Cycling Past 50: A Closer Look into the World of Older Cyclists, Year 5 Survey

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Cycling Past 50: A Closer Look into the World of Older Cyclists, Year 5 Survey

Abstract: 

This document reports on approximately 2,800 responses to a North American survey of older adults who cycle. The survey, open from March 2024 through February 2025, included questions that captured a person’s cycling over their life course, as well as their current cycling styles, habits, and preferences. Responses reflect the impact of various factors on an older adult’s cycling habits with respect to their ability and agility and their expectation to continue cycling. The survey asked about falls and near misses in the past year, coding fall descriptions into six categories and sorting them by the respondent’s gender and age. The survey’s Visual Preference questions offered photos of cycling contexts and asked respondents to select four to six options for traveling within each context, then scored its safety and comfort level between 1 and 5. Key takeaways include: many older adults can continue to cycle as they age by using a different bicycle, establishing a different expectation with regard to cycling, finding others to cycle with, and using safe and comfortable cycling facilities. Survey questions about e-bikes, adult trikes, and tandems show the variety of bicycle types available, but point to the need for higher-capacity bikeways and education about sharing bikeways safely. The report ends with several issues for further consideration, including ways that caregiving can enhance or reduce cycling benefits, and how injury recovery can affect a return to cycling, or not. The population of older adults is growing, and examining the needs of this group ensures a community’s ability to create environments conducive to equitable mobility for all.

 

Authors: 

Carol Kachadoorian
Carol started dblTilde CORE, Inc. in 2021, a nonprofit whose mission is to advance knowledge about and planning for sustainable mobility and wellness in communities through outreach, research, and education. dblTilde CORE’s work draws on Carol’s knowledge of and expertise in transportation planning and operations, working at both the city and regional levels, including school- and community-based active transportation plans and older adult mobility. She understands the importance of both big data and personal experience to determine feasible changes that make travel by all modes safe, accessible, and comfortable for all ages and abilities.

Carol’s work focuses on the need to revise long-standing perceptions of older adults in words and images, and in the type of research she conducts. She developed a typology of older adults’ physical activity, which she sees as part of a three-legged stool that includes Person-Environment Fit Theory and Life-Space Mobility Assessments. MTI published reports for Year 3 and Year 4 of her pioneering work the 50+ Cycling survey, Cycling past 50: A Closer Look into the World of Older Cyclists

Carol recently completed an article on older cyclists’ use of public transit as part of their cycling trips. She also contributed to a project studying mobility challenges for AAPI older adults in Southern California, and one aimed at improving walking conditions for older adults in five Los Angeles neighborhoods.

Carol is a Research Associate with the Mineta Transportation Institute (MTI), and Executive Director of dblTilde CORE, Inc.

Published: 
March 2026
Keywords: 
Older adults
Cycling
Active mobility
Aging
Cycling infrastructure

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MCTM
NTFC
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