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News + Trends

With or without you: the plight of the bike helmet

Michael Restin
27/9/2021
Translation: Jessica Johnson-Ferguson

Every year, the Swiss Council for Accident Prevention (BFU) counts helmets. Who wears one, on which type of bike and when? The results are in: when it comes to protecting their heads, cyclists have a mind of their own.

Many approaches, no silver bullet

Maybe my age group is so responsible in order to be a good role model for their children. And 62 per cent of these wee ones tag along with their flower and dinosaur helmets. At least that’s the case until they turn 14. Well, flowers and dinosaurs are ditched earlier than that, but there comes a time when the helmet goes, too. The helmet quota among teenagers and young adults drops to 42 per cent until these wild ones become prudent 30-plus cyclists. The circle of life.

Free time

Getting on your bike purely for the sake of cycling is probably the best reason you can have. It means freeing your head from stress. But what does it mean when it comes to protecting your head?

Today, 62 per cent of cyclists use a helmet when cycling in their free time. That’s five per cent more than in 2019. In other words, the majority of cyclists are happy to use a helmet when their bike isn’t a means of transport but purely used for the fun of it.

Going to work or school

When used to commute between two spheres of life, a bike mainly represents a means of transport. It takes you from A to B and back to A again. With or without a helmet?

On the way to work or the classroom, helmets are used by less than half of cyclists. While 46 per cent wear one on their way to work, 43 per cent of students use one to get to school. For the latter group, that’s two per cent lower than in 2019. For working professionals, the number has gone up by three per cent. Surprisingly, the gap between the two groups is small considering that adolescents and young adult are generally more likely to put themselves at risk.

Going shopping

Quickly heading to the shop to restock the fridge? Shopping is a part of life that’s often done with the help of a bike. But do people bother with a helmet when their hands are carrying shopping bags?

When your stomach is rumbling or you're in desperate need of a new pair of shoes or anything else from the shops, helmets are not a priority. Only 32 per cent of cyclists use one on these occasions – even though the nastiest accidents can also be lurking just outside the front door. The helmet is struggling to establish itself on routine routes and, unlike on joyrides, tends to be left at home.

Helmet compulsion – yay or nay?

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Simple writer and dad of two who likes to be on the move, wading through everyday family life. Juggling several balls, I'll occasionally drop one. It could be a ball, or a remark. Or both.


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