Your helmet is the one piece of kit that protects what matters most. This range covers full-face, modular, open-face and off-road lids from AGV, LS2, Bell, Airoh, Nitro, RXT, Leatt, Thor, Kabuto, Simpson, Shot and Merlin, built for road, adventure and dirt riders across every season.
How to choose the right motorcycle helmet
The safest helmet is the one that fits and suits your riding. Australian law requires every road helmet to meet AS/NZS 1698 or ECE 22.06, the current European standard that tests rotational impact across 18 points versus 6 in the old 22.05. Match the helmet type to how you ride before anything else.
| Type | Best for | Field of view | Weight guide |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full-face | Road, sport, touring | ~210 degrees | 1400-1700 g |
| Modular | Touring, commuting | ~210 degrees | 1600-1900 g |
| Open-face | Cruiser, cafe, urban | ~220 degrees | 950-1300 g |
| Off-road | MX, enduro, dirt | ~190 degrees with goggles | 1100-1500 g |
Full-face shells give the most coverage, protecting the chin bar where roughly 35 percent of impacts land. Carbon fibre shells cut weight by 15 to 20 percent over polycarbonate, which reduces neck fatigue on long days. Measure your head circumference in millimetres around the widest point above the brows, then size to within 5 mm. A correct fit should hold firm with zero movement when you shake your head, and the cheek pads will pack down around 10 percent in the first hours of use. Replace any helmet after a single impact or once it passes 5 years from the manufacture date stamped inside.
Frequently asked questions
What helmet types do you stock?
We carry full-face, modular, open-face and off-road helmets, plus adventure and cafe-racer styles, from AGV, LS2, Bell, Airoh, Nitro, RXT, Leatt, Thor, Kabuto, Simpson, Shot and Merlin to suit road and dirt riders.
How do I know what size helmet to buy?
Measure your head circumference in millimetres around the widest point just above your eyebrows and ears, then size within 5 mm. A correct fit holds firm with no movement when you shake your head, since cheek pads pack down around 10 percent with use.
When should I replace my motorcycle helmet?
Replace your helmet after any single impact, even with no visible damage, and once it reaches 5 years from the manufacture date stamped inside the shell. The internal liner and EPS foam degrade over time and lose protective performance.



















































































