Motorcycle Jackets
Motorcycle Jackets
Ride protected in style. Textile, leather, and adventure motorcycle jackets with CE-certified armor, waterproof liners, and all-season versatility. Built for the road ahead.
A motorcycle jacket is the single most critical piece of protection between you and the road. Our collection spans leather, textile, and mesh options, each engineered with reinforced shoulder and elbow armor, back protector compatibility, and ventilation systems that work across seasons. We select jackets that balance real-world protection with a fit you actually want to wear off the bike.
From classic cruiser silhouettes in full-grain leather to adventure-ready textile shells with waterproof membranes and removable liners, every jacket in our lineup is chosen because it meets our protection standards first. Style follows function, never the other way around.
The AtomBiker Standard
What Makes a Great Motorcycle Jacket
Multi-Zone Impact Armor
Shoulders, elbows, and back protector pockets come standard. Our jackets use impact-rated armor matched to the riding application, with upgrade paths for riders who want maximum coverage.
Ventilation Engineering
Strategic intake and exhaust vents channel air across your chest and back. Mesh panels, perforated leather, and zip-open vents let you regulate airflow from fully sealed winter riding to wide-open summer cooling.
Materials That Perform
Full-grain cowhide for abrasion resistance, 600D Cordura textile for versatility, and mesh composites for maximum airflow. Each material is selected based on the jacket's intended riding conditions and protection requirements.
Buying Guide
How to Choose the Right Motorcycle Jacket
Your jacket choice depends on three factors: the type of riding you do, the climate you ride in, and how much off-bike wear you need. A leather cruiser jacket built for weekend rides has different priorities than a textile adventure jacket built for multi-day touring through variable weather.
Armor placement matters more than armor brand. Make sure the shoulder and elbow pads sit directly over the joint when you are in riding position, not standing upright. Most jackets are designed to fit in riding posture, which means the sleeves may feel long when your arms are at your sides. That is correct and intentional.
The Reach Test
Sit on your bike and grip the handlebars when trying on a jacket. The sleeves should reach your wrists without the back riding up. If you only test standing upright, the jacket will feel right in the store but pull and bind when you are actually riding.
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