How It Works
Recommendations are built from riding context, not just brand hype
The tool is designed to start with how a person rides and then narrow the field using route needs, budget, model years, and available market data.
1. You describe the ride
The form asks for daily mileage, riding days per week, road conditions, riding type, experience level, budget, optional manufacturer preference, year range, and ZIP code. That lets the tool reason about whether a bike is more likely to suit commuting, highway miles, weekend use, or mixed riding.
2. The app looks for relevant bikes
The catalog layer tries to discover motorcycles that fit the requested use case and price range. It can use live market lookups and web queries to avoid showing the same fixed list for every rider profile.
3. Each candidate is scored for fit
- Budget fit and estimated market price
- Likely comfort for city, highway, rough-road, or mixed use
- Beginner friendliness and engine-size suitability
- Fuel economy and maintenance outlook for the rider's usage pattern
- Manufacturer preference when a rider explicitly asks for one
4. The results are meant to be a shortlist
A high score does not mean the bike is automatically the right purchase. It means the motorcycle looks like a strong candidate worth comparing more closely. Riders should still check ergonomics, dealer support, insurance rates, and real-world owner feedback before buying.
What makes a useful shortlist
The best workflow is usually to keep three to five bikes, compare them side by side, read linked reviews, inspect nearby inventory, and then decide which ones are worth seeing in person. The site is designed to make that first narrowing step faster and more practical.