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32″ Gravel Bikes of Sea Otter 2026: Fewer Than the MTBs, But They’re Coming

Salsa Fargo 32" gravel bike Travail 32" tires and rims
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The 2026 Sea Otter Classic has come and gone, but it left a big impression – especially when it comes to 32″ wheels. The hype behind the new-ish wheel size has been building exponentially, and while it’s still very much in the development phase, there was plenty to see at the show.

Going into the show, it seemed that most of the excitement had been geared towards 32″ wheels for mountain bikes – and there were plenty of 32″ mountain bikes on hand as a result. But after our discussions around 32″ wheeled gravel bikes, it seems like even more brands may be viewing gravel as the ideal use case for the larger hoops. That makes sense when you think about it, as 32″ wheels claim to offer a longer contact patch with increased traction in loose conditions, faster rolling, and don’t have the same concerns when it comes to building around full suspension frames like 32″ MTB.

Salsa Fargo 32 & Fargo Ti 32

Salsa waited until the first day of the show to break cover on two new 32″ versions of the Fargo gravel/adventure bike. The steel Fargo 32 and the titanium Fargo Ti 32 frame sets will launch this fall, available in sizes small through extra-large to accommodate riders from 5’2″ to 6’7″. Yes, size small. Salsa claims to have figured out the geometry to fit very small riders on 32″ wheels without toe overlap.

Full geo has yet to be announced, but the frames will provide 2.4-inch tire clearance and utilize standard boost spacing with a 73mm bottom bracket shell. An aftermarket alternator plate will reduce the chainstay length by 17mm.

Development of their 32″ platform began in 2024, with Salsa determining that launching the Fargo model first made strategic sense for their product lineup. Expect the official release to be this fall.

Teravail will introduce two new tire treads alongside the Salsa frame release: the Camrock and Cannonball models, both featuring two casing options. All 32-inch tires will include an updated SuperStructure casing that provides improved strength-to-weight ratios.

According to Teravail’s testing, 32″ tires offer 14 percent more surface contact area compared to equivalent 29″ models. The Camrock tread is currently available, while the Cannonball will become available in June or July.

Additional wheel options include late summer availability of the Circos wide wheels with updated carbon layup specifically designed for 32-inch applications. These wheels feature front and rear-specific profiles (29mm front, 28mm rear) and layup configurations, available in 28 and 32-hole drilling patterns with DT350 hubs, including impact-resistant wider rear lip designs.

BTCHN Geared & SS Gravel

BTCHN has gone all in on 32″ wheels with a single-speed bike that was shown at MADE, plus mountain bikes and a new geared gravel bike shown at Sea Otter.

Called the Bandito Ti, the geared gravel bike will actually be steel for the production run. That production will be run in batches with M, L, and XL frames. While the SS bike has sliding dropouts, the Bandito features a UDH hanger and appears to have a bit more traditional geometry than the MADE show bike.

We didn’t get any details on the wheels, only that they are prototype 32″ gravel wheels from WTB.

Faction 32″ Gravel Bike Concept

At this point, Faction Bike Studio is no stranger to 32″ wheels and followed up their 32″ Big Ben Concept at Eurobike with this Atlas Gravel build.

The concept bike serves as a testing platform to evaluate how oversized wheels affect real-world performance and geometry requirements in drop-bar bicycle applications.

The frame accommodates 2.1-inch tires while achieving 435mm chainstays, demonstrating that larger wheels can work with relatively short rear-end geometry.

The Atlas features a bonded carbon tube and aluminum lug construction and includes a TRP/Classified Vistar Powershift drivetrain, Easton 32-inch carbon rims (which are not Havens as it turns out – the wrong decals were applied…), and Schwalbe 32-inch x 50mm tires, which are unmarked, and different than the 32″ Schwalbe gravel tires shown on the…

Stinner 32″ Prototype Gravel Bike

Stinner is one of the brands, like Salsa, that has decided to start with gravel bikes for 32″ wheels instead of MTB. According to Aaron Stinner, it just makes more sense to start with gravel since there are so many questions surrounding the standards and designs of 32″ mountain bikes. As Aaron puts it, the industry is still “feeling through the dark” to find out what works.

