Bonn

The city of Bonn is testing a mix of new infrastructure along the North–South and East–West corridors: though separation from motorists is still needed, wider lanes and bicycle streets are effectively knitting the bicycle network all together. The result of the investments are tangible, with a modal share climbing from 15% in 2017 to 21% today.

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  • General score:

    61.4

Detailed Score

Safe and Connected Infrastructure: 50.1

Usage and Reach: 69.9

Policy and Support: 64.6

The Key Lessons

Bonn’s cycling network is transitioning from fragmented, paint-only lanes to a more coherent, protected network. Currently, 20% of Bonn’s streets are equipped with protected bicycle tracks, and more than half of streets run at 30 km/h. Until recently, bicyclists relied on unprotected, painted lanes, and tracks often with little separation from pedestrians; mergers onto sidewalks and into general traffic left gaps in comfort and safety. Today, the city is adopting new standards beginning with the North-South and East-West axes, using a mix of solutions – some better than others: wider painted bicycle lanes, some protected cycle tracks, ‘environmental lanes’ reserved for buses and bikes, and designated “Fahrradstraße”. Although these new ‘environmental lanes’ and “Fahrradstraße” are bicycle-first streets supported by clear signage, motorists nevertheless drive alongside unprotected cyclists. In a city still relatively car-dependent, this can compromise cyclist safety.

Progress is also visible beyond infrastructure. Plans, maps, and project timelines are easy to follow on the city’s website, signalling transparency and engaging civil society. Bicycle counters make trends in usage tangible, and the cycling budget has risen sharply in the last five years. The payoff has been measurable: cycling’s modal share has risen from about 15% in 2017 to 21% in 2024, indicating that sustained investment and network development, in addition to clearer design, are all transforming the political will in Bonn into more daily bicycle rides.

Bonn’s growing bicyclist population is inspiring new street design.

The Way Forward

Bonn should take full advantage of the current momentum to commit to prioritizing protected, continuous bicycle tracks over unsafe, painted compromises and unprotected shared lanes. In order for the city to make bicycling more accessible to businesses, families and logistics companies, cargo bikes should be prioritized and encouraged by means of household subsidies and regular trial opportunities. The city’s clear political will and rising modal share paves the path for Bonn to rise as a prominent bicycle city.

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