Tyre Choice and Pressures for UK Gravel

  • Tyres matter more on gravel than they do on road. They're your suspension, your grip, and the difference between floating over rough ground or feeling every rock and rut. Getting tyre choice and pressure right transforms how your bike rides.

  • Tyre Width: What Works

  • 35-40mm: Fast rolling, good for smoother gravel and mixed road/gravel routes. Less comfort on rough terrain. 40-45mm: The sweet spot for most UK gravel riding. Comfortable, versatile, and handles everything from tarmac to muddy bridleways. 45mm+: Maximum comfort and grip on rough terrain. Slower on smooth sections, but worth it for technical routes or bikepacking.

    **Ribble recommendation: Start with 40-42mm tyres. They handle most UK gravel well.

    Tread Pattern Light file tread: Fast on dry hard pack and road. Limited grip in mud. Medium tread: Versatile. Rolls reasonably fast, grips well on loose gravel, sheds mud. What most UK riders need. Aggressive tread: Maximum grip in mud and loose conditions. Slower on hard pack.

    Tubeless or Tubes? Tubeless advantages: Run 5-10 psi lower, fewer punctures, better grip and comfort. Tubes advantages: Simple setup, reliable, easier to fix on the trail. Ribble recommendation: Go tubeless if your wheels support it. The performance benefits are worth it.

    Tyre Pressure Guide Use this chart as a starting point, then adjust based on how the bike feels.

  • Tyres matter more on gravel than they do on road. They're your suspension, your grip, and the difference between floating over rough ground or feeling every rock and rut. Getting tyre choice and pressure right transforms how your bike rides.

  • Tyre Width: What Works

  • 35-40mm: Fast rolling, good for smoother gravel and mixed road/gravel routes. Less comfort on rough terrain. 40-45mm: The sweet spot for most UK gravel riding. Comfortable, versatile, and handles everything from tarmac to muddy bridleways. 45mm+: Maximum comfort and grip on rough terrain. Slower on smooth sections, but worth it for technical routes or bikepacking.

    **Ribble recommendation: Start with 40-42mm tyres. They handle most UK gravel well.

    Tread Pattern

    • Light file tread: Fast on dry hard pack and road. Limited grip in mud.
    • Medium tread: Versatile. Rolls reasonably fast, grips well on loose gravel, sheds mud. What most UK riders need.
    • Aggressive tread: Maximum grip in mud and loose conditions. Slower on hard pack.

    Tubeless or Tubes?

    • Tubeless advantages: Run 5-10 psi lower, fewer punctures, better grip and comfort.
    • Tubes advantages: Simple setup, reliable, easier to fix on the trail.
    • Ribble recommendation: Go tubeless if your wheels support it. The performance benefits are worth it.

    Tyre Pressure Guide Use this chart as a starting point, then adjust based on how the bike feels

  • FAQ's