Giro designers had pros describe their dream shoe—and turned that feedback into an all-new suite of shoes for riders of every level
(Photo: Giro)
Published June 25, 2026 01:15PM
With Giro’s latest shoe launch, the brand sends a clear message: Giro is leaning into performance, and leaning hard. The 2026 lineup includes eight new and updated shoes, which span everything from road to trail to gravel and cross-country riding. The first thing you’ll notice is the style. The entire product line sports a cohesive, minimalist design. It’s sleek, and it oozes professionalism.
But the shoes don’t just look the part. Every single one was designed around learnings from the brand’s Imperial II, a featherweight fan favorite. The Imperial II already had outstanding sensitivity and a massive adjustability range. But Giro designers wanted better. So, they gathered some of the world’s best cyclists (including Pual Seixas, Biniam Girmay, Jay Vine, Thymen Arensman, and Kasia Niewiadoma-Phinney) and asked them to dream it up. Giro then optimized an entirely new shoe specifically for that cohort of pros—and then dialed in the details for advanced and intermediate riders. The result is a lineup that’s designed to bring pro-tier performance to riders at every level.

Serious racers will want to reach for the Regime (the Regime II for road riding or the Regime XC for gravel). Lightweight and precise, the Regime series uses twin BOA dials to help riders find the perfect fit, with a carbon composite plate that maximizes power transfer. The Regime II weighs in at just 275 grams, while a ruggedized outer on the Regime XC brings it to 315 grams. Both are engineered to help you get more out of each stroke when it really counts.
Next up is the Cadet II road shoe and its cousin, the Cadet XC. The Cadet line is designed for amateur racers and advanced riders—anyone who wants elite-tier performance without the pro-level price. A single BOA dial contributes to precision fit, while an injection-molded nylon-and-fiberglass plate delivers confident power transfer.

Last up is the Stylus series. The Stylus II road shoe and the Stylus XC gravel shoe both prioritize durability and accessibility over ultralight weights. In other words, they’re more affordable and more likely to last for seasons of use without visible wear. The secret is a simple, classic design: a lace-up closure, sturdy materials, and an injection-molded nylon-and-fiberglass sole to improve stroke efficiency. The Stylus II also boasts a universal 3 + 2 bolt pattern that’s compatible with a wide range of pedals—ideal if you run SPD-SLs on your bike and SPDs on your indoor bike trainer.
The new lineup doesn’t stop with road and XC. Giro also launched two new trail shoes. The Chamber Trail—built on the already-beloved Chamber chassis and named for the one and only Richie Rude Chamber—is a lightweight trail shoe that delivers best-in-class power transfer and pedal feel. Its counterpart, the Empire TR, relies on a classic lace-up design, grippy sole, and understated styling to adapt to just about any dress code or terrain type—from the pump track to the enduro course to the post-ride watering hole.
Each shoe is engineered to deliver the maximum power and performance possible at its price point, which is just the way it should be. After all, you don’t need to be a sponsored athlete to benefit from pro-level technology. We could all use a boost—and Giro’s new lineup promises to deliver.
We Design For Sport. At Giro, we strive to build products that empower the fastest athletes to perform at the highest level. We destroy more test helmets than some brands build, obsess over the details, and pour years of sweat into our products so Giro is there when you need us most.