How I Found the Worlds Best Secret Cycling Roads

The roads that don’t appear in guidebooks or Strava segments. The ones locals keep quiet about. Finding them requires equal parts research, luck, and willingness to get lost.

Secret cycling road at sunset
The best roads are often the ones nobody’s heard of

Study Satellite Imagery

Google Earth reveals roads that maps omit. Zoom in on areas between major routes and look for thin gray lines. Agricultural roads, old mining tracks, and abandoned highways appear that GPS routing ignores.

Check for dead ends. Most “secret” roads connect to something eventually—they just aren’t optimized for car traffic. What looks like a road to nowhere often links small communities via routes cars have forgotten.

Ask the Right People

Not every local cyclist knows the secret roads—most stick to popular routes like everyone else. Find the farmers, the mail carriers, the utility workers. They drive these roads daily and can tell you surface conditions, seasonal closures, and which gates are actually locked.

Bike shop mechanics often know more than they let on. Ask about “interesting” roads, not “good” ones. The distinction matters.

Embrace Getting Lost

The best roads I’ve found came from wrong turns. Following a dirt track that looked promising, dead-ending at a farm, backtracking, and discovering an unmarked scenic route that paralleled the highway for 40 miles.

This requires time buffers. If you’re on a tight schedule, you can’t explore. Build slack into your itinerary specifically for investigating roads that might be worthless—or might be extraordinary.

Bikepacker on remote trail
The willingness to explore separates memorable tours from forgettable ones

Historical Maps

Before the interstate system, highways followed different logic. Old road atlases from the 1950s-60s show routes that still exist but no longer carry through-traffic. These become quiet cycling corridors—paved, maintained, but unknown to modern navigation apps.

University libraries often have historical map collections. A few hours of research can reveal an entire network of forgotten roads.

The Information Exchange

Share what you find—selectively. Other cyclists who value quiet roads will trade information. Online forums have dedicated threads for obscure route discoveries. The cycling community keeps these roads alive by using them.

But don’t broadcast locations publicly. Once a secret road hits a major blog or social media, traffic follows. The roads that stay special are the ones passed by word of mouth, cyclist to cyclist.

Recognition Over Search

Eventually, you develop instincts. That side road with good pavement but no center line. The route that follows the creek rather than the ridge. The connector between two towns that doesn’t show up in driving directions.

The secret roads were never hidden. They were just waiting for someone curious enough to take them.

Tyler Reed

Tyler Reed

Author & Expert

Tyler Reed is a professional stand-up paddleboarder and ACA-certified instructor with 12 years of experience. He has explored SUP destinations across the US and internationally, specializing in touring, downwind paddling, and SUP surfing.

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