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Today’s DealsONE-SIXTY 6000
A 27.5″ carbon frame full suspension enduro bike with high-end components.
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Manufacturer Price
A$7,299($5,221)| Weight | 35.5 lbs |
|---|---|
| Frame | Carbon |
| Suspension | Full, 171 / 170mm |
| Fork | RockShox ZEB Select |
| Shock | RockShox Vivid Select |
| Wheels | 27.5″ Aluminum |
| Drivetrain | 1 × 12 |
| Groupset | Eagle 70 Transmission |
| Brakes | SRAM DB8 Hydraulic Disc |
| Seatpost | Dropper |
Based on build material and quality level of the frame, fork, wheelset, groupset, suspension system, and more.
Compare the full ONE-SIXTY model range
View ComparisonSummary
The Merida One-Sixty is a highly capable enduro bike praised for its excellent suspension performance, modern geometry, and great value. It offers a supple and supportive ride, making it confident on descents while remaining efficient on climbs. The bike is designed for durability and versatility, with features that cater to both aggressive downhill and all-day trail riding.
Excellent suspension performance with supple and supportive feel
Modern geometry that inspires confidence and stability
Great value with competitive pricing and robust build kits
Durable alloy frame with extensive protection and warranty
Versatile handling suitable for enduro and bike park use
Heavy weight, though not detrimental to intended use
Internal cable routing can be cumbersome for maintenance
Budget components may require upgrades over time
It’s a burly bike, designed to take some abuse, and Merida’s decision to prioritize suspension and braking chime well with its intended bike park use.
It’s energetic where others flounder, forgiving where it matters most and never failed to deliver confidence when I wanted to push things that bit further.
With its contemporary geometry and feature-rich frame, the Merida One-Sixty stands as one of the best enduro bikes on the market.
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Jan 2026 · Peter Walker
Is the MERIDA ONE-SIXTY 10K the Best Enduro Bike for the 2026 Season? We Put It Through the Wringer to Find Out.
Strong all-rounder
Super efficient on climbs
Robust and well-balanced spec
Cable routing could be improved

May 2024 · Robert Johnston
The Merida ONE-SIXTY is an impressively well rounded Enduro machine, with pleasant climbing manners and versatile descending performance.

Dec 2023
The One-Sixty is Merida’s recently updated enduro bike. Using the very same frame as the One-Forty, it takes all of that goodness but simply ups the travel, unlocking the frame’s hidden potential and creating an absolute ripper that’s nothing short of capable. While it’s mega proficient downhill, the One-Sixty 500 is equally as impressive when it comes to cranking back up, all while delivering some serious bang for the buck and engaging yet forgiving trail dynamics. Not only is it one of the best mountain bikes on the market, it’s a very solid stepping stone into enduro racing.
Sep 2023 · James Watkins
Merida’s new longer-travel bike takes the standard One-Sixty aluminum frame and amplifies the fun factor, with more suspension up front and a coil-sprung rear shock
DVO suspension, including coil shock
Tried and tested, bombproof aluminum frame
TRP brakes
5-year frame warranty
It’s heavy, but this won’t affect intended use
Basic drivetrain and wheels won’t last forever

