10 models
Kross introduced the Earth in 2016 as its XC race weapon — positioned above the Hexagon and Level in terms of component quality and frame engineering. The Earth name became associated with World Cup-a
The Evado sits between the Trans trekking line and pure urban bikes in the Kross catalogue, targeting commuters and recreational city cyclists who want versatility. Its crossover geometry handles both
Hexagon has been the volume MTB in the Kross catalogue since the mid-2000s, predating the more performance-oriented Level. It targets first-time and recreational trail riders who want a reliable, well
The Lea is Kross dedicated women-specific MTB, offered as a parallel hardtail line to the unisex Hexagon. It uses women-specific frame geometry, narrower handlebar width, and saddle choices tuned for
The Lea Junior is the entry point into Kross women-specific MTB ecosystem, designed as the next step after balance bikes and small-wheel kids bikes. It bridges the gap between children's bikes and the
The Level has anchored Kross's XC mountain bike range since the brand's MTB push in the late 2000s. Built and assembled at the Przasnysz factory in Poland, it has been the bike most associated with th
The Moon is Kross's enduro platform — longer travel, slacker geometry, more aggressive intent than the trail-oriented Soil. Introduced in 2012 as the brand pushed into performance segment MTB, it has
Kross developed the Soil to show that a Polish manufacturer could compete in the premium trail/enduro segment dominated by brands like Santa Cruz and Yeti. The proprietary RVS (Revo Virtual Suspension
The Trans has been the anchor of Kross trekking range since the early 2000s, designed for riders who cover long distances on mixed road and light trail surfaces. It predates the gravel trend and occup
The Vento is Kross road identity. Launched to serve the growing Central/Eastern European road cycling market, it matured from an entry model into a product line reaching carbon-frame electronic-groups