Our Approach

Why We Keep It Small

We keep our groups deliberately small — usually no more than 8–12 riders.

It changes the feel of the whole week.

The riding flows more naturally. Conversations don’t fragment. Meals feel relaxed rather than organised. There’s no need to split into ability groups or chase people across a valley.

A smaller group keeps things personal without being intense. It allows the week to move easily.

How We Choose the Roads

We don’t build tours around a checklist of famous climbs.

We look at how each day unfolds.

How it starts. Where it opens up. When it climbs and when it lets you settle. Café stops are chosen with as much thought as the roads themselves. On well-known routes, we’ll often start early. On other days, we’ll head for the quieter lanes most visitors miss.

The aim isn’t to conquer. It’s to ride well.

Pace & Support

Each morning begins with a clear outline of the day — distance, elevation and where we’ll regroup.

We ride together and regroup regularly. No one is left navigating alone.

On selected days — typically longer or more demanding routes — we’ll have a hire car available as support. It won’t follow every ride, and it’s not intended to. It’s there when it adds value: longer stretches, exposed sections, or days where having that option brings reassurance.

The focus remains on riding, not on being shadowed.

This isn’t a training camp. It’s a considered week on good roads.

The Details

Logistics should feel almost invisible.

Transfers are organised around sensible arrival times. Accommodation is chosen for comfort and location. Bike storage and daily checks are factored in. Communication before departure is clear and measured.

When the background runs smoothly, the riding feels simple.

Built on Cycling

Lusso has been part of British cycling since 1982.

That background shapes how we approach these tours — with attention to detail, respect for the sport, and a belief that things should be done properly.

Lusso Tours applies that mindset to the road.