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My Motorcycle Gear in Thailand: What I Actually Wear and Why

Real-world motorcycle gear used for riding in Thailand. What has stood the test of time, and what hasn’t.

Review

30 Min

My Motorcycle Gear – in Thailand

Reviews | Motorcycle Gear Review

If you’ve followed me for a while, you’ve probably noticed I’m a bit fussy about motorcycle gear. Not in a glamorous “I need the latest expensive shiny thing” kind of way. More in a practical, slightly sweaty, tropical, mountain-road, soft-off-road, been-through-a-few-adventures kind of way.

Motogirlthailand - Laos Buddhas

I get asked fairly often what gear I actually wear, so here are the key items. Not a fantasy wishlist. Not a “top 10 best gear” article. Just the motorcycle gear that has genuinely been part of my riding life in Thailand, what worked, what didn’t, and what I still rate highly.

For me, the ideal setup is always the same: protection I trust, comfort in hot weather, and gear I’ll actually want to wear every single time I ride.

Table of Contents (Click)

Key Motorcycle Gear

Gear Specific to Thailand

Riding in Thailand comes with its own set of challenges. It’s hot, humid, often wet, and sometimes you can go from baking sunshine to mountain chill or a heavy rainstorm very quickly.

That means I don’t choose gear based only on protection. I also care a lot about airflow, how quickly things dry, how bulky they feel, and whether I can realistically live in them for a long day on the bike.

Because let’s be honest, the safest gear in the world is not much use if it is so uncomfortable that you keep making excuses not to wear it.

Daddy Modular Adv

My current helmet is a modular ADV helmet from Daddy, with an inbuilt sun visor. (I have owned a few helmets prior to this helmet, including a beloved Shoei. However, this Thailand Daddy Brand has proven to be very comfortable (and affordable), compared to imported brands).

Thai immigration in Chiang Khong. Crossing with a motorcycle into Laos

One thing I appreciate with this helmet is the practicality. In hot weather, little conveniences matter a lot, and features like a modular front and internal sun visor make life easier when riding through changing light, stopping often, or dealing with long days in the heat.

I used to be much more resistant to full-face style helmets years ago than I am now. These days, I value protection and comfort far more than I value that “free” feeling of lighter or more open helmets. Experience changes your mindset a bit.

Thai immigration in Chiang Khong. Crossing with a motorcycle into Laos

If a helmet fits badly, I won’t love it, no matter how good it looks on paper.

Komine JK-053 Mesh Jacket

This jacket has been one of the most reliable pieces of gear I’ve owned.

Komine Ladies Mesh Motorcycle Jacket

My Komine JK-053 mesh jacket has been a staple for years, and I still rate it highly for riding in Thailand. The airflow is exactly what I need in a tropical climate, and it has held up extremely well over time.

Komine Ladies Mesh Motorcycle Jacket

One of my main issues with the jacket originally was that I found the stock armour too flimsy for my liking. So I swapped it out and upgraded the protection, which made a huge difference to how much confidence I had in it.

That’s one thing I’ve learned over time: sometimes a piece of gear is almost perfect, and it just needs better armour rather than replacing the whole item.

Knox Micro-Lock insert

The armour upgrade was worth doing.

Knox D30 Back Protector

I replaced the original Komine (flimsy) back protector padding with Knox armour, and I’m much happier with that setup. It feels more serious in terms of protection, while still being comfortable enough to wear in the heat.

I’m a big believer in gear that gives confidence without feeling like you’ve strapped a wardrobe to your body.

Pando Moto Kusari

These have been the most comfortable riding pants I’ve owned.

The Pando Moto Kusari pants surprised me a bit because they manage to feel wearable and practical without making me feel like I’m dressed for battle every time I stop somewhere. Pretty useful also, when riding to cafés, viewpoints, border towns, or anywhere you’re on and off the bike regularly and don’t want to look like a spaceman.

Pando Moto Kusari Black Ladies Jeans

They also work better in the heat than I expected, which is always a major point in their favour.

