Welcome to our guide to the best road bikes under £2,000. Bikes in this price bracket, are light, well-equipped and great value for money.
You also have a big range of choices. Carbon fibre frame, or the latest ultra-sophisticated aluminium? Caliper brakes or discs? Racing geometry, more upright for comfort or something in between? How about taking the the byways and bridleways on a gravel bike? Whatever type of riding you have in mind, there’s a bike in this price range that’ll suit you perfectly.
Choose your weapon: there are great road bikes under £2,000 for racing, sportive and endurance riding, mixing up some gravel riding or just whizzing round the lanes
Carbon fibre is the most popular frame material for its light weight and strength, but don't dismiss road bikes under £2,000 that are made from the latest high-tech aluminium or steel alloys
Most road bikes under £2,000 now have hydraulic disc brakes but there are still some rim-brake bikes available for traditionalists
Shimano's 105 groupset dominates the equipment selection on road bikes under £2,000, but there are a few with the Ultegra groupset that's next up in the heirarchy
12 of the best road bikes under £2,000
- Giant Revolt Advanced 3 — £1,748.99
- GT Grade Carbon Expert — £1,999.99
- Ribble CGR AL Shimano Ultegra — £1,999.00
- Specialized Allez Sprint Comp Disc — £1,899.00
- Cube Attain GTC SL Disc 2020 — £1,999.00
- Van Rysel RR 920 CF Ultegra — £1,999.99
- Cannondale CAAD13 Disc 105 2020 — £1,900.00
- Giant Defy Advanced 2 2020 — £1,949
- Trek Émonda SL5 Disc 2020 — £1,750.00
- Canyon Endurace CF SL Disc 7.0 2020 — £1,849.00
- Merida Silex 700 2020 — £1,900.00
- Rose Reveal Four 105 — £1,904.99
Giant Revolt Advanced 3 — £1,748.99
Giant bills the handsome Revolt Advanced 3 as a gravel bike, but it's very much on the go-faster end of the gravel spectrum, so it's suited to Tarmac shenanigans too with handling that's positive enough that you can push it into the bends and still have fun when the road heads downhill.
Dirt roads are where the Revolt Advanced really excels though, rewarding flat-out effort with buckets of fun as the tyre scrabble for grip on loose surfaces. You can throw it through twisty gravel sections right on its limits and enjoy the thrill of feeling it could all go tits-up in an instant — but it doesn't.
Read our review of the Giant Revolt Advanced 2
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GT Grade Carbon Expert — £1,999.99
Highly capable, with a performance that shines on any surface as it smooths out bumps with the skinniest of skinny rear stays – and a very competitive price – the new GT Grade Carbon Expert is a top choice in an increasingly crowded gravel bike market.
The Grade is brilliant at being fast and comfortable on rough roads, and right at home on forest trails and gravel roads. The new frame, with its 'floating stays' design, is impressively smooth at the saddle. Rough tracks, jagged roots and rippled fields are soaked up exceptionally well thanks to the seat post flexing backwards. It's freer to do this on the new frame since the seat tube can bow forwards, unhindered by the seat stays.
GT makes no claim for how much flex there is, and it’s obviously not tuneable, plus variables like rider weight and aggression influence just how much you get. However the stays actually flex visibly, either when you press hard down on the saddle with your elbow, or look down when you’re riding. At the worldwide launch event in Girona, riding next to another Grade revealed that it's even noticeable from afar.
Geometry defines a gravel bike, with stability a key focus. The new Grade gets a lower bottom bracket across the size range, along with 15mm longer chainstays, and feels extremely surefooted on any terrain at any speed.
Read our review of the GT Grade Carbon Expert
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Ribble CGR AL Shimano Ultegra — £1,999.00
Ribble's CGR AL is a hugely versatile and superb value bike for everything from gravel bashing to cyclocross and road commuting. The aluminium frame isn't overly compliant and the kit needs a few tweaks if you intend to mostly stick to dirt, but that's easy enough to custom spec it to your heart's content when you order. (That's the £1,400 105-equipped version in the pic by the way; the Ultegra version is available in the same screaming orange.)
The CGR bit of the name stands for Cyclocross, gravel and road, which tells you pretty much everything you need to know about where this bike is pitched, namely as a do-it-all drop bar bike. The impressive thing is that it actually delivers on this promise, having taken in everything from gravel rides, road Audaxes and tow-path bashing commutes.
The aluminium frame is really nicely made with flattened welds, there are 12mm through axles at either end with flat mount disc brakes, loads of guard, cage and rack mounts and the paint job is smooth and smart - orange is available as well as this blue - and it generally gives off the vibe of being a much more expensive machine than it is. It scores extra points for having a proper, tapered steerer on the carbon forks where many rivals still have a straight item too.
Read our review of the Ribble CGR AL
Specialized Allez Sprint Comp Disc — £1,899.00
The Specialized Allez Sprint Comp is an aluminium alloy masterpiece. The ride quality is impressive and the stiffness is right up there with some of the most overbuilt carbon wonder bikes.
