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Guided Motorcycle Tours in Ecuador

Most tours show you a country. Ours make you part of it.

All-inclusive guided motorcycle tours through Ecuador, led by local guides who live here year-round, with hand-picked hotels and single occupancy as standard.

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Local Ecuadorian Guides

They live here year-round. English-speaking, mechanically capable, born storytellers.

Red Cross Certified

Every guide trained in accident-scene management and first aid.

Single Occupancy Standard

Your own room is included. No supplements. No surprises.

Hand-Picked Hotels

Every hotel chosen for what it adds to the trip — never just a bed.

Guided Tours. Real Adventure. Local Voices Built In.

A good guide here is what a great friend is at a party — the one who knows everyone in the room, makes the introductions, pulls you into the conversations. The one who brings you in.

That might mean walking you into a brickmaker's yard because you do construction back home. Your guide knows the brickmaker, tells him what you do for a living, asks how the bricks here are made — and twenty minutes later you're talking shop with a man you couldn't have ordered a coffee from on your own.

That's what we hire for.

Your Guide Is the Difference

The guides who lead our tours are the people who built them. They live here, ride here year-round, and they're the reason every day on the road is more than just kilometers.

One of our guides on the Pacific coast — Ecuador Freedom Bike Rental and Tours

One of our guides on the Pacific coast. Local. Fluent. And — clearly — stoked to be at work.

They live here. Year-round.

Our guides aren't seasonal hires flown in for the busy months. They live in Ecuador, ride here in October and February, know what's blooming, what's harvesting, what's washed out, and what the news is in the next valley over.

Storytellers, not just riders

Their job isn't to lead you through Ecuador. Their job is to make Ecuador make sense. Why this market exists in this town. What the textile patterns mean. Why the road climbs the way it does. You don't just see Ecuador — you understand what you're seeing.

They speak fluent English

Your guide isn't a driver who happens to translate. They're a fluent English-speaker whose job is to make sure you can have the actual conversation — with them, with the family that runs the hotel, with the woman selling fruit at the market.

Mechanically capable on the road

Your guide carries the right parts and tools and can sort out most roadside issues on the spot — they ride these bikes, they know how they fail. For anything bigger, we'll do everything we can to keep your trip moving.

They manage the group, not just lead it

A group of six riding at six different paces is normal. Your guide knows how to keep everyone safe, together, and unhurried — and knows the alternate routes when the day asks for one.

Red Cross-certified safety

Every guide is certified by the Ecuador Red Cross in accident-scene management and first aid. Safety rides with you on every trip.

The route gets you to Ecuador. The guide gets Ecuador to you.

Built for Riders. Not Racers.

The biggest reason people hesitate to book a guided tour isn't the price. It's the worry — "am I good enough?" Here's how a day on the road actually feels with us.

A group of riders together on a guided motorcycle tour in Ecuador

A stop at the base of Chimborazo. The riders who start the week as strangers usually finish it as friends

A pace that lets you look around

We're not in a hurry. We ride at a pace that lets every rider stay comfortable, stay safe, and actually see what they're riding through. The day isn't a race against the kilometers.

We stop a lot. On purpose.

We stop at the rose plantation. We stop at the market. We stop where the view is. We stop where someone interesting is doing something interesting. Some of the best moments on these tours happen with the engines off.

Day one: brief, then ride

Hand signals. Communication on the road. Group riding etiquette. Pace expectations. The briefing wraps by mid-morning, and we're on the road shortly after. Lunch happens somewhere out along the route. Day one is a full riding day — when we say a tour is seven days, that's seven days of riding.

We ride like a family

When something goes wrong, we fix it together. We eat lunch together. The people you start the trip with don't go back to being strangers — they go back as friends. Some of them come back together for a second trip.

If you're comfortable on a motorcycle, you can ride with us.

A hand-picked Andean lodge on a guided motorcycle tour in Ecuador

A hand-picked Andean lodge. The alpacas are the neighbors. The fire is yours.

The Hotels Aren't Just Beds. They're Part of the Tour.

We pick our hotels with the same care we pick our routes.

Every one earns its spot — for the family that runs it, the architecture, the patio view, the meal cooked from the garden out back, the conversation you'll have at breakfast. Some are luxury haciendas. Some are simple lodges in places where there's nowhere else worth staying. All of them add something to the trip.

Every hotel we use is listed by name on each tour page. You can look it up, read about it, and know exactly where you'll be sleeping each night before you book. No mystery. No surprise at check-in.

The hotel isn't where the day ends. It's where the next part of it starts.

You're going to learn things you didn't know you wanted to know. You're going to be quiet at moments you didn't expect. You're going to come home telling stories you can't quite explain to anyone who wasn't there.

That's the point.

 

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