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Is This the End for GT Bicycles?

GT Bicycles Pauses Production speeding
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With a heavy heart, we share the news that GT Bicycles appears to be slowly shutting down. After a joyous and hopeful homecoming back to So. Cal. not quite two years ago, the once iconic Southern California brand is laying off employees, and halting production.

Just last February, after being home in So. Cal. for a year, GT announced that they were on the mend and ready to shred again by hiring more employees. They jumped from 8 to 23 employees and the future was looking bright.

PON, the company that snatched the brand from the clutches of the Cycling Sports Group, already owned another iconic California brand, Santa Cruz, and seemed like a good home for GT. When PON decided to bring GT home after 15 years on the East Coast, we were all excited as the move seemed to be the right choice.

The future of the brand looked promising.

But, here we are. GT has said that it will sell through its remaining inventory through 2025, and then “pause the brand”. There was some other verbiage from GT’s Managing Director, Jason Schiers, that they are using the pause to focus “on core strengths, and refining our strategy to position GT for long-term growth”. Well, we’ve all heard stuff like this before, and while we are hopeful, GT’s future looks very dim.

A Word from Phil Kmetz

Phil (of Skills with Phil) confirmed the news yesterday on his youtube channel. According to Phil, this was a surprise to most of the GT team and GT athletes, with the official news being announced to them this week.

I Bleed Blue and Yellow

As you may or may not know, I got my start in the bike biz at GT Bicycles back in 1995. The brand was an absolute force to be reckoned with as it dominated every discipline. We even had a Formula One semi-truck as a race support vehicle.

GT Bicycles Pauses Production ad
Print ad for GT Bicycles

The industry was calling us “The Firm”. We started marketing on that reputation with our “Fast, It’s Corporate Policy” ad campaign. To quote Ron Burgandy, “We were kind of a big deal.”

There are so many stories I could share with you about the amazing people who helped build that brand into what it once was. And I am stoked that I was there for a lot of it. Working for GT Bicycles changed the trajectory of my life for the better. Hell, I found my wife of 24 years while working for GT.

That work environment has been the dragon that I have been chasing since I left, and there has never been another place like it. The people I met through my years at GT have become lifelong friends.

I hope for the best outcome for the brand and the employees. I would like nothing better than to see them come out of this “pause” and rebuild themselves to the brand’s former glory, whatever that may mean in today’s bike industry.

Here’s to the GT Bicycles of the past and hopefully of the future!

GTBicycles.com

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M G
M G
2 hours ago

This isn’t the first, nor will it be the last, news of an iconic brand shutting its doors… but this one hurts bad. For as long as I’ve been a cyclist, GT has been a mainstay brand. It’s super sad to see and I hope that everyone affected finds an opportunity to stay in the industry (if they want to).

B Barber
B Barber
2 hours ago

From BMX, to freestyle to mtb to road I have a GT of all kinds. Some I have a few of. This is sad news but not surprising.
The only question is which bike do I ride to get coffee later.

Tom
Tom
1 hour ago

Sad news indeed for a once iconic brand. However, look at the products they’ve put out in the past few years and this isn’t at all surprising. The days of the Xizang are long gone and their current crop of bikes looks more like a big box retail model you’d find at Target. I hope this is truly a pause/recalibration because it would be great to see this brand resurrected.

M G
M G
1 hour ago
Reply to  Tom

I have one of GT’s Grade Carbon gravel bikes and it’s anything but big box. In a stable that includes ten other Ti, steel, alloy and carbon fiber bikes (mine), its performance is hardly compromised relative to the others. I love riding it.

jason
jason
1 hour ago

GT has been completely disappointing with their bikes over the last few years. I have no regrets about the brand. It was all foreseeable.
And let’s be honest, it was never that great a brand…

Speshy
Speshy
17 seconds ago
Reply to  jason

This the brand that brought us the Pro Performer, Mach-One, Dyno VFR, and all that triple triangle greatness. These bikes are icons and so full of meaning to me and others. If you don’t regret this that’s okay but my soul just died a little and I know a lot of others are hitting up eBay right now to see their childhood bikes getting sold for 20x what they paid for them.

Billyshoo
Billyshoo
44 minutes ago

Thanks for sharing that vintage (circa ’99) ad campaign, Ron. I do remember the second one now, but that first one is one of my all-time favorite ads. The news disappoints me, too, but to your point about the glory of those ’90s heydays, the brand has never come close to reattaining that reputation since the sale to Pacific. I hope someday they can once again be the type of bike company that you, your coworkers, Gary, Richard, and all the customers and fans built once upon a time.

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