Trek

15 models

1120

Trekking2018–2021Discontinued

The Trek 1120 was launched in late 2017 as Trek's answer to the growing bikepacking movement. While the 520 served road touring and the 920 served off-road touring, the 1120 was designed for the most

520

Trekking1983–2021Discontinued

The Trek 520 was introduced in 1983 as part of Trek's 500-series touring line. It was designed as an accessible, dependable touring bike — less racing-oriented than the higher-end 720. Originally mark

920

Trekking2015–2022Discontinued

The Trek 920 was introduced around 2015 as a modern, aluminum alternative to the classic steel Trek 520. While the 520 was designed for paved road touring, the 920 was built for off-road adventure tou

Checkpoint Series

Gravel2018–

The Checkpoint is Trek's dedicated gravel and bikepacking platform, launched in 2018 and now in its third generation (2024). It comes in three frame tiers: the ALR uses 300 Series Alpha Aluminium and

Domane Series

Road2012–

Debuted in early 2012 just before the spring classics. Trek worked closely with world champion Fabian Cancellara ('Spartacus') to develop a 'Classics-specific' bike that could handle the brutal cobble

Domane WSD / Domane Women's

Road2012–2020Discontinued

Domane — Italian-flavoured coinage by Trek's marketing, suggesting 'tomorrow' (Italian 'domani') or 'home' (French 'domaine'). Trek never published an official etymology; the bike was launched in Ital

Dual Sport

Hybrid2007–

'Dual Sport' as a name signals the bike's two-discipline pitch — a single bike that handles both pavement (road / sport) and light off-road (gravel / sport). Trek borrowed the term from the motorcycle

Émonda Series

Road2014–2025Discontinued

Launched on the eve of the 2014 Tour de France as the world's lightest production road bike. Trek stripped away every unnecessary gram — the name itself means 'to prune'. The bike was a statement: the

Émonda Women's / Émonda WSD

Road2014–2019Discontinued

Émonda — French verb 'émonder' meaning 'to prune' or 'to trim'. The name signals the product philosophy: every gram trimmed off the frame. Trek used French naming for road performance lines (Émonda, M

FX Series

Hybrid2002–

FX = 'Fitness'. Not officially declared in a single Trek statement, but consistently used across Trek marketing — the bike is positioned as fitness-flat-bar, distinct from comfort hybrids and from dro

FX Women's / FX WSD

women2010–2020Discontinued

The FX Women's grew out of Trek's Fitness Cross (FX) hybrid line, the brand's flat-bar bridge between road efficiency and city practicality. It launched in the Women's-Specific Design (WSD) era as the

Lexa

womenDiscontinued

Introduced around 2011 as Trek's dedicated women's entry-level road bike line. The Lexa filled the gap below Trek's carbon women's bikes (Silque, later Émonda Women's), providing an accessible aluminu

Madone Gen 8

Road2024–

Launched in 2024, the Madone Gen 8 is the most consequential road-bike release in Trek's modern history because it does something the brand had resisted for over a decade — it replaces both the previo

Madone Series

Road2003–

Launched in 2003 as a successor to Trek's 5000-series road frames. Named after the Col de la Madone — a legendary 13km climb near Nice on the French Riviera that Lance Armstrong used as his personal t

Verve

Hybrid2014–

The Verve is Trek's comfort-leisure hybrid — the bike for a rider whose top priority is not speed or fitness training but simply enjoying a relaxed ride on bike paths, neighbourhood streets, and gentl

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