Used Enduro Bikes — Climb Up, Send Down, for Up to 70% Off
Enduro bikes are the do-it-all machines of mountain biking — built to handle aggressive descents while still being capable enough to pedal back to the top. With 150–170mm of suspension travel, slack geometry, and burly components, they're designed for riders who want one bike that can race, ride bike parks, tackle technical trails, and still make the climb. At buycycle, we have around 1,000 used enduro bikes — including e-MTB enduro models — from top brands like Specialized, Canyon, Trek, and Santa Cruz, at up to 70% off retail.
What to Look for When Buying a Used Enduro Bike
Suspension travel in the 150–170mm range is what defines an enduro bike — enough to absorb big hits and rough terrain on the way down, while still being efficient enough to pedal uphill. Look for quality forks (Fox 36/38, RockShox ZEB/Lyrik) and reliable rear shocks. Frame material is split between carbon and aluminum: carbon saves weight for those long climbs, while aluminum handles crashes and rock strikes better and comes at a lower price. Drivetrain matters — Shimano Deore XT, SRAM GX Eagle, or higher gives you reliable shifting across a wide gear range, which you need for steep climbs and technical descents. Wheels are typically 29" on modern enduro bikes for better rollover and stability, though some models use a mullet setup (29" front, 27.5" rear) for extra agility. Brakes need to be strong — four-piston disc brakes with 200mm rotors are standard for the kind of riding enduro bikes are built for.
Enduro Bikes by Groupset
Shimano Deore XT · SRAM GX Eagle · SRAM NX Eagle · SRAM X01 Eagle · Shimano SLX · Shimano Deore · SRAM GX · SRAM SX Eagle · SRAM GX Eagle AXS · Shimano XTR
Enduro Bikes by Frame Material
Enduro Bikes by Frame Size
Enduro Bikes by Price
Under €1,000 · Under €2,000 · Under €3,000 · Under €4,000 · Under €5,000
Popular Enduro Bike Models on buycycle
The Canyon Spectral is one of the most versatile enduro bikes on buycycle — a trail-shredding all-rounder that punches above its weight on both climbs and descents. The Specialized Enduro is a gravity-focused beast built for aggressive riding, while the YT Capra brings World Cup-level performance at a direct-sale price that's even better used. The Trek Slash offers a balanced mix of stability and playfulness, the CUBE Stereo is a proven all-rounder with a loyal following, and the Giant Reign delivers serious enduro capability at a price that's hard to beat. For riders who want motor-assisted climbing, the Specialized Turbo Levo is the benchmark e-MTB enduro bike, the CUBE Stereo Hybrid combines a reliable Bosch motor with enduro geometry, the Trek Rail handles like a regular enduro bike but with a motor to flatten the climbs, and the Focus Jam bridges the gap between trail and enduro with a versatile platform.
Popular Enduro Bike Brands
Specialized · Canyon · Trek · CUBE · Santa Cruz · Scott · Orbea · Mondraker · YT Industries · Focus · Giant · Propain · Norco · Commencal
Popular Enduro Bike Models
Specialized Turbo Levo · CUBE Stereo · Canyon Spectral · Trek Slash · CUBE Stereo Hybrid · YT Capra · Specialized Enduro · Focus Jam · Giant Reign · Trek Rail
Enduro Bikes: Acoustic vs. E-MTB Enduro
Acoustic enduro bikes (like the Canyon Spectral, YT Capra, Specialized Enduro, or Trek Slash) are the traditional choice — lighter, more agile, and powered entirely by your legs. They're the go-to for enduro racing, long backcountry rides, and riders who want the full-body workout alongside the downhill fun. E-MTB enduro bikes (like the Specialized Turbo Levo, CUBE Stereo Hybrid, or Trek Rail) add a motor to flatten the climbs, letting you ride more laps, explore further, and arrive at the top of every descent with fresh legs. E-MTBs have exploded in popularity and now make up a significant share of enduro bikes on buycycle — they're especially popular with riders who want to maximize descending time or who ride in hilly terrain where the climbs are long and steep. Both types deliver the same downhill capability; the difference is how you get to the top.
Explore Other Bike Types
Downhill Bikes · Road Bikes · Gravel Bikes · Triathlon & TT Bikes · Components & Wheels
Why Buy a Used Enduro Bike?
Enduro bikes — especially e-MTB models — are expensive when new, often €5,000–€10,000+ for a quality build. But they lose a significant chunk of that value after the first season while the performance stays the same. A used enduro bike with a solid drivetrain, good suspension, and decent wheels rides just as well as a new one, and the savings can go toward a suspension service, new tires, or a wheel upgrade. E-MTB enduro bikes are particularly good value used since battery technology evolves quickly, meaning last year's model gets listed at a fraction of its retail price. On buycycle, every listing comes with detailed photos and descriptions, and our buyer protection has you covered.
Enduro Riding in Germany
Germany's trail network is tailor-made for enduro riding. From the purpose-built trail centres in the Harz Mountains (Braunlage, Hahnenklee, Schulenberg) to the natural singletrack of the Black Forest, the Pfälzerwald, and the Bavarian Alps, there's enduro terrain for every level. The Erzgebirge and Sauerland offer underrated riding, and trail centres like the Flowtrail Stromberg and Trailpark Mehring keep expanding. Germany's Enduro One series and the Superenduro races draw competitive fields across multiple rounds, and the community of trail builders keeps growing. Canyon from Koblenz, CUBE from Waldershof, YT Industries from Forchheim, Focus from Stuttgart, and Propain from Ludwigsburg all build excellent enduro and e-MTB bikes — and the used market on buycycle is often the best way to find specific models and sizes from these direct-sale brands. Germany's four-season climate means your enduro bike sees action year-round: dry summer singletrack, muddy autumn roots, and even snowy winter rides if you've got the tires for it.