World-class mountain biking, stunning coastal road routes, multi-day touring, and 200+ days of rideable weather — the island is one of Canada's best cycling destinations
Vancouver Island isn't just bike-friendly — cycling is woven into daily life here in a way that few places in Canada can match.
This is the island that produced Ryder Hesjedal, Canada's only Grand Tour winner (Giro d'Italia, 2012), and it's not hard to see why. The combination of mild year-round weather, dramatic terrain from sea level to alpine, and a culture that actually respects cyclists creates something special. Victoria consistently ranks as Canada's most bikeable city. Cumberland is a globally recognized mountain bike destination. And the island's network of rail trails, logging roads, and quiet rural highways makes for touring that rivals anything in Europe.
Whether you're a roadie chasing segments on the Malahat, a mountain biker sessioning flow trails in the Comox Valley, or a touring cyclist loading panniers for a two-week circumnavigation, this guide covers everything you need to know — with real distances, actual costs, and honest assessments of the riding conditions.
From car-free rail trails to challenging coastal highways, the island offers road riding for every level.
The island's signature rail trail runs from downtown Victoria through Colwood and Langford to Sooke. The first 25 km are paved and flat — perfect for commuters and families. Past Langford it becomes crushed gravel through increasingly wild terrain, crossing trestle bridges and passing through old-growth forest. Connects to the Lochside Trail at the Victoria end for a combined 84 km network. Free to use, no permit needed. Gets busy on summer weekends near Victoria — ride early.
The Cowichan Valley is Vancouver Island's warmest region, and its network of quiet rural roads connecting wineries and farms makes for outstanding cycling. Start from Duncan, loop through Glenora, Cowichan Bay, and the wine trail. Light traffic, scenic farmland, and the option to stop at wineries and farm stands along the way. The hills are real but not brutal — expect 400–600 m of climbing per loop. Best April through October.
A challenging multi-day road loop that takes you through some of the island's most dramatic scenery. Highway 14 to Port Renfrew is narrow with limited shoulders — rideable but demanding, with logging trucks to contend with. The Pacific Marine Road section (Port Renfrew to Lake Cowichan) was paved in 2021 and is spectacular but remote with no services for 80+ km. Carry supplies. Most riders do this in 2–3 days. Not for beginners — elevation gain exceeds 3,000 m for the full loop.
The Lochside Trail runs north from Victoria through the Saanich Peninsula to the Swartz Bay ferry terminal — handy if you're arriving by bike from the mainland. Connects to the Galloping Goose downtown. The peninsula also has excellent road riding on quiet agricultural roads around North Saanich, with views of the Gulf Islands. Flat to gently rolling. Add the climb to Observatory Hill for a proper workout.
Vancouver Island's mountain bike scene is internationally recognized, with trail networks ranging from beginner-friendly flow to expert-only downhill.
Cumberland is Vancouver Island's mountain biking capital and one of Canada's top trail destinations. The village of ~4,000 people in the Comox Valley sits adjacent to a massive network of hand-built and machine-built trails in the surrounding forest. Over 100 trails covering every difficulty from gentle flow to gnarly enduro. The Cumberland Community Forest trail network is free to ride, volunteer-maintained, and constantly expanding. Trailhead is a 2-minute ride from the village centre. Expect loam, roots, rock rolls, and immaculate building. IMBA Gold Level ride centre.
Hartland Mountain Bike Park in the Saanich highlands is Victoria's go-to riding area. 50+ trails built around the old Hartland landfill, ranging from smooth flow to steep technical descents. A 10-minute drive from downtown Victoria. Free to ride. The trail builders here have been at it for decades, and it shows — tight, rooty singletrack through second-growth forest. Pairs well with the nearby Mount Work trail system. Not as extensive as Cumberland, but you can ride on your lunch break.
The Cowichan Valley's main riding area offers long descents on the flanks of Mount Prevost. Drive to the top (rough gravel road, high-clearance recommended) and ride down — some descents are 600+ vertical metres. Trails range from fast flow to chunky, technical descending. Less polished than Cumberland but more raw and adventurous. The local club (CATS) maintains the trails. Free, unmanaged riding — bring your own tools and bail-out plan.
Mount Washington Alpine Resort operates a lift-access bike park from late June through September. Gondola-served downhill runs from the alpine zone down through subalpine forest — think Whistler's little sibling. Day passes run $55–70, season passes around $350–450. The trail network has expanded significantly in recent years, with progressive trails for learners alongside expert-only lines. Rental bikes available at the resort ($80–120/day for a full-suspension DH rig). Located 30 minutes above Courtenay.
