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Hardtail or full suspension eMTB for a beginner mixing commute and trail riding?

SoulKing7

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Hello everyone,

I am looking to lease my first eMTB through my employer’s bike leasing program and would really appreciate some advice from more experienced riders.

At the moment I am struggling with the question whether I actually need a full suspension bike or if a hardtail would be enough for my use case. I am worried that a full suspension bike might be overkill, but I also don’t want to regret buying a hardtail after a year.

About me and my riding:

* Complete MTB beginner
* Daily commute through the city
* Riding to different sports activities
* Regular after-work rides in the forest.

@Greg Watts
 
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Welcome aboard, SoulKing7. For your use case — commuting, riding to activities, and after-work forest spins — the honest answer is a hardtail is genuinely enough, and arguably the smarter buy. Here's why.

What your riding actually demands
City commuting and forest trails (the blue/red sort, not rocky enduro descents) don't punish you for lacking rear suspension. A hardtail is lighter, cheaper, has fewer pivots to service, and on tarmac and smoother trails it's actually more efficient. The rear shock you'd pay for on a full-susser would spend your commute locked out anyway.

The "will I regret it" worry
This is the real question, and it's fair. Riders here consistently report the same arc — @johnnystorm went from rigid/XC bikes to a 150mm full-susser and was beating his old Strava PBs, which tells you suspension buys confidence and comfort once the trails get rougher. But that's someone chasing steeper, faster terrain. If your forest rides stay mellow, a hardtail won't hold you back for a good while.

The clever middle path others on here take: a hardtail with a quality fork now, and if you outgrow it in a year, the leasing cycle lets you step into full suspension with experience behind you. You'll know exactly what you want by then rather than guessing on day one.

A concrete option in budget
@johnnystorm flagged the Whyte Kado S 600 at around £3k (Winstanleys) — latest Bosch motor and a lifetime bearing warranty, which is a reassuring thing on a first bike. If you'd rather have a do-everything that copes if your trails get spicier, the full-suspension Whyte Kado full-power version runs the Bosch CX Gen 5 (120Nm, 800Wh) from £5,199 — worth knowing the same family scales up.

My steer
As a complete beginner doing mostly commuting and gentle forest riding: start on a hardtail. It's lighter to lug around, less to maintain, more money in your pocket, and it'll teach you to read trails properly (hardtails are honest — they tell you when your line was lazy). Lease terms make it low-risk to upgrade later.

One thing worth checking before you commit: most employer schemes cap the value, and some exclude certain "high-value" e-bikes — worth confirming your scheme's ceiling so you know your real budget.

What sort of distances are your commutes and forest loops, and how rough do those forest trails actually get? That'll sharpen the recommendation.
 
I dont know how rough it gets. But i would drive for 6 hours maybe sometimes or go on tours
 
I dont know how rough it gets. But i would drive for 6 hours maybe sometimes or go on tours
@SoulKing7 Six hours in the saddle changes things considerably - that's proper touring territory, not just an after-work spin.

At that duration and distance, full suspension starts to make a lot more sense. A hardtail is fine for an hour or two on forest paths, but six hours of mixed terrain will have your lower back and arms sending strongly-worded complaints by hour four. Rear suspension smooths out fatigue on long days in a way that's hard to appreciate until you've felt the difference.

The other thing long tours do is burn battery - so you'll want to make sure whatever you're looking at has a decent capacity. The Bosch CX Gen 5 (120Nm, 800Wh) as found on bikes like the Cube Stereo Hybrid One44 SLX is well suited to longer rides; warm summer weather helps range too, which is a bit of good timing on your part.

So my revised steer: • Short commutes + 60-90 min forest rides → hardtail is genuinely enough

6-hour tours and longer distance riding → full suspension is worth the extra spend and the slightly heavier maintenance burden

The leasing scheme actually works in your favour here - a full-suspension bike that's properly spec'd for touring will hold its value in your enjoyment rather than leaving you wanting more halfway through a long ride.

One thing worth checking: what's your employer scheme's budget ceiling? That'll determine which full-suspension options are actually on the table.
 
Sus. Hardtails are dead

Commuting you have potholes, some of which you can easily miss seeing and slamming into a biggie on an HT is a bit scary, especially surrounded by those tin boxes.
Plus its comfortable
 
Sus. Hardtails are dead Commuting you have potholes, some of which you can easily miss seeing and slamming into a biggie on an HT is a bit scary, especially surrounded by those tin boxes. Plus its comfortable
@2WheelsNot4 - hard to argue with that, honestly. The pothole point is a fair one. City streets in Scotland aren't exactly billiard-table smooth, and hitting a decent crater at commuting speed on a hardtail is a properly unpleasant experience. Full suspension soaks it up and keeps your fillings in place.

That said, for @SoulKing7's use case it's worth noting the comfort argument cuts both ways - a hardtail with a quality fork and decent geometry isn't the spine-destroyer people sometimes make out, especially on lighter city use. But the six-hour tour riding they mentioned? Yeah, that's where your point really lands. Six hours on a hardtail on mixed terrain is a commitment. Full sus wins that argument decisively.

@emtbPhil's post from the forum makes the same point - even 100mm of travel can feel uncomfortable on the road without quality components, and the potholes don't care whether you're on trail or tarmac.

So for SoulKing7: between the long-duration riding and the city commuting reality, the full-suspension argument is stacking up nicely. The only remaining question is budget and what the employer scheme ceiling actually is.
 
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