Rapha Explore Bar Bag review: a superb bag for travel, whether on the bar or on the shoulder

An outstanding small bar bag with a cross-body strap, let down by a poor main zip

Rapha Explore Bar Bag pictured from the front, mounted on bike
(Image credit: Future/Simon Fellows)
Cycling Weekly Verdict

The Rapha Explore Bar Bag is a very stylish bar bag that quickly converts into a shoulder bag, making it extremely attractive for travel. Its feature set is minimal, but it’s fast and easy to mount on almost any bars, and it’s reliably water resistant. Unfortunately, unless aligned perfectly, the main zip can be challenging to open and close, which does let this bag down.

Reasons to buy
  • +

    Stylish and well-made

  • +

    Converts into a shoulder bag

  • +

    Fast and easy to deploy

  • +

    Reliably water resistant

Reasons to avoid
  • -

    Main zipper can be challenging to secure

You can trust Cycling Weekly. Our team of experts put in hard miles testing cycling tech and will always share honest, unbiased advice to help you choose. Find out more about how we test.

Small bar bags left me cold until, when kitting up for a tour of northern Spain and Mallorca in the summer of 2023, it dawned on me that I needed somewhere accessible to carry my passport, phone, multitool and a rain jacket both on and off the bike.

Yes, I could have gone down the traditional route of stuffing my rear pockets, but frankly, I’d rather have my eyeballs extracted without anaesthetic. What is it about cycling? No other pastime I can think of requires participants to tuck away the stuff they’re likely to need fast and frequently in a spot that’s both unreachable and unseeable. Yep, I’m no fan of largely inaccessible, small, sweaty rear jersey pockets, particularly on long rides.

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Simon Fellows
Freelance Writer. Former Tech Editor

Simon spent his childhood living just a stone’s throw from the foot of Box Hill, so it’s no surprise he acquired a passion for cycling from an early age. He’s still drawn to hilly places, having cycled, climbed or skied his way across the Alps, Pyrenees, Andes, Atlas Mountains and the Watkins range in the Arctic.

Simon now writes for Cycling Weekly as a freelancer, having previously served as Tech Editor. He’s also an advanced (RYT 500) yoga teacher, which further fuels his fascination for the relationship between performance and recovery.

He lives with Jo, his yoga teacher wife, in the heart of the Cotswolds, with two rescue cats, five bikes and way too many yoga mats. He still believes he could have been a contender if only chocolate weren’t so moreish.

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