A few months ago, a service was launched that lets you rent a bike and accessories the same way you rent a car or book a flight. You pick a destination city, give the dates you're traveling and what type of bike you want, and the service attempts to find you available bikes in shops around the area.

Before you get to the city. Without you having to poke around once you get there, trying to find an open shop with a bike that fits you.

RentaBikeNow.com is a great idea. I like the idea of renting a bike in advance and having it waiting for me. The site provides service in 144 cities. The only problem is, it doesn't seem particularly comprehensive.

When I entered "Washington, D.C." and "Saturday, September 12" to see what bikes would be available at local bike shops, I was given five bike shops to choose from. Unfortunately, just one was actually in D.C.

The other four shops were in close-in Maryland, close-in Virginia, far-out Virginia and very far-out West Virginia. West Virginia? That's not a D.C. bike shop.

But I'll cut the rentabikenow folks some slack. These things take time to build.

And perhaps there are better choices of shops and bikes in other cities. I'll certainly keep them in mind next time I travel to a U.S. city and want to bike.

RentaBikeNow hopes to expand worldwide. Good luck to them. It would be a useful service if done well.

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2 responses to “Solo travelers can rent a bike in advance in cities they plan to visit”

  1. www.placeswegopeoplewesee.com Avatar

    I’m not cutting them slack, Ellen, but then you know how I am. As someone who rents bikes occasionally, I saw RentaBike’s info when it first came out and thought the company is not providing anything you can’t (more) easily get on your own. It’s really simple to pre-rent a bike, so why have a middle person? Just Google for bike shops where you’re going, look at their websites (usually there are 0-5) and see who rents. Then you can directly ask questions about the bikes, accessories, and riding routes. Much better strategy, in my experience, and I’ve done it several times.

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  2. Ellen Avatar

    Diane,
    Thanks for the insight. It’s good to know that a google search of bike shops in the city you’re going to turns up a fair number.
    Okay, we’ll cut out the middle man. Or try both and see which works better. Or maybe trying both will expand the options. Hm, now where should I go biking??

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