Specialized describes the Sprint Comp as a 'crit-racing weapon', a fast bike that is going to give you plenty of thrills and excitement when you just want to get out and smash the pedals.
The Sprint has an unbelievably stiff frame brought about, Specialized says, by its use of D'Aluisio Smartweld Sprint Technology. Basically this means the welds have been moved at some of the most stressed sections of the frame, most noticeably at the head tube and bottom bracket junction.
Acceleration and sprinting are epic against pretty much every alloy bike we've ridden, and powering out of corners whether on the race track or on your favourite section of road will see you grinning like a deranged nutter.
Read our review of the Specialized Allez Sprint Comp Disc
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Cube Attain GTC SL Disc 2020 — £1,999.00
How does Cube manage to make a carbon fibre endurance bike with Ultegra equipment and hydraulic discs for under £2,000? Well, they've swapped out the Ultegra brakes and shifters for 105 R7000 units, which saves a bunch on the price tag without substantial detriment to performance.
The Attain GTC SL Disc is very much a mile-eating all-rounder, with clearance for mudguards so you can keep going through winter without getting drenched.
Van Rysel RR 920 CF Ultegra — £1,999.99
You don't get many bikes in this price range with Shimano Ultegra R8000 components and with its superb frame and Mavic Cosmic carbon wheels that makes this eminently raceable speedster superb value for money.
When he tested the 105-equipped version, which has the same frame, Stu Kerton said it was "further evidence, if any was needed, that B'Twin knows how to build awesome-riding race bikes which offer excellent stiffness, handling and speed while also managing to be unbelievably comfortable." Decathlon has since rebranded these bikes as Van Rysel, but the sentiment reminds solid.
Read our review of the B’Twin Ultra 900 CF
Cannondale CAAD13 Disc 105 2020 — £1,900.00
Proving that composites don't quite reign supreme, Cannondale's meticulously engineered CAAD13 frame wrings every last gram of performance potential out of aluminium. Cannondale combines that frame with Shimano 105 shifting, its own HollowGram Si chainset and Shimano 105 hydraulic disc brakes for a thoroughly modern fast road bike.
The CAAD13 includes a stack of refinements over the previous, much-loved CAAD12 with tweaks to the aerodynamics and dropped seatstays to improve comfort.
Read our review of the Cannondale CAAD13 Disc 105
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Giant Defy Advanced 2 2020 — £1,949
Giant's Defy line is one of the most popular bikes in the endurance and sportive sector, and is the company's best-selling model, combining smart geometry with a full range of competitively priced builds. It was revamped for 2019 with a frame that will take up to 32mm tyres, some tweaks to the cable routing, and the addition of Giant's new D-Fuse buzz-reducing handlebar. Those improvements carry on into the 2020 models.
The 2020 Defy bikes also get tubeless-ready wheels and 32mm tyres, and the Defy Advanced 2 has Shimano's 105 R7000 shifting with an 11-34 cassette for a 1:1 low gear.
Read our review of the Giant Defy Advanced SL
Read our review of the Giant Defy Advanced 3
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Trek Émonda SL5 Disc 2020 — £1,750.00
Part of Trek's line of Émonda lightweight race bikes, the SL5 demonstrates one of two approaches to speccing up a bike in this range. Trek takes the second-lightest of its Émonda frames and equips it with Shimano's midrange 105 group for a bike that doesn't cost the earth but has plenty of upgrade potential.
Prefer rim brakes? For the same price you can choose the Trek Emonda SL6, with a full Shimano Ultegra groupset.
Read our review of the Trek Emonda SL5
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Canyon Endurace CF SL Disc 7.0 2020 — £1,849.00
It's always worth checking out what Canyon has to offer, and this combination of the light, quick but comfortable Endurace CF SL frame and Shimano 105 components is decent value, and — if the women's equivalent is any guide — a superb all-day mile-eater.
Read our review of the Canyon Endurace WMN CF SL Disc 8.0
Merida Silex 700 2020 — £1,900.00
Merida's dramatic take on the gravel bike genre is as close as a bike gets to being a mountain bike without becoming the bailiwick of our sister site off.road.cc. It has the long head tube and top tube that's a feature of many contemporary mountain bikes, with Shimano's new GRX groupset providing wide-range gearing. It'll go just about anywhere on its 38mm tyres, and if you wanted to get really adventurous there's room to go bigger.
Read our review of the Silex 600's carbon fibre big brother, the Merida Silex 9000
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Rose Reveal Four 105 — £1,904.99
Rose claims an impressive 7.5kg for the Reveal Four 105, the base model in the Reveal range that was announced in February 2020, and given that its predecessor the Xeon CDX-4400 came in at 7.5kg (16.6lb), we believe it.
The Reveal bikes boast some clever features including a shock-absorbing D-shaped seatpost and internal cable routing that starts right at the 1.5-inch head tube.