As a result, the gravel bike prototype is made from straight-gauge titanium tubing, which Aaron states is easier to iterate with. The ride quality of the tubing is known without having to worry about butting profiles, so he can focus on determining if the geometry works.

The first batch will be a limited run of 20-25 bikes in M-L or XXL. The bike is shown with a prototype Stinner carbon MTB fork that fits 32″ wheels, but isn’t designed for it, pointing out that by narrowing the gap between the tire and the fork crown, it would open up the ability to fit more riders by building a lower front end.

The bike also features Stinner carbon prototype 32″ rims wrapped in Schwalbe Rick Race Pro tires. Tire clearance is said to be 2.4″, and the frame will run Boost 148mm spacing with an MTB chainline.

Boyd’s Colorful 32″ Rims

Boyd had a handful of anodized 32″ rims on display, including two CCC models meant for gravel with a 26mm internal.

The rims were also being used in the Vittoria booth to display the 32 x 2.4″ Peyote tire, including the new model that claims to be 90% renewable & recycled. It looks like our 32″ future is going to require a lot more rubber, so that’s probably a good thing…

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18 Comments
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David
David
21 days ago

Make it stop….

Chris
Chris
21 days ago

Well you’re going to need a really BIG brake to make it stop.

Andy
Andy
21 days ago

It’s like a solution to a problem that doesn’t exist.

David
David
20 days ago
Reply to  Andy

The problem is sales of every type of non electric bike are flat-lining and everyone is grasping at straws to produce something new after years of ruining every other part of the bike with increasingly complex ‘standards’

Billyshoo
Billyshoo
21 days ago

Thanks for the awesome coverage!!

nooner
nooner
20 days ago

That SALSA Fargo looks elegant! There could be one in my future… Does anyone know if it will fit 2X GRX 48/31 ? Next bold prediction, Road 32 will become a thing. The archaic UCI needs to drop silly wheel diameter rules. It’s been proven that with 32 wheels that speeds will go up.. Will we see a 35mph average speed Paris Roubaix? You cannot stop evolution.

Brian
Brian
19 days ago
Reply to  nooner

I don’t think the UCI wants riders to go faster. They keep adding rules to slow down riders like no super tuck.The speeds the riders are going when descending are already scary and it seems like we are seeing more riders crashing and landing in the woods.

nooner
nooner
17 days ago
Reply to  Brian

Remember it was not long ago the UCI banned all disc brakes saying they were too dangerous. Mark my words, 32 Road is coming in the next 5-10 years, maybe sooner, .

arm85
arm85
20 days ago

Is it me, or do 32″ wheels make the bikes look ugly? Just looks off.

nooner
nooner
18 days ago
Reply to  arm85
arm85
arm85
15 days ago
Reply to  nooner

Yea, bro, I just watched that video. He looks like he is riding some monster bike, and he is not even a short guy. Those wheels make bike look ugly. But, he said it rides great so that’s good about it. Time will tell.

nooner
nooner
15 days ago
Reply to  arm85

bro, who cares what it looks like when you be dropping fools like bad habits, said backwards hat Dylan Johnson.

Stefan Roussev
Stefan Roussev
20 days ago

I think it’s very intriguing actually, happy to see new developments.

Stefan Roussev
Stefan Roussev
20 days ago

Deja vu moment just like the 29” show up at first and now everyone is riding them, I don’t get the negativity about it. Let it be and don’t get it if you don’t like it.

Ben
Ben
20 days ago

They all look like they had to shoehorn the frame in between the wheels

Joenomad
Joenomad
20 days ago

Why not go straight to the vintage mullet with a 50 inch front and a 25 inch rear?

Brandon
Brandon
19 days ago

Would like to see some data on aerodynamics 32″ vs. 29″ bikes.

Oli
Oli
16 days ago
Reply to  Brandon

Marginally more drag, but much lower rolling resistance. See Karrasch’s tests. Tire width has more effect than height.

Last edited 16 days ago by Oli

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