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Cube reaction hybrid comparison

KLBOOM

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Cube reaction hybrid performance 600 vs Cube reaction hybrid one 800.

Ignoring cost of each. For use with occasional commuting, mountain bike trails and hills on gravel and forest paths please.
 
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Cube reaction hybrid performance 600 vs Cube reaction hybrid one 800. Ignoring cost of each. For use with occasional commuting, mountain bike trails and hills on gravel and forest paths please.
Hi @KLBOOM - both of these are Cube Reaction Hybrid hardtails, so for your mix of commuting, gravel/forest paths and the odd bit of trail, they'll both do the job. The split comes down to spec rather than anything dramatic.

A quick honesty note first: the two exact 2026 trims you've named - the "Performance 600" and the "ONE 800" - I want to make sure I'm comparing the right models, because Cube's naming shuffles year to year. What my verified gold data confirms for the current Cube Reaction Hybrid range is:

SpecReaction Hybrid (2026 verified)
MotorBosch Performance Line CX Gen 4, 85Nm
BatteryBosch PowerTube 800 (800Wh), removable
Travel120mm front (hardtail)
ONE 800 trim£2,699 · 25.9kg · Suntour coil fork, Shimano Cues 10-spd, MT200 brakes

Here's the thing: the model name usually tells you two separate things - the "Performance" vs "ONE/Pro/Race" bit is the build kit tier, and the "600 vs 800" is the battery size in Wh.

So if you're genuinely choosing between a Performance 600 (600Wh battery) and a ONE 800 (800Wh battery), the practical differences are:

Battery: 800Wh gives you noticeably more range for hilly forest days - and you said hills on gravel/forest are part of the plan, so the bigger battery is the sensible call for that.

Build kit: the trim names denote different fork/brake/drivetrain levels. The cheaper ONE-tier bikes typically run a coil Suntour fork and Shimano Cues 10-speed - fine for paths and light trails, less plush than higher trims.

I can't confirm the exact motor wattage difference or the precise spec of a "Performance 600" trim from my verified data - those specific older trims aren't in my gold database, and I'd rather not guess at numbers. Your best move is to put both exact model URLs from Cube's site in front of me, or list the fork/brakes/groupset off each spec sheet, and I'll give you a clean side-by-side.

For your use case, though, the headline is simple: more battery (800Wh) matters more than a slightly fancier build when you're climbing on forest paths. How were you leaning?
 
Both are 2026 models. The shop sold out of the performance so did me a deal on the one instead.

The one looks better on paper. Just wanted to check.
 
They're essentially the same bike. The only differences are the motor (Performance vs. Performance CX) and the battery (600 Wh vs. 800 Wh).

The One has more torque and more power, but it also uses more energy. In real-world riding, I'd say the range ends up being pretty similar between the two. Unless you're planning to tackle extremely steep, technical climbs on a regular basis, I'd go with the Performance 600 without hesitation.

At the end of the day, it all comes down to one simple question: how much work do you want your legs to do?
 
Both are 2026 models. The shop sold out of the performance so did me a deal on the one instead. The one looks better on paper. Just wanted to check.
Good call double-checking, and you've landed on the better bike for what you want to do. The ONE 800 you've been offered is the Cube Reaction Hybrid ONE 800 - here's what my verified gold data confirms on it:

SpecReaction Hybrid ONE 800 (2026)
MotorBosch Performance Line CX Gen 4, 85Nm
BatteryBosch PowerTube 800 (800Wh), removable
ForkSR Suntour XCM34 NLO Coil, 120mm (100mm on size S)
BrakesShimano BR-MT200, 180mm rotors
DrivetrainShimano Cues, 10-speed (11-48T)
TyresSchwalbe Smart Sam Active 2.6in
Price / weight£2,699 · 25.9kg

The two things that genuinely matter for your mix of commuting, gravel and hilly forest paths:

Battery - 800Wh vs 600Wh is the headline. On hilly forest days that extra capacity is exactly what you'll feel, and it's removable so you can charge it off the bike. That alone justifies the swap for your use.

Build - the ONE is the entry trim, so it's a coil Suntour fork and Cues 10-speed. Perfectly capable for paths and light trail; just don't expect it to be plush on rougher stuff. The Smart Sam tyres are a fine all-rounder for your gravel/commute split too.

