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(Last updated on March 28th, 2023)

These days, cycling is more popular than ever, and people are flocking to mountain biking as a recreational and fitness activity. There are plenty of options out on the market, but this guide is here to help you make sense of what bike is best for you. Take a look at the 9 best mountain bikes of 2023 for beginners.

Mountain bikes are specifically designed to handle rough terrain and intense riding conditions such as steep hills, jumps, and bumpy descents. Compared to other models, mountain bikes typically have wider tires, more upright frame geometry, and heavier-duty brakes. Other MTBs also include suspension systems and 1x groupset to change gears.

As you’re developing your mountain bike skills, it’s important to start out with the right equipment. Quality beginner mountain bikes are typically more stable, affordable, and have straightforward components so you can focus on riding.

For me, the most crucial elements of a good beginner bike are durable componentry and affordability. Expert level models are too much bike for riders just starting who won’t utilize the extra features. Poor quality budget bikes can be unsafe as riders develop their skills and progress to more gnarly terrain and jumps.

The market for beginner MTBs is huge, so there are plenty of quality bikes out there hidden among the glut of not-so-great options. This round-up does the hard work of research and product comparison, so you don’t have to!

Novice MTBers don’t require the luxury shifting and long-travel suspension that professional riders need to tackle more intense terrain. A hardtail, a bike with front suspension but no rear shock, is the best choice for your first mountain bike, saving on weight and costs. That said, we’ve included a couple of full-suspension models in this list for the more ambitious beginners out there.

While formulating this round-up, I considered all the potential options. After analyzing their manufacturer specs, user reviews, and expert opinions, I have combined them with my experience. It helped me choose bikes that are a worthwhile investment and perfect for developing your MTB skills.

My criteria for the best mountain bikes for beginners prioritized durability, value, and performance. Almost every bike manufacturer offers an affordable MTB option, so plenty of quality bikes are available. I gave each model an overall rating and scored them according to the following criteria:

All bikes come equipped with either 27.5” or 29” wheels for better handling, a step up from the old 26” wheel standard.

Reliable groupsets and quality components are a must. Entry levels should be able to take a beating and perform well for years to come.

In beginner categories, bang-for-buck is one of the most important parts of purchasing a new bike. Most of the bikes on this list are priced under $1,000, except for the two full-suspension models.

Here are the best bikes that make it to the list with their great features and specifications:

Related: Best Mountain Bike Brands 2023

Mountain bike frame geometry is different from hybrids, cruisers, and road models, so it’s crucial to study mountain bike-specific charts when determining the right size for you.

More questions about the best beginner mountain bikes in 2023? Let us know!


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Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), or New Students for a Democratic Society (New SDS) is a United States student activist organization founded in 2006 in response to the US invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan with the aim to rebuild the student movement.[1] It takes its name and inspiration from the original SDS of 1960–1969, then the largest radical student organization in US history. The contemporary SDS is a distinct youth and student-led organization with chapters across the United States.[2][3][4]

SDS is a broadly progressive, multi-issue student and youth-led activist organization, which aims to rebuild the student movement through direct action campaigns on college, university, and high school campuses across the United States. While united by a commitment to direct action rather than any particular political ideology, SDS does release statements and resolutions standing against US wars and intervention, racist descrimination, police brutality, homophobic and transphobic attacks, attacks on women, attacks on reproductive rights, and other US and campus-based issues as they emerge.[1]

Beginning January 2006, a movement to revive the Students for a Democratic Society took shape. Two high school students, Jessica Rapchik and Pat Korte, decided to reach out to former members of the "Sixties" SDS, to re-establish a student movement in the United States.[2] Korte did this by contacting Alan Haber.[5] They called for a new generation of SDS, to build a radical multi-issue organization grounded in the principle of participatory democracy. Several chapters at various colleges and high schools were subsequently formed. On Martin Luther King Jr. Day of 2006, these chapters banded together to issue a press release that stated their intentions to recreate the national SDS organization.[6] In the press release, the SDS called for the organization's first national convention since 1969 to be held in the summer of 2006 and to have it preceded by a series of regional conferences occurring during the Memorial Day weekend. These regional conferences would also be the first of their kind since 1969. On April 23, 2006, SDS held a northeast regional conference at Brown University.

