Motorcycle riding

Summary

  • Motorcycle riding increases all-cause mortality risk mainly by increasing the chance of dying from road traffic injuries, especially head trauma.
  • Per distance travelled, fatality risk is about 30–34 times higher for motorcyclists than for car occupants in multiple analyses.
  • Helmets meaningfully reduce death risk (about 35–37%) and reduce serious head/brain injury risk (around 65–69%), but they do not remove the risk.
  • Risk is higher for older riders (for example, over 55), for riders who speed or use alcohol, and for high-performance (“supersport”) motorcycles.

Factor description

This factor measures whether a person rides a motorcycle (as a rider or passenger).

  • Measurement type: self-report (yes/no).
  • Timeframe: current behavior (do you ride a motorcycle now).
  • Units: not applicable (it is a behavior, not a lab value).

Impact on all-cause mortality

  1. Direct injury mortality (the main pathway)
  • Motorcycles provide little physical protection compared with cars. In a crash, the rider’s body absorbs more impact.
  • Because road traffic injuries count as a cause of death, higher crash fatality rates translate into higher all-cause mortality risk.
  • Studies consistently show much higher death risk per mile (or per distance) for motorcycles than for passenger cars (often around 30–34 times higher).
  1. Head injury as a key driver of death
  • Head trauma is a leading cause of death in motorcycle crashes.
  • Helmet use reduces the chance of dying and reduces serious brain injury risk, so helmet policies and helmet wearing can reduce population-level deaths.
  1. Risk is strongly modified by behavior and context
  • Speeding, alcohol use, fatigue, distraction, and unlicensed riding are repeatedly linked to higher fatal crash risk.
  • Riding environment matters (for example, high-speed roads, night riding, heavy traffic, and poor road conditions increase crash severity and risk).
  1. Motorcycle type and performance
  • High-performance “supersport” motorcycles have substantially higher fatal crash rates than standard/touring models in observational studies.
  • The likely mechanism is a combination of higher speeds, acceleration capability, and rider selection (who chooses these bikes).

Patterns

  • Age: Older riders (commonly reported as 55+) tend to have worse outcomes after crashes, including higher mortality and more severe injuries.
  • Sex: Men account for the majority of motorcycle fatalities in many national datasets, reflecting higher riding exposure and higher-risk riding patterns.
  • Safety behaviors: Not wearing a helmet, alcohol use, and speeding are common contributors in fatal crash reports.
  • Vehicle choice: Supersport/high-performance motorcycles are linked to higher fatal crash rates than standard/touring categories.
  • Policy environment: Places with stronger helmet laws and enforcement generally show higher helmet use and fewer head-injury deaths.

KamaLama scoring

Motorcycle riding is scored as an event-based (binary) risk factor. If you ride a motorcycle, KamaLama treats this as a sustained exposure to a high-injury-mortality hazard. If you do not ride, the model assigns no penalty from this factor. This scoring is threshold-based (yes/no), not dose-response, because the available field option in KamaLama is binary.

Category/RangeScore (in years)
Yes-10
No0

Practical tips

  • The biggest risk reduction is not riding a motorcycle. If you can switch to a safer mode of transport, that usually reduces injury death risk the most.
  • If you do ride, always wear a certified, well-fitting helmet and keep it properly fastened on every trip (even short rides).
  • Add protective gear as a habit: abrasion-resistant jacket/pants, gloves, boots, and eye protection.
  • Do not ride after alcohol or drugs, and avoid riding when very tired or in poor weather/visibility.
  • Take a certified safety course and practice defensive riding (assume other drivers may not see you).
  • Choose lower-risk bikes (standard/touring) over supersport/high-performance motorcycles, and keep tires/brakes/lights well maintained.

References

This website is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for medical advice.

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