One small thing to flag, since you're coming off a Performance 600: the only catch to "looks better on paper" is the coil fork. Coil forks don't adjust to rider weight the way an air fork does - if you're on the lighter or heavier side it can feel a touch off, though for towpaths and forest doubletrack it's a non-issue. If the shop deal stretches, the Pro 800 (£2,899) is the same battery with a slightly better kit, but you don't need it for what you've described.

So yes - the ONE 800 is the right pick here. Bigger battery beats fancier build for hills, and you're already a Bosch household, so the system'll feel familiar. Enjoy it.
 
They're essentially the same bike. The only differences are the motor (Performance vs. Performance CX) and the battery (600 Wh vs. 800 Wh).

The One has more torque and more power, but it also uses more energy. In real-world riding, I'd say the range ends up being pretty similar between the two. Unless you're planning to tackle extremely steep, technical climbs on a regular basis, I'd go with the Performance 600 without hesitation.

At the end of the day, it all comes down to one simple question: how much work do you want your legs to do?
That's the one I ordered, but after my purchase the shop advised they couldn't find the bike so would have to cancel my order. They then offered me the One model with a £100 discount.

The bit that confused me is the One 600 is more expensive than the Performance 600. Is it just the lower spec motor in the Performance that changes the price?

I've got the One 800, so it's a bigger battery. I understand why that's more expensive.

The price led me to believe the One model is higher spec that the Performance model. But it appears not and it may be the other way around, but the One model has the better motor?
 
That's the one I ordered, but after my purchase the shop advised they couldn't find the bike so would have to cancel my order. They then offered me the One model with a £100 discount. The bit that confused me is the One 600 is more expensive than the Performance 600. Is it just the lower spec motor ...
You've actually spotted the thing that trips most people up: the number isn't the spec tier, it's the battery. So pricing across these models doesn't move in one neat line - there are two separate things changing at once.

Here's the logic behind what confused you: • ONE vs Performance - these are build-kit tiers, and they don't map cleanly onto motors. Don't assume "ONE costs more, so ONE is higher spec" - the price gap you saw is mostly the battery and motor combination, not a straight quality ladder.

600 vs 800 - that's purely battery capacity (Wh). 800Wh costs more than 600Wh, full stop. That's the bit you've correctly worked out, and it's why your ONE 800 sits where it does on price.

On the motor question - here's where I have to be careful rather than guess. What I can confirm from verified data is the bike you've actually got: the Cube Reaction Hybrid ONE 800 runs a Bosch Performance Line CX Gen 4 (85Nm) with the 800Wh PowerTube. What I can't confirm from my verified data is the exact motor fitted to the Performance 600 trim - so I don't want to state it's a lesser motor when I haven't got that nailed down. Best way to settle it is the spec sheet off each bike, or check the motor badge on yours when it arrives.

So to answer you straight: the price you paid reflects the 800Wh battery more than anything else. Whether the Performance ran a different (lower-output) motor than your ONE - I'd want to see both spec sheets side by side before I'd swear to it, rather than telling you something tidy that turns out wrong.

And honestly? For commuting, gravel and hilly forest paths, you've ended up on the better bike for your use regardless of how the pricing logic looked - the 800Wh is the bit you'll actually feel on those climbs. The £100 off for the inconvenience isn't a bad result either.
 
The Performance model features the Bosch Performance motor 75nm
 
The Performance model features the Bosch Performance motor 75nm
That confirms it nicely, @KLBOOM - and it's the key piece that explains the pricing. So the two motors are:

Performance 600 - Bosch Performance Line, 75Nm • ONE 800 - Bosch Performance Line CX Gen 4, 85Nm

The CX is Bosch's higher-output motor, and the 800Wh battery on top of that is why the ONE 800 sits where it does on price - you're getting both a better motor and a bigger battery, even if the "ONE" name doesn't shout that from the rooftops.

For your mix of commuting, forest paths and hilly gravel riding, that's genuinely the better combination. The extra torque from the CX helps on climbs, and the 800Wh means you're not watching the battery gauge nervously on longer days out.

The shop's substitution - whether they meant to or not - actually landed you on the stronger bike. The £100 off was a decent consolation for the faff.

Enjoy it when it arrives. Tag me anytime if you've got more questions. 👍
 
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