10 min read

Cycling Photography: Camera Settings and Techniques

Cycling gives photographers two distinct creative modes: freeze the action completely or use panning to convey speed with a blurred background. Knowing when to use each — and the exact settings for both — separates compelling cycling images from snapshots.

What Makes Cycling Unique to Photograph

Cyclists travel at speeds ranging from 15 km/h on a mountain climb to over 70 km/h in a sprint finish. That's a wider speed range than almost any other sport, and it demands different settings depending on where in a race you're shooting. The other defining factor is that cycling is almost always outdoors — meaning you have natural light to work with and backgrounds that range from mountain scenery to city streets.

Freeze Action Style

Sharp rider, sharp background. Conveys power and clarity. Works best in interesting environments — mountain passes, cobblestones, urban settings. Requires 1/1000s minimum.

Panning Style

Sharp rider, blurred background. The classic cycling look — immediately communicates speed and motion. Technically challenging but very rewarding. Typically 1/60s–1/250s.

Settings for Freezing Cycling Action

Shutter Speed by Discipline

The shutter speed you need depends on how fast the riders are moving and how close you are. A rider 20 metres away at 50 km/h requires a much faster shutter than one 100 metres away at the same speed.

SituationRider SpeedMinimum ShutterRecommended
Sprint finish / downhill60–80 km/h1/1600s1/2000s
Road race flat section40–55 km/h1/1000s1/1600s
Criterium corner30–45 km/h1/1000s1/1250s
MTB descent / jump30–60 km/h1/1250s1/2000s
Mountain climb15–25 km/h1/500s1/800s
Velodrome sprint60–75 km/h1/2000s1/2500s
Track endurance45–55 km/h1/1000s1/1600s

Aperture and ISO Outdoors

Outdoor cycling is the most photographer-friendly lighting scenario in sports. Bright daylight means you can often shoot at 1/2000s, f/5.6, ISO 400 — clean files, sharp action, and enough depth of field to track riders comfortably. Use aperture priority in good light and let the camera handle exposure as riders move from shade to sun.

Bright Daylight (road race, sunny day)

Shutter: 1/1600–1/2000s

Aperture: f/5.6–f/8

ISO: 200–400

Overcast / Dappled Light

Shutter: 1/1000–1/1600s

Aperture: f/4–f/5.6

ISO: 400–1600

Indoor Velodrome

Shutter: 1/1600–1/2000s

Aperture: f/2.8

ISO: 2000–6400

Panning: The Essential Cycling Technique

Panning — tracking a moving subject with your camera during a slow shutter exposure — produces the most iconic cycling images. The rider stays sharp while the background streaks horizontally, communicating speed in a way that a frozen image simply cannot.

Panning Shutter Speeds

Rider SpeedShutter for Light BlurShutter for Heavy BlurDifficulty
60+ km/h (sprint)1/250s1/100sMedium
40–55 km/h (road)1/160s1/60sMedium–Hard
25–40 km/h (criterium)1/125s1/50sHard
15–25 km/h (climb)1/60s1/30sVery hard

The goal is a background that clearly streaks horizontally while the rider's torso, face, and number remain sharp. Wheels will always blur with spokes — this is normal and desirable, as spinning wheels read naturally to the eye. The rider's body is what needs to be sharp.

Panning Technique Step by Step

  1. Set a low shutter speed — start at 1/125s and adjust based on results
  2. Pre-focus on where the rider will be — use a fixed point on the road or a piece of tape on your focus point
  3. Start your pan early — begin tracking the rider 3–4 seconds before you shoot, matching their speed smoothly
  4. Keep your upper body moving, pivot from your waist — arms stay still relative to torso, the whole upper body rotates
  5. Shoot a burst as the rider passes your pre-focused point — 3–5 frames gives you options
  6. Follow through after the shot — don't stop the pan the moment you press the shutter

💡 Image Stabilisation and Panning

Most modern IS/VR/IBIS systems have a dedicated panning mode that stabilises the vertical axis only, leaving horizontal movement free. Always switch to panning mode (usually Mode 2 on Canon/Nikon lenses) when panning — standard stabilisation fights your pan movement and produces worse results than no stabilisation at all.

Lens Choice for Cycling

LensBest UseWhy
70-200mm f/2.8Roadside, criterium, finish lineVersatile range, fast aperture for indoor/low light
100-400mm or 200-600mmRoad race remote positionsReach for riders passing at distance
400mm f/4 or 500mm f/5.6 primeMountain passes, finish line from press areaMaximum reach and sharpness
24-70mm f/2.8Podium, team buses, tight criterium cornersClose access, environmental context
16-35mmCreative wide-angle, breakaway shots from low angleEnvironmental drama, unusual perspectives

💡 The 70-200mm is the Cycling Workhorse

For most cycling events — club races, gran fondos, local criteriums — a 70-200mm f/2.8 handles 90% of shots. At 200mm roadside you get tight head shots. At 70mm you capture the full peloton. If you can only bring one lens to a road race, this is it.

Positioning: Where to Stand

Road Race

Road races offer multiple positioning strategies depending on what type of image you want:

Criterium

Criteriums (short circuit races) are the best format for photographers — riders pass the same point every 3–5 minutes. Pick your corner, set up, and refine your technique with each lap. The tight, fast corners are where crashes happen and where the most dramatic leaning-into-the-turn shots occur.

Mountain Bike

Autofocus Strategy

Cyclists move in predictable straight lines and predictable arcs through corners — unlike combat sports or ball sports, cycling is one of the most AF-friendly sports you can shoot. Zone tracking or subject tracking with continuous AF works reliably. Single-point AF is sufficient if you pre-focus on a fixed point for a roadside pan shot.

SituationAF ModeNotes
Rider approaching head-onSubject/face trackingModern AF systems handle this easily
Panning shotSingle point or small zonePre-focus on a fixed point on the road
Peloton passingWide zone trackingLet AF grab the nearest rider
MTB jumpSingle point pre-focusedFocus on peak of jump arc, shoot as rider enters frame
⚡ Calculate Cycling Action Settings

Complete Settings Reference

SettingFreeze (Road)PanningVelodromeMTB
Shutter1/1600s1/80–1/160s1/2000s1/2000s
Aperturef/5.6–f/8f/8–f/16*f/2.8f/4–f/5.6
ISO200–800100–4002000–6400400–1600
AFContinuous trackingSingle point (fixed)Continuous trackingContinuous tracking
DriveHigh burstLow–medium burstHigh burstHigh burst
IS modeStandardPanning modeStandardStandard

*Panning aperture: smaller aperture (f/8–f/16) gives more exposure latitude for the slow shutter in bright light. Use ND filter if needed to reach slow enough shutter speeds in strong sun.

💡 ND Filter for Panning in Bright Sun

Panning at 1/60s in bright daylight requires a very small aperture or an ND filter to avoid overexposure. A 3-stop ND filter (ND8) gives you back f/5.6 at 1/60s in bright sun. A variable ND (2–5 stops) is the most flexible option — you can dial in exactly the exposure you need without changing aperture and affecting depth of field.

Final Thoughts

Cycling rewards preparation more than almost any other sport. Know the course, know where the action peaks — corners, climbs, feed zones, the finish — and be there early. The decisive moment in cycling is predictable if you've done the homework. Set your settings for the type of shot before riders arrive, and when the peloton comes through, your only job is timing and framing.

Master the pan. It's technically demanding, takes practice, and produces images that immediately look different from every freeze-frame shot at the same event. Even a 20% success rate on panning frames gives you something genuinely compelling.