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What Is Wrist Protection in Motorcycle Gloves?

  • Writer: jamesjordan
    jamesjordan
  • 3 hours ago
  • 2 min read

The wrist is the most vulnerable joint in a motorcycle fall. When a rider falls, the instinctive response — extending the arms to catch the fall — transmits significant force through the wrist. The scaphoid bone, positioned at the base of the thumb on the radial side of the wrist, is among the most frequently fractured bones in falls across all sports, including motorcycle riding. Wrist protection in motorcycle gloves addresses this specific vulnerability.

What Wrist Protection in Gloves Includes

Gauntlet coverage is the foundational form of wrist protection. A glove that extends 3–4 inches beyond the wrist provides leather coverage over the wrist bones and tendons — protection from abrasion at the wrist zone that a short-cuff glove does not provide. The gauntlet cuff also keeps the glove on the hand through a fall, maintaining continuous coverage.

Wrist impact armor adds structured padding or rigid panels at the wrist zone to address blunt impact as well as abrasion. Some gauntlet gloves include a wrist protector — a curved plastic or foam panel positioned at the palm-side of the wrist — that distributes impact force at the scaphoid zone. This type of protection is more common in sport riding and motocross gloves than in traditional touring designs.

Wrist closure security matters for protection: a glove that stays on through a fall maintains its protection; a glove that slides off provides protection only until it leaves the hand. Buckle closures over jacket sleeves provide the most secure retention in gauntlet-style gloves.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a gauntlet glove prevent wrist fractures?

A gauntlet glove reduces wrist fracture risk by providing structural support and coverage at the wrist zone, but cannot prevent all wrist injuries in high-force impacts. It meaningfully reduces the severity and frequency of wrist injuries compared to unprotected or short-cuff gloves.

What is the scaphoid and why does it break in falls?

The scaphoid is a small carpal bone at the base of the thumb. It breaks in falls because it takes the force of the extended arm impact — compressive force from above combined with hyperextension of the wrist. The scaphoid has limited blood supply, making fractures slow to heal and prone to complications. This is why wrist protection matters more than most riders appreciate.

Is gauntlet wrist protection better than wrist guards under gloves?

For most riders, a well-designed gauntlet glove provides adequate wrist protection with less complexity. Dedicated wrist guards under gloves provide more structured impact protection and are favored in off-road, adventure, and motocross contexts where falls are more frequent and wrist impact severity is higher.

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