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Solo vs Group Motorcycle Touring: What 4,000 km Taught Me

By Greg Toope  |  July 14, 2026  |  8 min read

I've done my touring every way — solo, two-up with Monique, and with groups of riding friends. Newfoundland, Montana, the Tail of the Dragon, Sturgis, Daytona — 200,000 km (124,000 miles) across 28 states and several Canadian provinces, split between independent rides and group runs with friends from the local Indian and touring communities. This summer I did the 3rd annual Eastern Canadian IMRG Celebration (ECIC) in Muskoka, Ontario — 4,000 km (2,485 miles) with a group. It changed some of my assumptions.

How the ECIC Group Ride Came Together

This was the ECIC — a ride I do every year with fellow riders from the Halifax IMRG group. It's an established annual event, not something you stumble into. I rode out of Dieppe with Raye, and we picked up Kent in Fredericton. By the time we got to Muskoka, the group had grown. Indian riders from across eastern Canada, all converging on the same destination. The route out used Highway 30 (toll road), Ottawa, Renfrew, and Highway 28 through the edge of Algonquin — one of the best stretches of road in Ontario.

"Riding with a group forces a pace discipline that solo touring never demands of you."

What Group Riding Actually Feels Like

If you've never done a multi-day group tour, the biggest adjustment is pace. Solo, you stop when you want. You make a left turn on a whim. You decide at a gas station that you're going 50 km farther before stopping. Group riding doesn't work that way. You move together, stop together, eat together. For someone used to going solo, that takes adjustment.

The flip side is that you're never truly alone in a breakdown situation. You have a built-in safety net. And the social side — the stories around the dinner table, the connections with riders from other provinces — is genuinely something you don't get rolling into a motel by yourself at 7 PM.

The Pace Problem

Every group has a range of comfort speeds. Some riders want to push. Some are more conservative. Finding a pace that works for everyone without frustrating the faster riders or stressing the slower ones is a real logistical challenge. On the ECIC, the organizers handled it well — staggered starts, designated lead and tail riders, clear fuel stop communication. A well-organized group ride is a very different experience from an informal one.

On a 4,000 km (2,485 mile) trip my Indian Pursuit averaged 5.8 L/100km (40.6 mpg US / 48.8 mpg UK) — which is actually slightly better than my typical solo touring average, likely because group pace tends to be steadier and slightly slower on average.

Solo Advantages Nobody Talks About

Group Advantages Nobody Talks About

What I'd Do Differently

Ride the first day solo to the group rendezvous point instead of riding with others from the start. You get the best of both — the solitary early miles with your own music and pace, then the community when you arrive. It's how I'll approach the next group event.

Bottom line: Solo touring gives you freedom. Group touring gives you connection. The real answer is that you need both in your riding life. If you've never done a proper organized group tour, find a well-run one and go. If you've only ever done group rides, take a week and go somewhere alone. Both will make you a better, more rounded rider.

Related: ECIC Muskoka 2026 Trip Recap | How to Prepare for a Multi-Day Motorcycle Tour