For over 22 years we’ve dedicated ourselves to engineering the extraordinary: innovative, award-winning, trail blazing bikes that inspire confidence and spread joy.
For over 22 years we’ve dedicated ourselves to engineering the extraordinary: innovative, award-winning, trail blazing bikes that inspire confidence and spread joy.
For over 22 years we’ve dedicated ourselves to engineering the extraordinary: innovative, award-winning, trail blazing bikes that inspire confidence and spread joy.
About us
Ride extraordinary
Our first breakthrough bike (the PRST-1) rewrote the rules. And we continue in that spirit; relentlessly seeking and developing the next big performance advantages with pioneering innovations that move you to ride better, feel better and do better.
Extraordinary rides require extraordinary bikes
We believe that extraordinary ride can’t be just a ‘one-ride wonder’. An extraordinary ride should grow your confidence, develop your potential and deliver the joy of the ride on each and every ride. This has always been our goal. It has driven us to amass the decades of pioneering technical expertise and design engineering capability that goes into every Whyte bike today.
Extraordinary bikes marry engineering with joy
Engineering and joy are a marriage made on two wheels, and they roll hand in hand. For us, engineering must simply deliver joy. Of course, we relish the challenge of designing the breakthrough, the next big advantage to riders. But we also relish what we see in their faces as they better their personal bests or simply feed their spirits because what we see is joy. It means we’ve done something that matters.
Our story
Engineering extraordinary
Every industry has one – the renegade, the rule breaker. The one who sees it all differently and refuses to accept things that don’t work properly.
Performance by design
For mountain biking, that is Jon Whyte. And, to really understand our bikes, you need to understand him – the obsessive, maverick, lateral thinking design engineer. Someone for whom building bikes was part science, part instinct – but all emotion.
Before bikes, there was the hyper-competitive engineering environment of Formula 1 (F1) – designing the suspension system that propelled the underdog Benetton team, driven by a young Michael Schumacher, to the 1994 World Championship.
Dedicated follower of passion
But there were always bikes too. F1 podiums were great but Jon had mud flowing through his veins. He really got his kicks mountain biking at the weekends, and that's where he soon reached the conclusion that the big manufacturers weren’t doing a very good job on full suspension bikes.
So he did what all great engineers do. He went a different direction and carved his own path. Striving for the same high-performance as F1, he started developing systems that would work on all terrain, any incline, for any rider. His single-pivot Marin Mount Vision powered Paul Lasenby to the first ever UK Pro-Elite cross country (XC) national points series race win for a full suspension bike in 1997. In doing so, it tore up the mountain bike design rule book and proved that full suspension was the future.
Daring to dare
Encouraged by that success, in 1999 the Whyte brand was launched, allowing Jon and his fledgling team to push the designs even further – with radical bikes like the PRST-1 and E5. The PRST-1 name came from the visually challenged but unstoppable robot dog ‘Preston’ from Aardman Animation’s Wallace and Gromit 1995 short film A Close Shave.
There’s no doubt that this machine divided opinion, but its unique linkage system could beat most obstacles and produced ride dynamics that gave riders a completely new level of confidence out on the trails. Thousands were sold, and they put huge grins of satisfaction across as many faces.
About us
Engineering extraordinary
Every industry has one – the renegade, the rule breaker. The one who sees it all differently and refuses to accept things that don’t work properly.
Performance by design
For mountain biking, that is Jon Whyte. And, to really understand our bikes, you need to understand him – the obsessive, maverick, lateral thinking design engineer. Someone for whom building bikes was part science, part instinct – but all emotion. Before bikes, there was the hyper-competitive engineering environment of Formula 1 (F1) – designing the suspension system that propelled the underdog Benetton team, driven by a young Michael Schumacher, to the 1994 World Championship.
Dedicated follower of passion
But there were always bikes too. F1 podiums were great but Jon had mud flowing through his veins. He really got his kicks mountain biking at the weekends, and that's where he soon reached the conclusion that the big manufacturers weren’t doing a very good job on full suspension bikes.So he did what all great engineers do. He went a different direction and carved his own path. Striving for the same high-performance as F1, he started developing systems that would work on all terrain, any incline, for any rider. His single-pivot Marin Mount Vision powered Paul Lasenby to the first ever UK Pro-Elite cross country (XC) national points series race win for a full suspension bike in 1997. In doing so, it tore up the mountain bike design rule book and proved that full suspension was the future.
