops on drop bars)Aero and ergonomic tops can improve comfort and reduce dragAero sections can limit accessory clamps and complicate bar tape, routing, and fit tweaks
Internal routingCleaner cockpit, less cable clutterHarder service, more noise if poorly executed, and more swearing when you swap a stem
Mounting real estateRoom for lights, computer mounts, remotes, and lever setupCrowded cockpits force bad lever angles, which becomes bad braking control and wrist pain

3. Flat Bar vs Drop Bar: Core Design Options

  • Ideal user: Trail, enduro, downhill, dirt jump, and technical singletrack riders who want leverage and quick corrections.
  • Strengths: Maximum steering leverage and stability at low speed and high chaos. Simple control setup.
  • Limitations: Fewer hand positions for long rides. More wind drag on road miles.
  • Ideal user: Road cyclists, cyclocross racers, gravel riders, and riders doing long mixed-surface mileage where hand positions and aerodynamics matter.
  • Strengths: Multiple positions (tops, hoods, drops). Better wind management. Very efficient for steady speed.
  • Limitations: Less leverage in slow technical terrain. Fit gets picky, fast.

4. Handlebar Fit, Compatibility & Comfort Checks

  • Choose riding discipline first, then choose handlebar shape. A road drop bar on a bike that lives in technical singletrack is like bringing a knife to a shovel fight.
  • Confirm clamp compatibility. Handlebar clamp diameter must match the stem. Many modern bars use 31.8 mm. Some mountain setups use 35 mm. Older road setups often used 26.0 mm. Measure before you buy.
  • Flat bar fit should feel like this: elbows slightly bent, wrists neutral, shoulders not shrugged, and you can weight the front tire in a corner without feeling like you are falling forward.
  • Drop bar fit should feel like this: the hoods are a place you can live, not a perch you tolerate. The drops should be reachable without locking elbows or crushing your lower back.
  • Choose flare for your discipline. Gravel and cyclocross riders often benefit because it opens up control in the drops. Pure road riders may find it unnecessary or awkward at high cadence sprints.
  • Control compatibility matters. Road levers and mountain levers are not interchangeable ecosystems. Changing handlebar style often means changing shifters, brakes, and routing.
  • Plan for mounts and accessories. Some aero-topped drop bars do not play nice with clamp-on lights or aero extensions. Some riser bars run out of straight clamp space once you add brakes, shifter, dropper remote, and a light.

5. Handlebar Care, Installation & Service Basics

  • Use a torque wrench. Most handlebar failures are installed, not manufactured.
  • Carbon demands clean installs. Carbon assembly paste where appropriate, correct torque, and zero tolerance for clamping damage.

  • Keep bar ends plugged. Open bar ends are a sharp circular punch.