Rider-matched picks
Size-matched tires picks for 6 year olds, with fit and feature priorities curated for how 6 year olds actually ride.
Verified on Amazon today — prices and availability may vary.

Continental
Benchmark all-round race tire. 25mm is the most popular all-round size; 28-32mm is the best fit for endurance and rough roads.

Continental
Built for winter training, wet weather, and bad roads. 28mm is the popular all-season choice; 25mm if you want a faster feel year-round.

Continental
Reference long-mileage training and commuting tire. Heavier and slower than the GP 5000 but very flat-resistant. 28mm balances comfort and rolling speed for daily riding.

Continental
Affordable training and entry-level race tire. Good first upgrade from stock OEM tires on a sub-$1500 road bike. 25-28mm is the sweet spot.

Continental
Pro-only tubular. Requires tubular-specific rims and gluing. Used at Paris-Roubaix and Flanders. Skip unless you already race on tubulars.

Continental
Fast-rolling gravel tire for hardpack and mixed road/gravel. 40mm is the most popular size. Step up to Terra Trail or Race King for looser surfaces.

Continental
Versatile XC and trail all-rounder. 29x2.2 is the classic XC race size; 27.5x2.3-2.6 fits most trail bikes. Pair with a more aggressive front tire for chunky terrain.

Continental
Aggressive trail and enduro tire with strong wet-rock grip. Heavier and slower-rolling than the Cross King — pick it for technical descents and aggressive lines.

Continental
Heavy-duty commuter and e-bike tire. The reflex sidewall version adds night visibility. 700x32 or 700x37 are the most common urban sizes.

Continental
Value city/trekking tire with broad size coverage including kids' wheel sizes. Good budget replacement on a hybrid or commuter; step up to Contact Plus if you ride a heavy e-bike.

Mongoose
Replacement fat-bike tire — match the size to your existing rim and tire (20x4 or 26x4). Wire bead, so confirm rim width compatibility.

Royalbaby
Replacement outer tire for RoyalBaby and similar kids bikes 12-20" — confirm rim diameter and width before swapping.
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Six-year-olds are typically in the transition zone between 16" and 20" wheel bikes. Most average-height children this age still fit a 16" bike well, while taller 6-year-olds (over 118 cm) may be ready for an 18" or even a 20" bike. At this age, nearly all children should be riding without training wheels. Hand brakes should be introduced if they haven't been already — look for levers with adjustable reach that are sized for small hands. The saddle should allow your child to touch the ground with the balls of their feet, though not necessarily flat-footed. A single-speed drivetrain is still ideal for most 6-year-olds; gears add unnecessary complexity unless your child rides hilly terrain.
Every bike tire carries two size numbers on the sidewall: the modern ETRTO (ISO 5775) format like 28-622 — width in millimetres, then bead-seat diameter — and an older Imperial label like 700×28c, 26×2.10, or 20×4.0. The first number stays the same regardless of width (700c = 622 mm, 26" MTB = 559 mm, 27.5" = 584 mm, 29"/700c = 622 mm). Width affects everything: a 700×25c rolls fast on smooth roads, 700×32–35c is the modern endurance and gravel default, 2.1–2.4" suits trail MTB, and fat-bike tires run 4.0–4.8" wide for sand and snow. Kids bikes follow wheel diameter — 12", 14", 16", 18", 20", and 24" — and replacement tires must match exactly. Always check your rim's max width and your frame/fork clearance (typically printed on the chainstay or fork) before going wider.