What I wear on the bike has a strong influence on how my ride feels that day. And I鈥檓 not the only one with this sentiment:听there鈥檚 a reason the hashtags or exist. Slipping on听my favorite aero jersey makes me feel sleek and fast. Skipping the chamois guarantees a chill cruise to the coffee shop. One of my favorite items to ride in, though, is a humble T-shirt. Riding in a tee is freeing: goodbye suck-it-in Lycra, hello breeze on my back. Wearing non-cycling clothing on the bike听sets the tone for a ride that equally colors outside the lines, like dragging my road bike up four miles of rocky singletrack (a poor choice听in retrospect) or taking it on听the metro to the edge of town to ride to an alpine lake (a great choice).
This wasn鈥檛 my idea. Riders have long worn T-shirts听on bikes. But up until recently, it wasn鈥檛 accepted or even practical for serious听cyclists.听(听and all that.)听Besides, where do you put your phone,听wallet, snacks, and any cool rocks you find along the way?
Enter cargo shorts.
I鈥檓 not talking about the dorky, khaki-colored knee-length bottoms popular with middle schoolers in the early aughts. I鈥檓 talking about the spandex variety you may have听seen hugging the chiseled quads of pro gravel racers in recent years. Essentially听bib shorts with snug pockets on the hips and/or the lower back, cargo shorts are an extension of a trend started by the all-road and听gravel听craze.听With cyclists riding longer days and pushing further off the grid, accessories for carrying more听food, layers, and tools have become popular, as evidenced by the听proliferation of handlebar bags, frame bags, and cargo shorts among drop-bar riders.
But you don鈥檛 have to ride epic gravel grinders to appreciate these shorts鈥攖hey were听designed with everyday selfie takers in mind. 鈥淭he original concept was created for easier access to your phone instead of trying to grab it out of your jersey pocket,鈥 says Brian Dunlap, president of , the cycling clothing company that created one of the first pairs of bib shorts with hip pockets back听in 2017. 鈥淭his also eliminated always having to wear a jersey.鈥 In other words, by shifting pocket听space from our jerseys to our stretchy pants, cargo shorts liberated听us from that Power Ranger look听and, I鈥檇 argue, from the performance-oriented mindset attached to it.
We ride bikes to feel free: physical freedom, transportational freedom. Sliding my phone into a hip pocket and slipping into a T-shirt lifts a literal and metaphorical weight off my shoulders, and it feels something like spiritual freedom, too.听
My Favorite Cargo Shorts

Pearl Izumi Interval Cargo Bib Shorts ($165)
The Interval鈥檚 pockets听are minimalist and snug鈥攋ust a narrow one on either hip鈥攚hich is nice for stashing a phone and wallet for a short ride. Bonus: the dropper function on the women鈥檚 version allows you to pee without that bib-strap shimmy.
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7Mesh Cargo Bib Shorts (奥辞尘别苍鈥檚, $200;听惭别苍鈥檚, $230)听
In addition to hip pockets, these sleek bibs offer extra carrying capacity, with two lower-back pockets, essentially replacing the ones on your jersey. It鈥檚 best if you don鈥檛 use them听in tandem with jersey pockets, because then that area gets a little bulky.

Rapha Core Cargo Shorts ($130)
These听bib-free options have generous pockets that are big enough to stuff full of snacks for all-day adventures.