Adult bikes are sized by frame; kids’ bikes are sized by wheel diameter — 12, 14, 16, 20, 24 inches. Age ranges on the box are marketing. Height is the spec, and an inseam check beats everything.

The height-first chart

  • 12-inch wheels: ~2–4 years, height 33–39 in. Most are balance-bike-adjacent; skip training wheels if you can (more below).
  • 14-inch: ~3–5 years, 37–44 in. The size manufacturers skip most often, and often the right first pedal bike.
  • 16-inch: ~4–6 years, 41–48 in. The classic first “real bike.”
  • 20-inch: ~5–8 years, 45–54 in. First hand brakes and gears appear here.
  • 24-inch: ~8–11 years, 50–59 in. A small adult bike in most respects.
  • From ~59 inches tall, most kids fit a small 26-inch or XS adult frame.

Overlapping heights are normal — a 46-inch-tall kid can ride a 16 or a 20. Confidence decides: timid riders size down, confident riders size up.

The standover test (30 seconds, beats every chart)

Have the child straddle the top tube, both feet flat on the ground:

  • 1–2 inches of clearance over the top tube = right size.
  • On tiptoes = too big. This is the one to walk away from.
  • For a first pedal bike, the child seated should get both feet flat on the ground — that’s how they self-rescue instead of falling.

“They’ll grow into it” is the most expensive sentence in kids’ bikes: an oversized bike is hard to start, hard to stop, scary to corner — and a scared rider stops riding, so the bike is outgrown unridden.

The weight rule nobody prints

A quality kids’ bike should weigh under 40% of the child’s weight. A 40-pound five-year-old on a 24-pound big-box bike is carrying 60% of their body weight — the adult equivalent of pedaling a 90-pound bike. Weight is the single clearest difference between bargain bikes and the mid-tier: lighter frames, narrower cranks, kid-scaled brake levers. If a listing doesn’t state weight, that’s usually the answer.

Balance bike first, training wheels last

Balance bikes (or removing the pedals from a 12/14-inch bike) teach the actual hard skill — balancing — before pedaling. Kids typically jump from balance bike straight to pedal bike with no training-wheel phase at all. Training wheels teach pedaling while preventing balance, which is why the transition off them is tearful. If you’re buying at age 2–4, buy balance-first.

Quick checklist at purchase

  • Standover clearance 1–2 in; feet flat when seated (first bike)
  • Bike weight < 40% of child weight
  • Hand brake reach — small hands must pull the lever fully with two fingers
  • Coaster brake (pedal-back) for under-5s; hand brakes phased in at 20-inch
  • Real air tires, not foam, for anything ridden past the driveway

Size by the child in front of you, not the child you expect next summer — a right-size bike gets ridden into the ground, which is the only kind of outgrowing worth paying for.