Collection: Hardtail Mountain Bikes

Hardtail mountain bikes are simple by design. There is suspension up front but no rear shock, so the bike stays lighter and easier to care for. The solid rear end gives a direct feel when you pedal, which works well on climbs, gravel paths, local trails and smoother singletrack. 

Showing 28 products

Hardtail vs Full Suspension Mountain Bikes

A hardtail has front suspension only. A full suspension bike adds a rear shock for more comfort and grip on rougher trails, at the cost of weight and added service items.

Choose Hardtail If

Choose Full Suspension If

You ride smoother trails or singletrack

You ride rougher, technical terrain

You want a lighter, simpler bike

You want more comfort on long rides

You care about efficient climbing

You need more control on descents

You want easier service

You ride rocks, roots and drops



Find the Right Hardtail Mountain Bike by Type and Travel

Fork travel and riding style go hand in hand. Less travel keeps the bike lighter and quicker on climbs. More travel handles rougher trails with more confidence.

Cross-Country Hardtails

Built for speed, climbing and longer rides. Light, quick to pedal and best for smoother singletrack, fitness rides and race-style routes.


Trail Hardtails 

The sweet spot for most riders. Climbs well, handles corners with control and feels steady on mixed terrain. A more capable fork handles roots and rocks without giving up climbing efficiency.

Rigid & Fat Bikes 

Zero front travel - the lightest, simplest setup. Most fat bikes are rigid hardtails with wide tires (4" or wider) that float over snow, sand and soft ground. Built for winter rides, beach trails and loose desert terrain.

Not sure where you land? Start with a Trail hardtail (120–130mm). It covers the widest range of real-world riding.


Shop Hardtail Mountain Bikes by Brand

Hardtails at Colorado Cyclist span a wider mix of brands than any other MTB category. Eastern and Kona lead the lineup with accessible, durable builds for newer riders. Kona also brings a strong fat bike range. Marin covers cross-country and trail riding with planted, confident handling. Norco brings trail-ready hardtails and fat bikes tuned for rougher ground.Fuji rounds out the collection at value-driven price points. Use the brand filter to narrow the list.


Still deciding? Shop the mountain bikes category to see the full range.

Considerations When Choosing a Hardtail Mountain Bike


  • Start with where you ride. Hardtails handle cross-country, gravel singletrack and moderate descents well but you'll feel more trail vibration than on a full-suspension bike. Aggressive enduro terrain is where the trade-offs start to show.

  • Pick the right wheel size. Hardtails at Colorado Cyclist come in 24", 26", 27.5", 29" and MX.

Wheel Size

Best For

29"

Modern standard for adult trail and XC riding; rolls over obstacles with less effort

27.5" (650b)

More playful on tight trails, easier to throw around in corners

26"

Fat bikes and select smaller-rider builds

24"

Juniors and smaller riders

MX (mullet)

29" front, 27.5" rear; rollover up front with agility out back




  • Get the size right. Frames span X-Small to 2X-Large. A frame that's too long or too short means fighting the bike on every trail. Check reach and stack against your measurements before ordering. Between sizes? Shorter frames favor technical, slow-speed work; longer frames stay planted at speed.

  • Then choose your frame material. Aluminum dominates the mid-range - affordable, stiff and light enough for most riders. Carbon trims weight further and dampens vibration, at a higher price. Steel offers a smoother ride and easier repair, often chosen for bikepacking.

  • Don't overlook component value. At any given price, a hardtail puts more budget into the frame, fork, wheels and drivetrain than a comparable full-suspension build - which is why you can get more bike for your money.


Why Buy a Hardtail Mountain Bike from Colorado Cyclist

Colorado Cyclist carries hardtail mountain bikes from trusted brands across cross-country, trail, fat bike and rigid setups. You get expert rider support, fast shipping, easy returns and fit help before and after purchase.

Before your first ride, check the gear that makes trail days safer and easier, a well-fitted MTB helmet, proper MTB shoes and pedals and reliable bike tires.


FAQs About Hardtail MTBs


Are hardtail mountain bikes good for beginners?

Yes. The simple setup means less that can break and the direct feedback from the trail helps you build skill faster.


Can hardtail mountain bikes handle rough trails?

A trail hardtail with 120–130mm of fork travel handles roots, rocks and chunky singletrack well. Not built for the most technical or steep ground but more capable than most riders expect.


Are hardtail bikes easier to service?

Yes. Fewer moving parts than full suspension — no rear shock, pivots or linkage hardware to maintain. Easier to care for and cheaper to service over time.


Can I return a hardtail mountain bike if it doesn't fit?

Yes. Colorado Cyclist offers a 90-day return window but bikes must be unassembled and unridden to qualify, in their original packaging. If you're between sizes, contact the team before ordering. See the full returns policy.


How long does shipping take for hardtail bikes from Colorado Cyclist?

Most orders placed before 3pm PDT ship the same business day; bikes can take an extra 2–3 days for assembly checks. Riders close to Colorado see the quickest delivery and Next Day or Two-Day shipping is available at checkout. Full details on the shipping policy page.