Sep 2023 · Mick Kirkman
The Merida One-Sixty FR was launched at September’s EX Enduro in Devon, so our first ride testing and evaluation was carried out on terrain in and around the event with an uplift day in the local area beforehand. It’s familiar testing ground for us and terrain where we’ve previously evaluated the best enduro mountain bikes. With a coil rear shock and a 180mm travel fork, this new Merida is designed to handle new school machine-built jump and berm trails that have increasingly popped up over recent years. It’s targeted at progressive riders taking their riding to the next level as much as younger rippers on a budget looking for a tough durable bike for enduro, DH or uplift laps. Keeping an eye on a lower price point means, unlike the regular Merida One-Sixty trail bike, there is no carbon fibre option. The One-Sixty FR is only available with an aluminium frame, across two different models, topping out at £3.5k on this DVO suspension-clad 600 version. Frame Merida’s basic concept was to bring a tougher, more affordable bike that can be hammered in bike parks or push-to-the-top jumpy DH spots – or even become part of rental fleets in uplift destinations. Its frame shares the updated shape and geometry of the current Merida One-Forty and One-Sixty platforms. The FR carries over Merida’s ‘Agilometer’ geometry philosophy, which (like plenty of other sensible brands) allows riders to choose size based on frame length/reach, rather than seat tube height. Smaller riders can opt for a longer frame to taste and not get penalised by the saddle or top tube getting in the way. Taller riders can benefit too and can run one of the latest-generation dropper posts like Merida’s Team TR 2 here that is infinitely adjustable up to 230mm to achieve the desired saddle height. One thing that’s slightly at odds with Merida’s sizing philosophy though and may affect a small number of riders is the size-specific tuning on the Fast Link, because while it’s easy enough to reduce spring rate for lighter/shorter riders on longer bikes, there will always be slightly more progression in the suspension than on the smaller frame sizes. Merida’s five frame sizes see reach measurement extend all the way from 409mm in XShort up to 519mm in XLong. The chainstay is semi size-specific too, with 434mm in the smaller three sizes growing to 437.5mm in the longest two. There’s a typical-for-this-category 63.5mm head angle and a bottom bracket drop of just 2mm, although this didn’t feel high while riding to me. Smaller details include a removable 4/6mm Allen key in the rear axle and a removable ‘service port’ on the bottom of the BB that makes internal dropper routing much less painful. One-Sixty FR frames use an easy to service BSA threaded bottom bracket and neat features include chunky frame protection and a rear mud guard. The best full-suspension mountain bikes: reviewed by experts Seeing as the FR is primarily gravity focused, it’s no bad thing the alloy …Continue reading »
Suitably robust build kit. Well matched DVO suspension. Modern sizing system. Keenly priced. Bike park ready straight from the box
Internal headset cable routing. Noisy in rough terrain. Heavy

Sep 2023 · Seb Stott
The FR is aimed at park rats and rental fleets, with mixed wheels, more travel and burlier components.

May 2023 · Robin Weaver
With impressive geometry, well-balanced suspension and a great parts package for the cash, the Merida One-Sixty 6000 offers a seriously exciting ride and feels incredibly capable just about everywhere
Great geometry helps inspire confidence
Well-balanced suspension
Parts well-considered for the money
Easy on the eye
Headset cable routing won’t be for everyone
Seatpost scores easily

Mar 2023 · Jessie-May Morgan
Jessie-May's take on the 2023 Merida ONE-SIXTY; a 171mm travel flex-pivot enduro bike with all the frills and none of the spills
| Frame | ONE-SIXTY CF4 III, 171mm suspension travel mullet / 162mm suspension travel 29", material: carbon, 29x2.5" max. wheelsize, 148x12mm axle standard, BSA bottom bracket standard BB Standard: BSA, 73mm, Threaded |
|---|---|
| Fork | Rock Shox Zeb Select, Air, 170mm suspension travel, Tapered, 44mm fork offset, 29x2.6" max. wheelsize Travel: 170mm Spring Type: Air |
| Shock | Rock Shox Vivid Select, platform Travel: 171mm |
| Bottom Bracket | BSA, 73mm, threaded |
| Headset | Acros ICR MERIDA INTEGRATED neck, Upper and lower IPS sealing |
| Handlebar | MERIDA EXPERT TR II, material: aluminium, 780mm width, 30mm rise |
| Saddle | MERIDA COMP SL, 25% recycled material, V-mount, incl. MERIDA minitool |
| Seatpost | MERIDA EXPERT TR III, 34.9mm diameter, 0mm setback, 25mm travel adjustability, XSHORT: 170mm, SHORT/MID: 200mm, LONG/XLONG: 230mm Type: Dropper |
| Rear Derailleur | SRAM Eagle 70 Transmission, T-Type |
|---|---|
| Crank | SRAM Eagle 70 Transmission, 32 teeth, 1 guard, 165 mm for all sizes |
| Shifters | SRAM dropper lever MMX |
| Cassette | SRAM XS-1270 Eagle Transmission, 11-52 teeth, 12 speed |
| Chain | SRAM Eagle 70 Transmission, Flattop |
| Brakes | SRAM DB8 stealth, 4 piston Type: SRAM DB8 Hydraulic Disc |
| Rims | Reynolds 309 Enduro Comp, 30mm inner width, material: aluminium, Tubeless ready (tubeless tape installed), rear 27.5" up to Size M / L & XL rear full 29" |
|---|---|
| Spokes | Double Butted Black stainless w/black nipples |
| Front Hub | Shimano TC500-B, 110x15mm width front hub, 32 spoke holes, Centerlock |
| Rear Hub | Shimano TC600-HM-B, 148x12mm width rear hub, 32 spoke holes, Centerlock |
| Tires | Continental Kryptotal-F, 29x2.4", fold, TR, Enduro casing, Soft compund |
| Disc Rotors | SRAM CenterLine, 200mm |
First added August 23
Last updated May 30