The new SDS has organized and participated in numerous actions against the Iraq War and made clear its opposition to any possible military action against Iran by the US. The Pace University chapter of SDS protested against a speech by Bill Clinton held at the University's New York City campus, prompting the university to hand over two students, Lauren Giaccone and Brian Kelly, to the United States Secret Service. After the threatened expulsion of the two protesters, Pace SDS began a campaign that helped pressure the President of Pace to resign.[7]

Beginning in March and continuing into April and May 2006, SDS chapters across the country participated in a series of actions supporting Immigrant Rights. SDS chapters, such as at Brandeis, Connecticut College, and Harvard coordinated with large coalitions of students to strike and walk out of their classes on May Day.

The newly formed SDS held its first national convention from August 4 to August 7, 2006 at the University of Chicago.[8]

On March 17, 2007, SDS groups from across the country met and participated in the March on the Pentagon, in which parts of the SDS contingent along with allies occupied a bridge near The Pentagon. Five demonstrators were arrested.

On March 20, 2007, 83 SDS chapters from around the country held coordinated actions against the Iraq war.[9] One such action in the Bay Area shut down the entrance to Chevron's World Headquarters.[10]

The Summer of 2007 was a critical turning point for SDS as a national organization. First, SDS fielded a large contingent at the first US Social Forum in Atlanta on June 27 – July 1. SDS found itself part of a national movement to change the US; at the forum, SDS members gave workshops, demonstrated, and formed bonds with members from across the country.

The second SDS National Convention took place July 27–30, 2007 at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. Approximately 200 members of SDS attended what was a constitutional convention. The primary focus of the convention was to democratically create a national structure and vision for the organization. These goals were achieved, though all decisions made at the convention will be sent back to the SDS chapters for a process of ratification which is currently under way.

The first national SDS Action Camps[11] took place from August 13–16 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The camp was hosted by the Lancaster chapter of SDS. It included anti-oppression/collective liberation trainings, and workshops about a variety of things – including media skills, meeting facilitation, and direct action. The camp was held in order to provide students with skills needed to become better organizers, and deepen the sophistication of their vision and strategy.

On September 15, 2007, SDS chapters from several colleges across the country (including Ohio, Indiana, Washington D.C., Harrisburg, PA and New York) gathered and marched in the ANSWER coalition march from the White House steps, to the Capitol building. The protest was estimated to include up 80,000 people. At least 150 were arrested, and there was at least one incident where police pepper-sprayed protesters.[12]

In early November 2007, SDS members were again present at a similar blockade at the Port of Olympia, Washington. The blockade was broken only after 67 arrests, as well as use of pepper spray, rubber bullets, and other crowd-control weapons. A similar confrontation had occurred in May 2006 at the Port of Olympia.

Members and Chapters around the US and Canada participated in a large series of semi-coordinated events and demonstrations between March 17 and March 21 to bring awareness to the 5th anniversary of the invasion of Iraq.[13]

The 2008 National Convention was held in College Park, Maryland. Members at the meeting decided on a national structure: the National Work Committee and a national campaign: Student Power for Accessible Education.

In September, SDS chapters from around the country converged on St. Paul, Minnesota to participate in the four days of protests against the Republican National Convention.[14][15][16]

Members of Providence SDS took over a board meeting of the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority RIPTA to protest proposed route cuts. The group also argues that the RIPTA board is detached from its riders and doesn’t represent them.[17]

The University of North Texas and several other chapters opened. In 2008, the University of Houston opened a chapter and added to the efforts of immigrant rights actions that Texas Grassroots Leadership had begun in 2006,[18] holding many protests centered on detention centers in Texas, particularly the family detention center T. Don Hutto that incarcerated immigrant mothers with children in Taylor, the center in Raymondville and Houston's Processing Center who's in contract with ICE.[19] These efforts across Texas saw a big win when the T. Don Hutto detention center changed its policies and stopped incarcerating children in late 2009. SDS at the University of Houston in Houston, Texas has continued the protests of these detention centers and plans for more in 2010. New efforts in Texas SDS chapters are being made to support the DREAM Act, as well as 2010's May Day.

SDS at the University of Houston also participated in the March 4 National Day of Action to Defend Education,[20] along with SDS chapters nationwide,[21][22] as well as national anti-war,[23] anti-occupation and Israeli apartheid Week campaigns.

In March 2010, members of the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee's chapter of SDS staged a protest outside the Chancellor's building. The event, designed to protest rising tuition costs, was met with a police presence. Police began using pepper spray, and arrested sixteen members of the protest, including both SDS members and allied organizations on campus through the Education Rights Campaign.[24]


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