Women's motorcycle gloves across leather, textile and mesh builds. Stock runs from Shark Leathers own-brand and FIVE through to Thor, Macna and Motodry. Short summer cuffs, road gauntlets and motocross mitts sit side by side, so you match grip, ventilation and crash protection to your ride.
Choosing women's motorcycle gloves
Material decides your protection ceiling. This range splits into leather, textile and mesh pairs. Leather carries the highest abrasion resistance, mesh trades coverage for airflow, and textile sits in the middle for year-round road use.
| Material | Best for | Abrasion |
|---|---|---|
| Leather | Road, sport, touring | Highest |
| Textile | All-season road riding | Medium to high |
| Mesh | Hot-weather summer rides | Lower, high airflow |
Certification matters
Buy to a standard, not a look. EN 17092 rates abrasion as AAA (highest), AA (mid) and A (entry), and certified gloves carry a CE label sewn inside the cuff. Knuckle armour is rated CE Level 1 (lower impact transmission threshold) or CE Level 2 (higher protection, around 20kN versus 30kN limits). For daily road work, target AA-rated leather or textile with Level 1 knuckles minimum. For sport and track, push to AAA construction with Level 2 sliders.
Fit and brands
Sizing is non-negotiable on gloves. A loose glove spins on impact and exposes skin. Across these brands, Shark Leathers and FIVE lead the range, with Thor, Macna and Motodry rounding it out. Measure your palm circumference, size to a snug fit with no fingertip gap, and break leather in over 2 to 3 rides.
Frequently asked questions
What women's motorcycle glove brands does Shark Leathers stock?
This collection carries gloves from Shark Leathers own-brand, FIVE, Thor, Macna and Motodry across leather, textile and mesh builds.
Should I choose leather, textile or mesh gloves?
Leather gives the highest abrasion resistance for road and sport riding, mesh maximises airflow for hot summer days, and textile sits in the middle for all-season use. This range covers leather, textile and mesh pairs.
What CE rating should women's road gloves have?
Look for EN 17092 AA-rated construction with CE Level 1 knuckle armour for daily road riding, and step up to AAA with CE Level 2 protection for sport or track use. The CE label sits inside the cuff.































































