Vancouver Island is one of the best bike touring destinations in North America — manageable distances, frequent campgrounds, mild weather, and scenery that justifies every pedal stroke.
The most popular touring route runs from Victoria to either Port Hardy (470 km) or Tofino (320 km from Victoria via the highway). Most tourers take 7–14 days depending on pace and side trips. The route follows Highway 1 north to Nanaimo (110 km), then Highway 19/19A up the east coast. Highway 19A (the Old Island Highway) is preferred over Highway 19 (the Inland Island Highway) — it's slower, has more services, and passes through every coastal town. Expect 500–1,500 m of climbing per day depending on the section.
Bikes ride BC Ferries for free (walk-on) or for a small surcharge if you're with a vehicle reservation. Key routes for touring:
Provincial park campgrounds are spaced well for touring — roughly every 40–80 km along the east coast route. Expect to pay $22–38/night for a basic site. Many campgrounds offer hiker/biker sites at reduced rates ($10–16/night) on a first-come, first-served basis. These rarely fill up. Private campgrounds are slightly more expensive ($30–50) but often have showers and laundry. The island also has a network of Warm Showers hosts (check warmshowers.org) who host touring cyclists for free — the community is active here.
Rain gear is non-negotiable except in July and August. A good waterproof jacket and fenders will make or break your tour. The island's weather can shift fast, especially on the west coast. Pack layers. Panniers beat bikepacking bags for touring — you'll want the capacity for rain gear, food, and camp supplies. Water is abundant (streams and campground taps) so you don't need to carry more than 1–2 litres. Bike shops are available in Victoria, Duncan, Nanaimo, Parksville, Courtenay/Cumberland, and Campbell River — but not much north of that. Carry spare tubes, a patch kit, tire boot, chain links, and basic tools.
| Route | Distance | Days | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Victoria → Port Hardy (one-way) | 470 km | 7–10 | Moderate |
| Victoria → Tofino (via Lake Cowichan) | 320 km | 5–7 | Challenging |
| Gulf Islands loop (ferry-hopping) | 120–200 km | 3–5 | Easy–Moderate |
| Pacific Marine Circle Route | 260 km | 3–4 | Challenging |
| Cowichan Valley wine loop | 60–80 km | 1–2 | Easy–Moderate |
| Victoria → Nanaimo (rail trail + highway) | 110 km | 2–3 | Easy–Moderate |
Vancouver Island's vast network of logging roads and decommissioned rail grades is a gravel rider's paradise — if you're prepared for remote, rough conditions.
The island is laced with thousands of kilometres of active and decommissioned logging roads. These range from well-maintained gravel highways to overgrown double-track reverting to forest. The best gravel riding is in the interior of the island, away from the main highways, where you can ride for hours without seeing another soul.
Active logging roads have trucks that are large, fast, and have the right of way. Yield to all industrial traffic. Many logging roads have radio-controlled access — if you don't have a resource road radio, ride defensively on blind corners. Weekends are generally quieter (less active logging). Flat tires are common on sharp gravel — tubeless setups are strongly recommended. Cell service is nonexistent on most logging roads. Tell someone your route and expected return time. Carry a satellite communicator (inReach or SPOT) for deep backcountry rides.
E-bikes have exploded on Vancouver Island. Here's what you need to know about riding, renting, and charging.
E-bike adoption on the island is among the highest in Canada, particularly in Victoria where the bike infrastructure supports year-round commuting. The combination of hills (real hills — the Malahat, Mount Tolmie, the Comox Valley climbs) and an aging but active population has made e-bikes enormously popular.
E-bike rentals are widely available in Victoria ($50–90/day, $250–450/week) and increasingly in Nanaimo, the Comox Valley, and Tofino. Most rental shops offer both commuter-style e-bikes and e-mountain bikes. For touring, Pedal & Sea Adventures in Victoria rents touring-equipped e-bikes with panniers. In Tofino, several shops rent fat-tire e-bikes for beach riding. Reserve ahead in summer — demand outstrips supply.
If you're touring on an e-bike, charging logistics matter. Most batteries give 60–120 km of range depending on assist level and terrain. Campgrounds with electrical hookups work; some coffee shops and bike-friendly businesses will let you charge if you ask nicely. A full charge from a standard outlet takes 4–6 hours. Victoria, Nanaimo, and Courtenay have public charging stations at some bike racks. Bring your charger and a power bar — you'll need to be opportunistic. For multi-day touring, carry a spare battery ($400–800 to buy) or plan shorter daily distances.
