Bikes that fit a 170 cm rider

Filtered against every manufacturer's published rider-height range. 11 bikes in the audited catalog list 170 cm inside their official fit window.

170 cm fit recommendation

Gravel — 7 bikes fit

BikeManufacturer fit rangeStackReach
3T Ultra 700c 2026145 cm – 210 cm574 mm387 mm
Lauf Seigla 2026156 cm – 200 cm565 mm388 mm
Santa Cruz Stigmata 2026152 cm – 193 cm588 mm412 mm
BMC Kaius 2026166 cm – 192 cm561 mm402 mm
BMC URS 2026165 cm – 188 cm580 mm410 mm
3T Racemax 2 Italia 2026157 cm – 195 cm579 mm379 mm
3T Extrema Italia 2026157 cm – 195 cm580 mm382 mm

Road — 4 bikes fit

BikeManufacturer fit rangeStackReach
BMC TeamMachine 2026166 cm – 192 cm557 mm392 mm
BMC RoadMachine 2026158 cm – 192 cm582 mm388 mm
Winspace T1600 2026155 cm – 192 cm523 mm382 mm
Giant Defy Advanced 2026160 cm – 198 cm567 mm382 mm

How to interpret manufacturer fit ranges

At 170 cm you sit inside the published fit window of 11 bikes (7 Gravel, 4 Road). That is more options than most riders realise — the manufacturer fit ranges are deliberately conservative on both ends, which means a bike whose top size lists you at its upper boundary is not "too big", just at the upper end of its design intent.

Two cohorts inside this list deserve closer attention. 0 bikes list 170 cm within 2 cm of the bottom of their range — meaning you would be on the smaller end of the size, which favours an aggressive fit, more standover clearance, and easier handling at the cost of cockpit length. 0 bikes list 170 cm within 2 cm of the top of their range — meaning you would be on the larger end, which favours a longer cockpit and more stability at the cost of standover and quick weight-shifting.

Manufacturer fit ranges are not interchangeable across brands. Two bikes that both list "175 cm" can have stack values 25 mm apart and reach values 15 mm apart — comparable to swapping a 70 mm stem for a 100 mm stem. The Stack and Reach columns above are the columns to read carefully. As a rough heuristic, riders of the same height usually settle on bikes whose stack is within ±10 mm of each other across categories; a bike that's 30 mm shorter or taller than your current one will feel materially different even if both manufacturers say it fits you.

Once you've narrowed the list, the comparison tool can put any two bikes from the table above side-by-side with full geometry. If you already own a bike you like, the Fit Wizard takes its measurements as a baseline and ranks the candidates by how closely they match your current cockpit, rather than by manufacturer marketing copy. And if you want to slice the same data by riding style instead of by height, jump into the XC, gravel, all-road or road-race pages.

One number to ignore: the manufacturer-published "size" (S/M/L or 52/54/56). Letter-sizes are not standardised between brands and number-sizes are usually a seat-tube length, which is the least informative geometry value on the chart. Stack and reach are what locate the cockpit; standover clearance is what tells you whether you can put a foot down. The columns above give you those numbers up front so you don't have to dig.

Other heights

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