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Orbea Rise M or L for a 178cm / 75kg rider — which size to choose?

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At 178cm and 75kg, you're right on the cusp — but for the Rise, I'd point you at the Medium, and here's the reasoning.

You sit dead-centre of the M sizing band, and that's borne out on here — @KKe at 173cm found himself right in the middle of Orbea's M and noted the bike feels usefully compact. You've got a few cm on that, which nudges you toward the top of M rather than the bottom of L.

Here's the geometry side by side (2026 Rise, 140/140mm, 65.0° HA across the board):

SizeReachStackSeat Tube AngleChainstayWheelbase
M455mm623mm77.0°445mm1260mm
L480mm633mm77.0°445mm1285mm

The deciding factor is what you want from the bike. The Rise is the lightweight whippet of the range — closest thing to a normal trail bike, best suited to fit riders who want range without the eMTB heft. That character rewards a frame you can flick and throw around, and at your height the 455mm M reach does exactly that. The 480mm L is a fair stretch — it'll feel more planted at speed but noticeably more of a handful in tight, techy, lower-speed stuff.

Two practical notes:

Dropper / seat tube — worth flagging that on the Rise LT, @levity found the L frame's seat tube tall enough that a 200mm dropper put the saddle too high at 5'11", forcing a swap to 170mm. Standard Rise sizing differs, but the principle stands: check the seat tube length and your inseam before committing to L, especially if you like the saddle slammed.

Riding style — go L only if you're chasing stability for fast, open descents or bike-park laps and you're happy giving up some agility. For all-round trail riding at 75kg, M is the livelier, more confidence-inspiring pick.

My call: Medium, unless you know you ride fast and open and prefer a long, stable cockpit.


What sort of riding are you mainly planning — tight tech and all-day trail, or faster descending? That'd settle it completely.
 
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