The island's cycling community is welcoming, active, and easy to plug into.
Ryder Hesjedal grew up in Victoria, training on the same roads you'll ride — the Malahat, the Saanich Peninsula, the West Shore. After winning the 2012 Giro d'Italia and a long professional career, he returned to the island. His legacy matters because it cemented Vancouver Island's reputation as a legitimate cycling training ground. The local cycling community takes genuine pride in this — and the road infrastructure in Greater Victoria has improved partly because of the attention world-class riders brought to the area. You'll still hear stories from club riders who trained with Ryder in the early days.
The good, the bad, and the missing bike lock.
| Municipality | Bike Lanes | Rating | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Victoria | Extensive protected + painted | ★★★★½ | AAA network expanding. Protected lanes on Fort, Pandora, Vancouver St. Canada's best cycling city. |
| Saanich | Good on arterials | ★★★½ | Improving rapidly. Shelbourne corridor project adding protected lanes. |
| Nanaimo | Moderate, patchy | ★★½ | E&N trail through town is good. Road infrastructure lags behind Victoria. |
| Courtenay/Comox | Improving | ★★★ | Good multi-use paths. The valley is flat and bike-friendly in practice even where lanes are missing. |
| Parksville/Qualicum | Limited | ★★ | Relies on wide shoulders on the Old Island Highway. Functional but not dedicated. |
| Campbell River | Moderate | ★★½ | Greenways improving. Coastal path is excellent. Highway shoulders variable. |
| West Shore (Langford/Colwood) | Poor to moderate | ★★ | Galloping Goose is great but road infrastructure in Langford is car-centric. Improving slowly. |
Let's be blunt: bike theft on Vancouver Island is a serious problem, particularly in Victoria, Nanaimo, and to a lesser extent other communities. Victoria consistently ranks among Canada's worst cities for bike theft per capita. The problem is driven by addiction and property crime — stolen bikes are quickly disassembled and sold or traded.
Outside of urban centres, bike theft drops dramatically. If you're moving to a smaller community like Cumberland or Qualicum Beach, it's far less of a concern — though not zero.
Where to buy, rent, and fix your bike across the island.
Shops: Oak Bay Bikes, Broad Street Cycles, North Park Bicycle Shop, MEC (gear + basic bikes), Cycle BC. Specialty: Russ Hays for road/triathlon.
Rentals: $30–60/day (city bikes), $50–90/day (e-bikes), $70–130/day (full-suspension MTB). Multiple rental shops downtown and along the harbour.
Shops: Dodge City Cycles (Courtenay — the go-to MTB shop), Comox Valley Cycle. Cumberland: Trail Bicycles — right at the trailhead, incredible MTB selection.
Rentals: Trail Bicycles rents quality MTBs from $65/day. Reserve ahead on weekends.
Shops: Chain Reaction Cycles, Arrowsmith Bikes (excellent service). Limited compared to Victoria but covers the essentials.
Rentals: Available but limited. Better to rent in Victoria or Courtenay for destination riding.
Shops: Bicycle Valet (Duncan), a couple of smaller shops. Selection is limited — most serious riders drive to Victoria or Nanaimo for major purchases.
Rentals: Limited. Tour operators sometimes include bike rental.
Shops: Straight Up Cycles — solid shop covering road, MTB, and commuter. Essential stop for any touring cyclist heading north.
Rentals: Available. Last reliable bike shop heading north — stock up on spares.
Shops: TOFiNO Bike Co — rentals and basic service. Limited parts selection. Don't expect to find a specific derailleur hanger here.
Rentals: Beach cruisers and fat-tire e-bikes from $40–80/day. Fun for exploring but not performance bikes.
Gap warning: Between Campbell River and Port Hardy (235 km), there are zero bike shops. Between Nanaimo and Port Alberni on Highway 4, nothing. Between Port Alberni and Tofino, nothing until Tofino itself. If you're touring or riding remote routes, carry comprehensive spares and know how to use them.
Vancouver Island is rideable year-round, but each season has a different character. Here's what to expect.
For a deeper breakdown of what each season looks and feels like, including rainfall data and activity calendars, check our seasonal guide.
Honest talk about the risks and how to manage them.
