Turkey – Cycling

Turkey is steadily establishing itself as a cycling destination, with infrastructure that is expanding but has yet to reach maturity. Cycling remains peripheral to everyday commuting across much of the country, and is more commonly pursued as a sporting, leisure,

Switzerland – Cycling

Switzerland is a genuinely bike-friendly nation with a thriving cycling culture, more than 11,000 kilometres of signposted routes, and a constitutional obligation to develop cycling infrastructure. Although it cannot match the Netherlands or Denmark for physically separated cycle lanes, motorists

Taiwan – Cycling

Among Asia’s most welcoming destinations for two-wheeled travel, Taiwan stands out for its exceptional recreational routes, its passionate cycling community, and a continuously expanding urban bike-share network. Scooters dominate short-distance urban travel, so bicycles are used less for daily commuting

Thailand – Cycling

Thailand presents a rich yet demanding environment for those who ride bikes. Recreational and competitive cycling is flourishing — particularly in the northern reaches around Chiang Mai — but using a bicycle as a daily commuting tool remains constrained by

Spain – Cycling

Spain has become an increasingly compelling destination for cyclists, blending a thriving recreational scene, steadily improving urban infrastructure, and spectacular long-distance routes. While the country has yet to reach the level of everyday cycling integration seen in the Netherlands or

Sweden – Cycling

Sweden ranks among Europe’s most cycle-friendly nations, whether your goal is daily commuting, running errands around town, or venturing out into breathtaking natural landscapes. The country features extensive dedicated cycling infrastructure in its cities and larger towns, sustained government commitment

South Korea – Cycling

South Korea offers cyclists a genuinely compelling experience, pairing an internationally admired long-distance trail network with steadily improving urban infrastructure across its biggest cities. Cycling culture here leans more toward leisure and sport than daily transport — it is not

Slovakia – Cycling

Slovakia presents a cycling scene that is steadily evolving, though it has not yet reached full maturity. Leisure and long-distance riding enjoy strong support, with picturesque EuroVelo corridors and mountain trails attracting riders from across the continent. Day-to-day cycling as

South Africa – Cycling

South Africa is a nation of devoted recreational and competitive cyclists, blessed with some of the planet’s most breathtaking riding landscapes, yet it has not developed into a commuter-cycling culture on the same scale as the Netherlands or Denmark. Cycling

Singapore – Cycling

Singapore stands out as a genuinely bike-friendly city-state, boasting a steadily growing web of dedicated cycling paths, park connectors, and shared mobility schemes. While it has yet to reach the deeply ingrained cycling culture found in the Netherlands or Denmark,