Skip to content
Anthem’s Only Bike Shop — 42407 N. Vision Way, Suite #113
ServiceBrandsTrailsAboutContact Now
Mixed Terrain

Cross & Gravel

Drop-bar versatility for dirt roads, canal paths, and backroad adventures

We have the bike to match your riding style

Trek Checkpoint ALR
GravelTrek Checkpoint ALR
Click to see stats
Quick StatsGravel
Road Speed
Off-Road
Load Carry
Comfort
Trek Checkpoint ALRClick to flip back
Giant TCX Advanced Pro 1 (2024)
CyclocrossGiant TCX Advanced Pro 1 (2024)
Click to see stats
Quick StatsCyclocross
Road Speed
Off-Road
Load Carry
Comfort
Giant TCX Advanced Pro 1 (2024)Click to flip back
Giant Roam 2 (2025)
AdventureGiant Roam 2 (2025)
Click to see stats
Quick StatsAdventure
Road Speed
Off-Road
Load Carry
Comfort
Giant Roam 2 (2025)Click to flip back

Gravel, Cyclocross & Adventure Bikes

Drop-bar bikes that leave the pavement behind come in three distinct flavors. Each is optimized for a different kind of off-road riding, and choosing the right one depends on whether you prioritize speed, racing, or long-haul capability.

Gravel / All-Road Bike

Fast & versatile

The Swiss Army knife of drop-bar cycling

Gravel bikes are designed for riders who want to link pavement, dirt roads, canal paths, and light singletrack into a single ride. They feature relaxed geometry for stability, wide tire clearance (40–50mm), and enough mounting points for bags and bottles. Modern gravel bikes are fast enough on pavement to join group rides and capable enough off-road to handle most non-technical terrain. They're the fastest-growing category in cycling because they open up the most terrain with a single bike.

Best for: Mixed-surface riding, all-day adventures, light bikepacking, one-bike solution

Cyclocross (CX) Race Bike

Race-bred

Built for mud, barriers, and 60-minute suffering

Cyclocross bikes are purpose-built for CX racing — short, intense races on courses with mud, sand, barriers to dismount and run over, and tight turns. They share DNA with gravel bikes but are lighter, stiffer, and have a more aggressive geometry optimized for explosive efforts. Tire clearance is typically limited to 33mm (UCI rule). If you race CX, you need a CX bike. If you don't race CX, a gravel bike does everything a CX bike does and more.

Best for: Cyclocross racing, fast mixed-terrain riding, riders who value light weight

Adventure / Touring Bike

Long-haul

Built for the long game — days, weeks, or months

Adventure and touring bikes are designed to carry heavy loads over long distances, reliably. They feature the most relaxed geometry for stability under load, the most mounting points for racks and bags, and components chosen for durability over weight savings. Steel frames are common for their compliance and field-repairability. If you're planning multi-day bikepacking trips, cross-country tours, or credit-card touring, this is your platform.

Best for: Bikepacking, multi-day touring, heavy load carrying, expedition riding

Side-by-Side Comparison

GravelCyclocrossAdventure
Primary UseMixed-surface ridingCX racingLoaded touring
Tire Clearance40–50mm33mm (UCI)40–50mm+
GeometryRelaxed, stableAggressive, nimbleUltra-relaxed, load-stable
Frame MaterialCarbon, alloy, steelCarbon, alloySteel, alloy, titanium
Mounting PointsManyMinimalMaximum
Weight PriorityModerateLow weightDurability over weight
Best ForOne-bike solutionRacing onlyMulti-day expeditions

Most riders should start with a Gravel bike — it's the most versatile and handles 90% of what all three categories offer. Only get a CX bike if you race cyclocross. Only get an Adventure/Touring bike if you're carrying serious loads over serious distances.

Ready to find your Cross & Gravel bike?

Come in and talk routes. We'll set you up with a gravel bike that handles everything from Scottsdale's canal paths to the Black Canyon Trail.