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UK has almost nine million cyclists, claims report

A fifth ride at least once a week & transport cycling makes up 40% of total

Almost nine million people in the UK ride a bike regularly, a new survey claims, making cycling the number three participation sport in the UK after swimming and running.

The claim comes from sports research firm Sports Marketing Surveys Inc (SMS Inc) which says that 16.9% of adults in the UK are cyclists, with the average participant cycling 48.9 times in the past year. One fifth of the 8,741,000 UK cyclists ride at least once per week.

That claim roughly matches figures published last year by Sport England which showed that 2,003,000 people had ridden a bike in the period October 2012 to October 2013, up by 137,000 from the period April 2012 to April 2013.

However, Sport England’s Active People survey specifically excluded cycling for transport, while SMS counts people commuting and simply getting from A to B. Comparisons are further muddied by SMS looking at the UK (64 million people), while Sport England just surveys a sample of England's 53 million. 

SMS Inc says road cycling is the most popular type of riding, with 80 percent of riders on the tarmac. However, some might say they've confused cycling and cycle sport as they mention that the most common reason for cycling is for recreational purposes, while over 40% cycle for commuting and transportation.

Twenty-two percent of under-18s ride, according to SMS whose managing director John Bushell said: “Cycling is the growth sport in the UK and our report shows no signs of that slowing down. The insight into youth participation, along with positive involvement from the older age groups, is testament to the healthy state of the sport.

“The boom has been well documented.”

Cycle sport my well be on the up, as the seemingly unstoppable rise in sportive participation suggests, but the proportion of journeys undertaken by bike in the UK remains stuck at two percent after declining steeply since the 1950s.

John has been writing about bikes and cycling for over 30 years since discovering that people were mug enough to pay him for it rather than expecting him to do an honest day's work.

He was heavily involved in the mountain bike boom of the late 1980s as a racer, team manager and race promoter, and that led to writing for Mountain Biking UK magazine shortly after its inception. He got the gig by phoning up the editor and telling him the magazine was rubbish and he could do better. Rather than telling him to get lost, MBUK editor Tym Manley called John’s bluff and the rest is history.

Since then he has worked on MTB Pro magazine and was editor of Maximum Mountain Bike and Australian Mountain Bike magazines, before switching to the web in 2000 to work for CyclingNews.com. Along with road.cc founder Tony Farrelly, John was on the launch team for BikeRadar.com and subsequently became editor in chief of Future Publishing’s group of cycling magazines and websites, including Cycling Plus, MBUK, What Mountain Bike and Procycling.

John has also written for Cyclist magazine, edited the BikeMagic website and was founding editor of TotalWomensCycling.com before handing over to someone far more representative of the site's main audience.

He joined road.cc in 2013. He lives in Cambridge where the lack of hills is more than made up for by the headwinds.

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11 comments

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Texwade | 9 years ago
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I can't believe that swimming is more popular than cycling. I swim once a week with my kid (and rarely swim while I am there - usually I am a stood up shark) and while at the pool I reckon there are about 10-15 people on average actually swimming. On my drive to the pool I pass that many cyclists each way and obviously that is just on the roads I am on. Where are all these people swimming ?

I reckon that if anybody has a swim during the Summer holiday it is getting picked up in the statistics. I can believe that more people might swim than cycle during a year but the total participation in hours must be far less ?

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gazza_d | 9 years ago
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I took this with a pinch of salt, but 20% of 9 million, is about 2 million.
The 40% of that does equate to the near million stated by other surveys for regular commuters.

most of whom are not in my neck of the woods. On a good day I nearly run out of fingers on both hands & that's over 15 miles.

We just need to convert the 60% of regular cyclists to transport, and then the other 6-7 million to riding more regularly.