Daring to dare
Encouraged by that success, in 1999 the Whyte brand was launched, allowing Jon and his fledgling team to push the designs even further – with radical bikes like the PRST-1 and E5. The PRST-1 name came from the visually challenged but unstoppable robot dog ‘Preston’ from Aardman Animation’s Wallace and Gromit 1995 short film A Close Shave. There’s no doubt that this machine divided opinion, but its unique linkage system could beat most obstacles and produced ride dynamics that gave riders a completely new level of confidence out on the trails. Thousands were sold, and they put huge grins of satisfaction across as many faces.
Our story
Engineering extraordinary
Every industry has one – the renegade, the rule breaker. The one who sees it all differently and refuses to accept things that don’t work properly.
Performance by design
For mountain biking, that is Jon Whyte. And, to really understand our bikes, you need to understand him – the obsessive, maverick, lateral thinking design engineer. Someone for whom building bikes was part science, part instinct – but all emotion.
Before bikes, there was the hyper-competitive engineering environment of Formula 1 (F1) – designing the suspension system that propelled the underdog Benetton team, driven by a young Michael Schumacher, to the 1994 World Championship.
Dedicated follower of passion
But there were always bikes too. F1 podiums were great but Jon had mud flowing through his veins. He really got his kicks mountain biking at the weekends, and that's where he soon reached the conclusion that the big manufacturers weren’t doing a very good job on full suspension bikes.
So he did what all great engineers do. He went a different direction and carved his own path. Striving for the same high-performance as F1, he started developing systems that would work on all terrain, any incline, for any rider. His single-pivot Marin Mount Vision powered Paul Lasenby to the first ever UK Pro-Elite cross country (XC) national points series race win for a full suspension bike in 1997. In doing so, it tore up the mountain bike design rule book and proved that full suspension was the future.
Daring to dare
Encouraged by that success, in 1999 the Whyte brand was launched, allowing Jon and his fledgling team to push the designs even further – with radical bikes like the PRST-1 and E5. The PRST-1 name came from the visually challenged but unstoppable robot dog ‘Preston’ from Aardman Animation’s Wallace and Gromit 1995 short film A Close Shave.
There’s no doubt that this machine divided opinion, but its unique linkage system could beat most obstacles and produced ride dynamics that gave riders a completely new level of confidence out on the trails. Thousands were sold, and they put huge grins of satisfaction across as many faces.
The laws of Total Geometry
That philosophy of innovating, exhilarating, and putting riders at the heart of Whyte has been carefully nurtured ever since. It is still what keeps our hearts pumping and it’s what has kept our bikes consistently ahead of their time.
Winning multiple XC national championships, in the last 25 years we have produced bikes with a string of industry firsts earning us best-in-class reviews from the toughest critics year after year.
At their core is our Whyte Total Geometry approach – an uncompromising holistic method of developing bikes with performance optimised geometry. This ensures that our different classes of bike will all equip you with nothing short of sweet spot handling characteristics whatever terrain you're riding – mountain, trail, gravel or Tarmac.
Moving people for better
Today, you’ll see and feel the Whyte philosophy in our high-performance machines like the E-Lyte 150 Works, as well as our city and urban bikes that bring joy regardless of age, gender, fitness or ability. You’ll see other passions, too. Like protecting the great outdoors by designing with sustainability and accessibility in mind, getting more people cycling, and making bikes with longevity that can forestall landfill.
Making extraordinary machines that simply move people better. It’s as true now as it’s always been.
Moving people for better
Today, you’ll see and feel the Whyte philosophy in our high-performance machines like the E-Lyte 150 Works, as well as our city and urban bikes that bring joy regardless of age, gender, fitness or ability. You’ll see other passions, too. Like protecting the great outdoors by designing with sustainability and accessibility in mind, getting more people cycling, and making bikes with longevity that can forestall landfill.Making extraordinary machines that simply move people better. It’s as true now as it’s always been.