Motorcycle Gear Starter Kit: The 6 Things to Buy First
ATGATT — All The Gear, All The Time. The six pieces every new rider needs, in the order to buy them, without blowing your whole budget on day one.
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There's a phrase you'll hear from every experienced rider: ATGATT — All The Gear, All The Time. It's not gatekeeping; it's the difference between sliding and grinding. Pavement doesn't care that it was a short ride. Here's the gear that matters, in priority order.
1. Helmet
Non-negotiable, buy it first. Full-face, ECE 22.06 if you can, fitted to your head shape. (See our beginner helmet guide.)
2. Gloves
Your hands hit the ground first, every time — it's instinct. A good pair of leather or textile gloves with knuckle armor and a secure wrist closure saves you months of skin grafts. Don't ride in fingerless gloves; they protect nothing.
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3. Jacket with armor
A hoodie is not a jacket. You want CE-rated armor at the shoulders and elbows, and ideally a back protector pocket. Mesh for summer, textile for all-season, leather for abrasion resistance. Fit should be snug enough that the armor stays over the joint in a slide.
4. Boots (over-the-ankle)
Sneakers roll and shred. Over-the-ankle boots with a stiff sole and ankle protection keep your feet where they belong and stop the "foot-peg through the shin" injury. They don't have to look like spaceboots — plenty of casual riding boots exist.
5. Riding pants (or armored jeans)
The most-skipped piece, and the reason so many riders have scarred legs. Kevlar-lined jeans with knee armor are an easy, wearable entry point. Regular denim lasts about half a second in a slide.
6. Ear protection
Wind noise at highway speed causes permanent hearing loss — faster than you'd think. Cheap foam plugs or moulded filters make you less fatigued and protect your hearing. Underrated, buy a box.
How to buy it without going broke
- Prioritize helmet → gloves → jacket if cash is tight. Add boots and pants next.
- Buy armored jeans before dedicated riding pants — you'll actually wear them.
- Watch for closeout and last-season gear; safety standards don't expire yearly.
- Fit over brand, always.
Gear up once, ride for years. The rider who "just runs to the store real quick" in a t-shirt is the cautionary tale in everyone else's group chat.
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