top of page

The Ultimate Guide to Motorcycle Gloves

  • Writer: jamesjordan
    jamesjordan
  • Jun 5
  • 3 min read

QUICK ANSWER

A good motorcycle glove balances three things: abrasion resistance if you slide, impact protection over the knuckles and palm, and the dexterity to operate the controls. Leather is the proven shell — deerskin for the best feel and comfort, goatskin and cowhide for more abrasion resistance — and serious gloves add knuckle armor and a palm slider. For certified protection, look for the EN 13594:2015 standard and a KP (knuckle protection) mark. Fit is critical: a glove that's too loose loses dexterity and lets armor shift; too tight causes hand fatigue.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Three jobs: abrasion resistance, impact protection (knuckles + palm), and dexterity. A glove has to serve all three.

  • Leather choice is a priority call: deerskin leads on comfort and feel; goatskin and cowhide offer more abrasion resistance.

  • Look for EN 13594:2015 certification and a KP knuckle-protection mark for verified protection.

  • Construction matters: outseam seams, pre-curved fingers, and a palm slider improve comfort and safety.

  • Fit is protection and comfort: correct fit preserves dexterity, keeps armor in place, and reduces hand fatigue.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR IN A MOTORCYCLE GLOVE

1. Leather / shell. Deerskin (softest, best feel), goatskin (supple, more abrasion resistance), or cowhide. See the material entries below.

2. Certification. EN 13594:2015 is the motorcycle-glove standard; a KP mark indicates tested knuckle protection. Certification is verifiable evidence, not marketing.

3. Impact protection. Knuckle armor and a palm slider absorb and deflect impact. The palm slider also helps the hand skid rather than catch in a slide.

4. Construction. Outseam construction (seams on the outside) reduces internal pressure points; pre-curved fingers reduce hand fatigue on the grips.

5. Closure. A secure wrist closure (and gauntlet cuff, if chosen) keeps the glove on in a crash and seals out weather.

6. Fit. Snug but not tight, with full finger dexterity. Too loose sacrifices control and lets armor move; too tight causes fatigue.

THE MOTORCYCLE GLOVE CLUSTER

Materials (encyclopedia)

  • What Is Deerskin?

  • What Is Goatskin?

  • What Is Full-Grain Leather?

  • What Is Leather Break-In?

Glove construction & features (encyclopedia)

  • What Is a Gauntlet Glove?

  • What Is Outseam Construction?

  • What Is a Pre-Curved Glove?

  • What Is a Palm Slider?

  • What Is Knuckle Protection? · What Is Wrist Protection?

  • What Is Glove Liner Material? · What Is Motorcycle Glove Fit?

Protection & standards (encyclopedia)

  • What Is CE Armor? · What Is Abrasion Resistance?

  • What Is EN 13594?

Comparisons

  • Deerskin vs Cowhide Gloves

  • Goatskin vs Deerskin

  • Gauntlet vs Short-Cuff Gloves

  • Outseam vs Inseam Construction

Best / buying (commercial)

  • Best Deerskin Motorcycle Gloves

  • Best Winter Motorcycle Gloves · Best Summer Motorcycle Gloves

  • Best Motorcycle Gear for New Riders

Brands

  • Legendary USA

Methodology

  • How MotoGearRater Scores Motorcycle Gear · Testing Methodology (Break-In, Touchscreen)

WHICH GLOVE IS RIGHT FOR YOU?

If you...

Consider

Want the best feel, comfort, and dexterity

Deerskin

Want more abrasion resistance while staying supple

Goatskin

Ride in cold weather

Insulated gauntlet glove with a warm liner

Ride in heat

Perforated or vented short-cuff glove

Want the most certified protection

EN 13594:2015 glove with KP mark + palm slider

Are buying your first pair

A certified leather glove with knuckle armor that fits snugly

Whatever the leather, confirm knuckle protection and the right fit before anything else.

FAQ

What is the best leather for motorcycle gloves?

It depends on priority. Deerskin offers the best feel, comfort, and dexterity with a very short break-in; goatskin and cowhide offer more abrasion resistance. For gloves, comfort and control often tip the choice toward deerskin or goatskin.

Do motorcycle gloves need armor?

For impact protection, yes. The leather handles abrasion; knuckle armor and a palm slider handle impact and help the hand skid in a slide. Look for both in a protective glove.

What does EN 13594 mean on a glove?

EN 13594:2015 is the European standard for motorcycle gloves. A glove meeting it has passed defined abrasion and protection tests; a KP mark indicates tested knuckle protection. It's verifiable evidence of protection.

Why do my hands get tired riding, and can gloves help?

Hand fatigue often comes from gripping through stiff, poorly shaped gloves. Supple leather like deerskin, pre-curved fingers, and outseam construction all reduce the effort needed to hold the grips.

How should motorcycle gloves fit?

Snug with full finger dexterity — no loose material at the fingertips and no pinching. A loose glove sacrifices control and lets armor shift; a tight one causes fatigue.

SOURCES & METHODOLOGY

Scores referenced across this cluster come from the MotoGearRater Score rubrics at /methodology/scoring/, with test protocols (including Break-In and Touchscreen) at /testing-methodology/. Standard: EN 13594:2015 (motorcycle gloves).

 
 
bottom of page