May is Bike Everywhere Month! Here’s what you need to know to get biking around Seattle.


Please note: this blog post is available in additional languages via the links below, including Amharic, Korean, Somali, Spanish, Tagalog, and Vietnamese.


Spring is here! Lighter and warmer days mean it’s time to bring out the bikes and get ready to ride. Along with our partner organizations, we offer many programs and projects to help people of all ages and abilities bike around the city.


Please use the “drop-down” links below to jump to any topic within this blog post:


Biking, walking, and rolling are great ways to get outside, stay healthy, and get where we need to go. Biking also supports the City’s goal to have 90% of all personal trips have zero emissions by 2030. Zero-emissions modes of transportation include walking, rolling, biking, and taking transit, or using Electric Vehicles (EVs).


Bike map and guide

  • Our 2022 bike map is the most up-to-date map of Seattle’s bike lanes, neighborhood greenways, and other bicycle connections in Seattle.
  • You can get a 2022 map mailed to you for free! Request a copy.
  • Later this month, we plan to publish the updated Seattle Bike Guide, your guide to everything bicycling in Seattle.

New bike routes thanks to the Levy to Move Seattle

  • In 2021, thanks to the voter-approved Levy to Move Seattle, we completed nearly 7 miles of new protected bike lanes, and more than 7 miles of new Neighborhood Greenways.
  • Since 2016, we’ve completed about 4 miles of bike lanes and 24 miles of protected bike lanes (which have a physical barrier between people biking and moving vehicles). We have also created almost 27 miles of Neighborhood Greenways.
  • Check out this video to see Seattleites putting some recently completed bikeways to good use.
  • Thank you, Seattle, for making these possible with your Levy tax dollars!
  • Stay Healthy Streets are another option open to people walking, biking, and rolling. They are closed to pass-through vehicle traffic.
Biking along a Neighborhood Greenway.
Biking along a Neighborhood Greenway. Photo: SDOT

Bike tune-ups, rentals, and bike-share

  • The city’s many local bike shops can get your bike tuned-up and ready to ride. You can find a list of them here.
  • Don’t have a bike? Check out these rentals or one of the city’s bike share programs.

Planning ahead

Once your bike is good to go, you’re ready for next steps. Planning ahead can make you feel safe and prepared.

  • Find a well-fitting helmet to help keep you safe.
  • Where do you want or need to go? Try mapping your route ahead of time using a paper or online 2022 bike map.
  • Check out the Bikery’s Commuter Help Desk for hands-on help planning your trip.
  • Review the bike guide to make sure signaling and rules of the road are fresh in your mind.
  • Then, grab a friend to go with you on a practice ride. The most important thing is feeling safe and comfortable on your trip!

Celebrating Bike Everywhere Day

  • You can join your fellow cyclists today, Friday, May 20 for Bike Everywhere Day!
  • Throughout the month, Cascade Bicycle Club runs the Bike Everywhere Challenge.
    • Riders in the Challenge can track and compare trips, win virtual badges, and participate a community passionate about cycling.
  • Check out Cascade’s web page for group rides, happy hour rides, and more fun, bike-friendly ways to celebrate all month long!

These videos from Commute Seattle show some of our neighbors sharing their climate-friendly commute story.

This one is about a Seattle Public Schools (SPS) middle school teacher who bikes every day from the Central District to school:

Video highlighting Jessica, a Seattle Public Schools (SPS) middle school teacher who bikes everyday to work. Video credit: Commute Seattle

Bike to school with friends and family

  • Bike Everywhere Month is also a great time to try out biking to school. In May, we also celebrate National Bike & Roll to School Day.
  • Many students have celebrated so far this month!
Concord Elementary & Genesee Hill Elementary. Photo: Seattle Public Schools
  • Concord International Elementary in South Park welcomed students to school with watermelon and free lights, coloring books, and colored pencils. Many students walked or biked to school that day. Students also took calendars where they can track their walking and biking minutes each day and receive prizes at the end of the month. Kate Ayers has been teaching at Concord since 2000 and supporting students in walking and biking for all 22 years!
  • Genesee Hill Elementary in West Seattle also celebrated Walk, Bike, & Roll to School Day. Over 100 kids biked and rode scooters to school and many walked. Students got an enthusiastic welcome from Principal Dunn and parent volunteers. Everyone received free reflectors, stickers, coloring books, and pencil cases.
  • One Seattle Public Schools middle school teacher bikes every day to school! Learn more here.

Here are some other ways we and our partners support biking and rolling to school: