I recently asked cyclists how they felt about speakers on bikes.
The response was immediate—and not subtle.
A lot of people hate them.
And honestly… I get it.
Why People Hate Bike Speakers
If you’ve ever been out on a quiet trail and heard someone coming up behind you blasting music, you already understand the issue.
It’s not really about the speaker.
It’s about forced noise.
- People ride to get outside, not to hear someone else’s playlist
- Trails have an unspoken etiquette—respect the space
- We’ve all experienced “that guy” who takes it too far
So yeah—there’s a reason the reaction is strong.
In the wrong setting, bike speakers are annoying. Full stop.
But That’s Not the Whole Story
Here’s where it gets more nuanced.
Earbuds aren’t always better. Wind noise. Lack of truly hearing around you (at high volumes) is dangerous too.
Not all riding happens on quiet trails.
A lot of it happens:
- on roads with traffic
- on paved paths through cities
- during group rides
- in environments where there’s already noise
In those situations, the equation changes.
Now it’s less about “broadcasting music” and more about:
- staying aware of your surroundings
- not sealing yourself off with headphones
- adding a little background audio to a ride that’s already loud
Used that way, it’s not disruptive—it’s practical.
The Part No One Talks About
Even the people who hate speakers will admit something if you read closely:
People are already using them.
They’re just doing it in ways that aren’t great.
- Strapped to handlebars
- Stuffed in bottle cages
- Hanging off backpacks
It works… but it’s not clean, and it’s not stable.
It’s a workaround.
What I Took Away From All This
The takeaway isn’t:
“Everyone should use a speaker.”
And it’s definitely not:
“People who don’t like them are wrong.”
The real takeaway is this:
Context matters.
- Quiet trail? Probably not the move.
- Alone on a ride with nobody around? Rock on!
- Busy road or city ride? Totally different conversation.
That’s the line.
Why I Built What I Built
I kept running into the same problem:
Too much stuff on the handlebars.
Phone. Light. Bell. Speaker. It adds up fast—and it gets messy. The biggest issue for most people riding with speakers? Not having them forwards on the handlebars. Think about it, if you’re riding with etiquette, the distance from the speaker to your ears is very close— so you don’t need much volume with this kind of arrangement. If it is mounted somewhere else, then that’s when you need to blast the music so that it’s something the rider can hear (effectively bouncing the sound off of everything else). By placing the speaker on the handlebars and being able to point the speakers in the right direction (towards your face), the music is barely heard by people around you.
So I started experimenting with pushing everything forward off the bars into a cleaner, more stable setup.
That’s where this whole thing came from.
Not from trying to force speakers into every ride—but from trying to make a better setup for the rides where it actually makes sense.
The Bottom Line
Bike speakers aren’t universally good.
They’re not universally bad either.
They’re situational.
And like most things in cycling, it comes down to awareness—of your surroundings, and the people around you.
If you use them thoughtfully, they can make a lot of sense.
If you don’t, you already know how that story goes.
If you’re someone who’s already tried strapping things to your bars and thought, there has to be a better way, that’s exactly the problem I’ve been working on.

