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By MTB Cycling Gear
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Best Trail Helmets Under $150 for 2026: Protection Without the Premium


The Giro Fixture MIPS saved my skull on a root drop gone wrong last fall. $85 helmet. Still intact. Still wearing it.

That crash reminded me: the difference between a $300 helmet and a $100 helmet isn’t safety certification. Both pass the same tests. The difference is weight, ventilation, and how much plastic your head sweats against.

I’ve tested seven sub-$150 helmets over the past year. Some on purpose. One very much not on purpose. If you’re also building a complete bike on a budget, this guide will help you protect your head without sacrificing funds for other critical first upgrades.

Quick Verdict: Top 3

HelmetBest ForWeightPrice
Giro Fixture MIPSAll-around value340g$85
Bell 4Forty MIPSHot weather riding358g$110
POC AxionMaximum protection feel380g$140

What Actually Matters

MIPS (or Similar Tech)

Rotational impact protection isn’t marketing. The slip plane between helmet and head reduces rotational forces in angular impacts—the kind that cause concussions.

Every helmet here except one has MIPS or equivalent (POC’s SPIN, Leatt’s 360° Turbine). The one without it isn’t worth buying in 2026.

Coverage

Trail helmets need more coverage than XC lids. Extended rear coverage protects when you go over the bars backward (it happens). Temple coverage matters for side impacts.

All seven helmets here have decent coverage. Some better than others.

Fit System

A $150 helmet with a good fit system beats a $300 helmet that doesn’t fit your head shape. Most use dial retention. Quality varies wildly.

Best Overall: Giro Fixture MIPS

Weight: 340g (measured, size M) Price: $85 Sizes: S, M, L, XL

Why It Wins

Value. The Fixture does everything adequately for less than $90.

The Roc Loc Sport retention system is basic—single dial, limited vertical adjustment—but it works. The dial is chunky enough to use with gloves. It stays put once adjusted.

18 vents keep air moving reasonably well. Not great in 90°F weather, but acceptable for most conditions. The visor is fixed position, which is annoying but not deal-breaking at this price.

MIPS integration is clean. The liner doesn’t feel like it’s floating around like some cheap implementations.

Trade-offs

No sweat guide channels. On long climbs, sweat runs straight into your eyes. The padding is basic and compresses quickly. After six months, it’s noticeably thinner.

The aesthetic is bland. It looks like what it is: a budget helmet. If style matters, look elsewhere.

Who It’s For

New riders who need protection without commitment. Riders who break helmets regularly. Anyone building a complete bike on a tight budget.

Best Ventilation: Bell 4Forty MIPS

Weight: 358g (measured, size M) Price: $110 Sizes: S, M, L

Why It Wins

15 vents with actual channel design. Air flows through, not just in.

The Float Fit retention system is borrowed from Bell’s premium helmets. Good vertical adjustment range. The dial mechanism is smooth. This is $200 helmet retention in a $110 package.

The sweat guide works. Channels direct moisture away from your eyes. On a humid climb last August, this was the only helmet that didn’t blind me with sweat.

Trade-offs

The MIPS liner makes more noise than others. You hear it creak occasionally when turning your head. Not loud, but noticeable.

Coverage is adequate but not extensive. The rear sits higher than the POC or Leatt options. Fine for trail riding, marginal for aggressive enduro.

Who It’s For

Hot climate riders. Anyone who sweats heavily. Riders who prioritize climbing comfort over descending protection.

Best Protection Feel: POC Axion

Weight: 380g (measured, size M) Price: $140 Sizes: XS/S, M/L, XL/XXL

Why It Wins

Coverage. The Axion wraps low and wide. Temples, lower rear skull—all covered.

The EPS foam is thicker than competitors. Whether this means better protection is debatable (all pass the same tests), but it feels substantial. The psychological confidence matters.

POC’s SPIN pads are different from MIPS—silicone inserts that allow rotation. Less mechanical complexity. Works similarly in practice.

Trade-offs

Heavy at 380g. You feel it on long rides.

Minimal ventilation. 10 vents that don’t channel particularly well. This is a cool-weather helmet. Above 75°F, it’s a sweat box.

Sizing runs large. The M/L was loose on my normally-medium head. Try before buying.

Who It’s For

Aggressive riders prioritizing protection. Cool climate riding. Anyone who’s had a bad crash and wants maximum perceived safety.

Also Tested

Smith Convoy MIPS

Price: $120 Weight: 350g

Good helmet undermined by weird fit. The retention system sits too high on many head shapes, creating pressure points. Ventilation is excellent. Koroyd impact tech is interesting but unproven versus MIPS. If it fits your head, worth considering.

Leatt MTB 2.0

Price: $90 Weight: 365g

360° Turbine tech is Leatt’s rotation protection—silicone discs that compress and rotate. Works. Heavier than MIPS equivalents. Excellent coverage. Mediocre ventilation. Good value if you find it on sale under $70.

Specialized Tactic 4

Price: $130 Weight: 345g

MIPS Evolve is Specialized’s integrated approach—lighter, less bulk. Works well. Excellent ventilation. But at $130, you’re close to better helmets on sale. Full retail price isn’t justified.

IXS Trail Evo

Price: $75 Weight: 395g

The only helmet here without rotational protection. In 2026, that’s unacceptable. Heavy. Bulky. Cheap feeling. The $10 saved versus the Giro isn’t worth the compromise. Skip it.

Crash Test Reality

The Giro Fixture took a direct side impact into a stump at approximately 15mph. Helmet cracked (as designed). Head didn’t. Slight headache, no concussion. MIPS liner showed clear signs of rotation—it worked.

This wasn’t scientific testing. But it was real-world validation that a $85 helmet with proper certification does its job.

Fit Is Everything

Every head is different. What fits me might create pressure points for you. Before buying:

  1. Measure your head circumference
  2. Check the manufacturer’s size chart
  3. If between sizes, size up (you can tighten, can’t loosen beyond range)
  4. Buy from somewhere with good return policy
  5. Wear it around the house for an hour before riding

A properly fitted cheap helmet protects better than a poorly fitted expensive one.

The Upgrade Question

Should you spend more than $150?

For safety? No. All certified helmets meet the same standards.

For comfort? Maybe. Premium helmets are lighter with better ventilation.

For features? Depends. Removable chin bars, magnetic buckles, integrated cameras—nice but not necessary.

Most riders are well served by these sub-$150 options. Spend the saved money on skills coaching or your first critical upgrades. That prevents more crashes than any helmet. And if you’re also choosing components for your build or dialing in tire setup, these helmets leave budget for those priorities.

Maintenance Reality

These aren’t expensive helmets. Don’t baby them.

Pads are replaceable on all models except the IXS. Order spares when you buy—they’re cheap and wear out. Wash pads monthly. The funk gets real otherwise.

Replace after any significant impact. The foam compresses and won’t protect as well second time. At these prices, treating helmets as consumable is reasonable.

The Bottom Line

For $85, the Giro Fixture MIPS provides adequate protection, decent comfort, and proven MIPS tech. Most riders don’t need more.

If you sweat heavily or ride in heat, spend the extra $25 for the Bell 4Forty’s superior ventilation.

If you want maximum coverage and don’t mind weight, the POC Axion at $140 is still half the price of their premium options.

All three will protect your head. Pick based on your climate, riding style, and head shape.


Tested over 12 months in Pacific Northwest conditions. One unplanned impact test. All weights measured on our scale.