Is It Time to Leave the Sport? Honestly… I’m Starting to Wonder.

Trackday

Well-known member
I never thought I’d say this, but here we are: is it even worth staying in this sport anymore?
One by one, GTA bike shops are shutting their doors. The ones that survive? Half of them act like they’re doing you a favour just by unlocking the door.

Try buying a new bike—good luck. Inventory is thin, prices are insane, and every model you want is “coming soon” or “allocated” or “maybe next season.” And servicing? Don’t even get me started. Every shop has its horror stories: sky-high labour rates, techs rushing jobs or cutting corners, and bikes coming back worse than they went in. Yet somehow the bill is always eye-watering.

But the real kicker? The greed baked into the system.
Distributors mark parts up like they’re made of gold. They want maximum margins, luxury lifestyles, and bigger bonuses, and that cost rolls downhill straight onto riders. Dealers then tack on their own markup, charge stupid prices for basic service, and shrug like this is just “how the industry is.”

Meanwhile, riders get squeezed from every direction. Can’t buy local because pricing is ridiculous. Can’t buy online because you get lectured about “supporting your shop.” Can’t get service because you either get gouged, ignored, or treated like an inconvenience.

It feels like the whole ecosystem—distributors, dealers, the lot of them—decided the sport is a cash grab instead of a community.

And honestly? That’s how you kill a sport.
Not with noise complaints.
Not with land closures.
Not with regulations.
You kill it by making it so expensive, so frustrating, and so inaccessible that normal people just walk away.

I love motorcycles. But the industry around them? It’s making it harder every year to stay in the game.

Anyone else feeling the same?
 
Nope. You need to take a breath. The industry, liked many, has its challenges. The sun will still rise tomorrow.
 
You kill it by making it so expensive, so frustrating, and so inaccessible that normal people just walk away.

I love motorcycles. But the industry around them? It’s making it harder every year to stay in the game.

Anyone else feeling the same?
Agreed, but my beef isn't with the businesses. It's with government regulation, police enforcement, road conditions and insurance costs.
 
Sounds like you are equating motorcycling with the businesses that sell supporting products.

Once you have your bike and your gear, do you really need to deal with these businesses again, other than service, if you cannot perform it yourself? You can even find an independent mechanic or shop that's less "greedy" or learn to do basic maintenance yourself. I have lots of friends who are willing to help me with something on my bike and it's a fun garage project that can be shared over a few beers.

To me, these two things - motorcycles and the supporting businesses - are separate and just because there are problems with the industry of making and selling motorcycles and gear, for me, it maybe accounts for 2% of the ownership experience and it doesn't really affect my enjoyment of the motorcycling itself once I'm on the bike and braaaaping away to my heart's content the other 98% of the time.

As for being criticized about buying cheaper items online? Who cares? Just because you get some people with strong opinions, why do you let it get to you personally? It's your money and you have to pay for other things like food and rent. Buy cheap and buy often, and the hell with people who want to tell you how you should spend your own money. This is not just related to motorcycles. People have lots of strong opinions about how you should raise your kids, which car to drive, which churches to attend... are you also going to let these opinions get you down?

My advice is to ignore all the noise and just enjoy your bike and don't go to any motorcycle stores any more. This is not really a necessary part of the motorcycle experience once you're already equipped and it sounds like that's the part that is really stressing you out.

I don't mean to overstep, but maybe there's something else in your life besides motorcycling that's got you down?
 
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