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Gkam84 | 9 years ago
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So nearly 9 million cyclists and British Cycling are cheering and whooping they have 100k members  19  19  19  19  19  19

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Northernbike | 9 years ago
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''the average participant cycling 48.9 times in the past year''

Is that 0.9 of a ride where you get a puncture a couple of miles out from home and you decide to just walk the last bit and fix it later - looks like we must all get one of those once a year - glad it's not just me

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Blue_Brevatto | 9 years ago
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Unless anyone has some hard data to back this up I'd take it with a pinch of salt. I couldn't find a link on their own web-site but I did find the remarkable claim that:

"SPORTS MARKETING SURVEYS INC. (SMS INC.) announces the results of its groundbreaking International Participation Research into running across eleven markets, which reveals that the UK’s running population has reached an impressive 10.5million runners."

Which is pretty much the same % as they find for cyclists and kind of hard to square almost every other piece of research published recently concerning activity and obesity levels. However they kind of give the game away in the next paragraph ...

"The market-leading sports research company’s exclusive venture offers unrivaled insight into the UK running market in 2014, and has concluded that one in five adults run four or more times a year, while 25% of under-18s also qualify as active runners under these criteria"

If you can get past the cloyingly blunt tone of self-promotion you'll see it's a pretty low standard to beat. Being late for the 08.15 to Paddington a couple of days a year and you'd qualify as would anyone who'd ever tried assuming that the bus would never actually run ahead of time in the mornings.

I suspect the cycling data is similarly mis-leading. There's probably a very high percentage of people who have cycled a handful of times in a year. Anyone with kids will have been dragged along the local cycle trail a few times to ensure little Thomas doesn't take out someone else's grandmother with his new Christmas present. And then there's the odd bit of mountain biking on holiday - a quick whizz round the trail at Centre Parcs or some other similarly "safe" environment that might be enjoyable but bears absolutely no relation to actually using your bike as a means of transport or even exercise on UK public roads. None of this amounts to a cycling revolution and anyone who things it is does is deluding themselves (or has an agenda to promote). As someone else pointed out up-thread the modal figures for cycling remain stubbornly around 2% country-wide.

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bikebot | 9 years ago
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I find that final paragraph somewhat depressing. We need more cyclists displacing car journeys rather than golf clubs.

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dafyddp replied to bikebot | 9 years ago
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We do, but if every recreational rider commutes to work just once or twice a week during summer that brings enormous benefits in terms of changing opinions and attitudes. Those same guys who previously sneered at the office cyclists as they drove to the golf cource, now want to be part of the gang. Inclusion is a powerful force for bringing change

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Simmo72 | 9 years ago
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The problem is for every good cyclist there is an arsehole driving a motor vehcile with no regard for other users. For instance the idiot behind me this morning in his white van who was busy texting and picking his nose (a real rummage) whilst managing to squeeze in just about staying in lane. I was tempted to flick the brakes just to see if his reaction would result in his index finger being driven through the chicken sized brain in his head, but as there were other road users I thought better of it. People like him kill but the police are powerless to get them off the road.

How about at least putting out some hard hitting tv/radio adverts. How about "don't be a twat, keep the phone in your pocket"

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mmag1 replied to Simmo72 | 9 years ago
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Simmo72 wrote:

How about at least putting out some hard hitting tv/radio adverts. How about "don't be a twat, keep the phone in your pocket"

WVM on Huntingdon ring road last week texting and smoking a spliff, when I suggested putting the phone down in similar terms to yours he found a free hand. Tweeted @cambscops, no response.

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mrmo | 9 years ago
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curious, about the back ground to this, according to Strava I have been on 383 rides this year. obviously I commute so lots of two rides per day.

40% of survey commute yet the average is only 49 rides per year, not denying the numbers are what they are, just not completely sure what they are saying. one ride a week seems very low with that percentage claiming to commute. And the final line about 2% of journeys when c8% claim to commute/transport, (40% of 16.9%) all seems a bit of creativity from responders.

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Airzound | 9 years ago
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You would have thought that with that many riding you would see more cyclists on the roads. I hardy see anyone when out except when I am in central Cambridge which is a cycling hotspot. I suspect the criteria to qualify as a "cyclist" were not that difficult to meet even if you just sat on a bike and didn't go anywhere. How were people's responses checked? You could say anything to exaggerate your cycling, well, almost anything.

What we need is for more people to cycle for their commute and as part of their daily routine.

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