Pando Moto Kusari Black Ladies Jeans

Older riding jeans I used before were fine, but they often involved compromises with fit, weight, or extra armour pieces. These feel like a much more sorted setup.

Rokker Hip Protectors

One thing I don’t like is when gear looks “complete” but still leaves important gaps.

Rokker Hip Protectors

The Pando Moto trousers had hip pockets, but no hip protectors included, so I added Rokker Hip Protectors. It was a small change, but an important one. I would much rather finish the job properly than assume a piece of gear is complete just because it looks good in product photos.

Forma Adventure

Oh dear, Forma….

Boots have honestly been one of the trickiest categories for me. For while, the Forma Adventure boots were a staple and I absolutely loved how comfortable they felt. Compared with stiffer, clunkier boots, they felt almost ridiculously easy to live with. Comfort-wise, they were excellent.

Rokker Hip Protectors

But over time I also ran into frustrations. Once water got into them, it tended to stay in them. In a place where rain, river crossings, puddles, and general tropical nonsense are part of life, that became a real downside.

The final nail in the coffin was the lack of ankle protection on a ride, which resulted in torn ligaments after a fall.

At the moment, I also have a budget ADV boot from Scoyco in the mix while I work out what my next ideal long-term boot will be.

So this is the honest answer: boots are the category I’m still refining. I want decent rigidity, proper ankle protection, comfort for long days, and something that makes sense for tropical riding. Do you have any suggestions?

Scoyco MX

I keep coming back to Scoyco gloves for one simple reason: they fit me.

That might sound basic, but if you have small hands, you’ll know that glove shopping can get annoying very quickly. I’ve tried more expensive gloves before, and a lot of them just felt too rigid or awkward. These feel light, soft, and natural on my hands, which means I actually enjoy wearing them.

And that matters.

Scyoco Gloves

They’ve also held up surprisingly well considering the price and the tropical conditions they’ve been through. Humidity, heat, rain, they’ve done a solid job.

I’ve purchased three sets over the last 15 years, which I think is pretty solid for an MX glove and Thailand conditions.

Additional Personal Staples

A lot of motorcycle gear articles stop at helmet, jacket, pants, boots, and gloves. But in real life, there are always a few smaller items that end up being part of the setup too.

For hydration, I use a Camelbak pack, which in Thailand is less of a luxury and more of a survival strategy.

Scyoco Gloves

For luggage, I keep things fairly simple with a GIVI E300 top box and a small Alpinestars magnetic tank bag. Nothing wildly exciting, but both are practical and that’s what matters to me most.

Scyoco Gloves

And then there are the boring little essentials that never look glamorous in photos but always earn their place: tools, electrical tape, cable ties, poly bags, visor spray, and a first aid kit. Which tend to come in handy!

Scyoco Gloves

Those are the items that quietly save the day.

Priorities that Never Shift

After a lot of riding, my priorities are pretty clear.

First, I want gear that suits the climate I actually ride in, not the climate a marketing department imagines. If something is too hot, too heavy, or too awkward, it becomes a chore.

MotoGirlThailand - Zed Dtracker

Second, I care a lot about fit. Especially as a woman rider, I have no patience left for gear that almost works, would be fine with alterations, or technically fits if I stand in one position and don’t breathe too deeply. I want gear that works with me, not against me.

Third, I want protection that feels real. Good armour placement, proper support, decent construction, and gear that inspires confidence are all far more important to me than a flashy brand name.

To Sum Up

If I had to sum up my motorcycle gear in one sentence, it would be this: I want gear that is protective, practical, comfortable in the heat, and realistic for the kind of riding I actually do.

Not showroom gear. Not fantasy expedition gear. Just gear that works.

If you ride in a hot climate, if you’re trying to balance protection with comfort, or if you’ve also spent far too long hunting for gear that actually fits properly, hopefully this gives you a useful starting point.

Was this helpful? Have questions? Leave a comment. I’d be interested to read your thoughts.

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