Highway 1 between Victoria and Duncan has variable shoulders — some sections are wide and smooth, others narrow to almost nothing. The Malahat section is particularly dicey with fast traffic and limited sight lines. Highway 19 (Inland Island Highway) has generally good shoulders but high-speed traffic. Highway 19A (Old Island Highway) is much better for cycling — slower traffic, more shoulder, more scenery. Highway 4 to Tofino has stretches with no shoulder at all and logging trucks. Research your route before committing.
Black bears are common across the island, especially on rural roads and trails from spring through fall. They're generally not aggressive toward cyclists, but don't surprise them — make noise on blind corners. Cougars are present but encounters are rare. Deer are the real hazard — they dart across roads unpredictably, especially at dawn and dusk. Hit a deer at cycling speed and you're going down hard. Ride with lights and stay alert on rural roads in the shoulder hours.
If you're going to ride on Vancouver Island outside of July–August, invest in proper rain gear. Minimum kit: waterproof breathable jacket ($150–300), waterproof gloves, fenders (front and rear), waterproof panniers or dry bags, lights (reflective everything in winter). Shoe covers help but neoprene booties are better. Don't cheap out on the jacket — a garbage bag with arm holes will have you soaked in sweat in 20 minutes. Gore-Tex or equivalent. Your comfort in rain directly correlates with how much you spend on gear.
Know how to fix a flat, adjust your brakes, and re-seat a chain. On remote routes (Highway 4, North Island, logging roads), you are your own bike shop. Carry: spare tubes (2), patch kit, tire levers, multi-tool, chain quick link, tire boot (old sidewall piece or Park Tool TB-2), pump or CO2, zip ties, and duct tape. Tubeless riders: bring a tube anyway. Cell service is spotty to nonexistent on many routes. Connectivity can't be relied on for emergency help outside of towns.
Logging trucks on rural highways are large and fast — they have schedules to keep and limited ability to slow down on grades. Give them space. Wet roads in fall/winter mean longer stopping distances and slippery painted lines and manhole covers. Railroad crossings (some still active) can be treacherous on skinny tires — cross at an angle. Gravel patches on paved shoulders from driveways and construction are a constant hazard. Stay alert.
If something goes wrong: hospitals are in Victoria, Duncan, Nanaimo, Port Alberni, Comox Valley, and Campbell River. North of Campbell River, medical services are limited — Port Hardy has a small hospital but trauma cases get airlifted. On remote routes, carry a first aid kit and know basic injury management. BC's MSP covers emergency care for BC residents. Visitors from other provinces: bring your provincial health card. International visitors: travel insurance is essential — a helicopter evacuation costs $10,000+.
Real numbers so you can plan your budget.
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Bike rental (city/hybrid, per day) | $30–60 |
| E-bike rental (per day) | $50–90 |
| Full-suspension MTB rental (per day) | $70–130 |
| Mt. Washington bike park day pass | $55–70 |
| Mt. Washington DH bike rental | $80–120/day |
| Provincial campground (touring) | $22–38/night |
| Hiker/biker campsite | $10–16/night |
| BC Ferries walk-on with bike (Tsawwassen–Swartz Bay) | $18.75 + bike free |
| Basic tune-up at a shop | $60–90 |
| Complete overhaul | $200–350 |
| Good U-lock (Kryptonite/Abus) | $60–120 |
| Quality rain jacket | $150–300 |
| Entry-level commuter bike (new) | $500–900 |
| Quality used bike (Craigslist/Facebook) | $300–800 |
| Cycling club annual membership | $50–100 |
The cost of living on Vancouver Island is high, but cycling is one of the most affordable ways to get around and recreate. A touring trip with camping works out to roughly $30–60/day (camping + food), which is remarkably cheap for a world-class vacation. Commuting by bike instead of driving saves the average Victoria household $3,000–6,000/year in gas, insurance, and parking.
Plan the rest of your Vancouver Island experience alongside the cycling.
Hiking, kayaking, surfing, skiing — the complete outdoor guide
Read guide →Detailed trail guides from easy walks to multi-day wilderness treks
Read guide →Provincial and private campgrounds — essential for bike touring
Read guide →Getting to and around the island — ferry logistics for cyclists
Read guide →Rainfall, temperatures, and microclimates — plan your rides
Read guide →Cumberland MTB, Mount Washington, and the island's cycling hub
Read guide →Canada's most bikeable city — infrastructure, trails, and culture
Read guide →E-bikes and cycling are huge for active retirees here
Read guide →The complete relocation guide — including getting around by bike
Read guide →