
Best Touchscreen Motorcycle Gloves That Actually Work
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Every rider who’s fumbled with a phone at a gas station knows the drill. Gloves off, swipe, gloves back on. Repeat at every stoplight when your GPS reroutes you through construction.
It’s a small annoyance that adds up fast, especially if you’re running a dash-mounted screen like the Chigee or using your phone for navigation on a RAM or Quad Lock mount.
I do a lot of city riding in Bangkok now, and touchscreen gloves went from “nice to have” to “non-negotiable”. Traffic here moves in unpredictable bursts. You don’t get the luxury of pulling over to adjust your route. I found that my Pando Moto Ivy gloves work incredibly well on both the touchscreen of my Chigee AIO 5 Play and on my iPhone, which honestly surprised me given how many “touchscreen compatible” gloves I’ve tried that barely register a tap.
Here’s what most gear sites won’t tell you: touchscreen compatibility varies wildly between gloves, and the label on the box doesn’t guarantee much. Some gloves need you to press so hard into the screen that you’d think you were trying to crack it. Others work on your phone but fail on aftermarket dash screens. And a few actually nail it, letting you swipe and tap with the same confidence you’d have with bare fingers.
These seven gloves all passed that bar.
Quick Picks
Retro looks, modern CE-rated guts, and touchscreen tips that respond like bare skin. Buy from Pando Moto with code ROAD for 10% off. My personal favorite, reviewed here.
- Touchscreen fingertips for easy navigation
- CE Level 1 knuckle protection under leather
- Abrasion-resistant palm reinforcements
- Perforation is only on the palms, not the tops
- No hard sliders on palm—softer padding only
Under $60 with CE knuckle armor and touchscreen on the index finger and thumb. Hard to beat for the money.
- Excellent airflow keeps hands cool in heat
- Flexible fit allows natural hand movement
- Lightweight feel reduces fatigue on rides
- Touchscreen-friendly for quick phone use
- Limited protection vs full leather gloves
- Durability concerns with stitching over time
Hard knuckle protection, breathable mesh, and a touchscreen index finger at a fair price.
- Lightweight design reduces hand fatigue on rides
- Breathable build keeps hands cool in traffic
- Good grip and control for daily commuting
- Flexible fit allows easy, natural movement
- Limited protection vs full gauntlet gloves
- Stitching durability may wear with heavy use
Mesh-heavy construction with what riders call the best touchscreen performance they've tried on a glove.
- Excellent airflow keeps hands cool in heat
- Flexible fit with great bar feel and control
- Solid knuckle and palm protection for class
- Touchscreen-friendly fingertips work reliably
- Runs small, sizing up is often needed
- Limited protection for aggressive street riding
I wore these for two years through high heat and humidity. Full goat leather, short cuff, with conductive suede on the index finger and thumb.
- Excellent abrasion resistance from goat leather
- Hard knuckles and reinforced palm for protection
- Touchscreen fingertips with solid grip control
- Stretch fit reduces fatigue on long rides
- Limited airflow-perforation makes them warm on very hot days
- Sizing runs snug especially around cuff—consider going up one size
Goatskin palm, 3D air mesh, and serious knuckle protection that doesn't sacrifice dexterity.
- Superior ventilation for maximum airflow
- Advanced knuckle protection for impact resistance
- Enhanced grip and flexibility for better control
- Limited wrist coverage due to short cuff
Waterproof gauntlet with PrimaLoft insulation and touchscreen compatibility on the thumb and index finger.
- Excellent waterproofing keeps hands dry
- Warm insulation for cold-weather riding
- Good flexibility and control feel for touring
- Strong knuckle protection with comfort
- Too warm for hot or humid climates
- Limited airflow in warmer conditions
Pando Moto Ivy Black
If you want a glove that looks like it belongs on a ’70s cafe racer but protects like it was designed this decade, the Ivy is it. These are my daily riders in Bangkok, and they’ve earned that spot.
The Rundown
The Ivy is built from 1mm perforated goatskin leather that feels broken in from the first ride. No stiff break-in period. No fighting with your fingers to get them into position. You just pull them on and go.
Pando tucked a flexible knuckle guard under the leather and added abrasion-resistant overlays on the palm and outside edge of the hand. Those are the spots that hit pavement first in a slide. The whole package earns a CE Level 1 certification under EN 13594:2015.
All fingertips are touchscreen compatible, not just the index finger, which means you can pinch-to-zoom on a map or type a quick message without any dead spots. On my Chigee’s screen and on my iPhone, they register taps and swipes every single time.

What Stands Out
The crash warranty. If you go down in a pair of Ivy gloves, you send Pando your story and some photos, and they replace them with a new pair. On a sub-$100 glove with CE armor and touchscreen compatibility, that’s an absurd amount of confidence in the product.
The Trade-Offs
The Ivy isn’t on Revzilla or Amazon. You’ll need to order from Pando Moto’s website or a US retailer like MotoFever or High Road Motorsports. Shipping from Europe can take a bit longer.
- Silver lining: Pando Moto’s direct site often runs promotions, and their customer service is responsive. Plus you get access to their full color range.
- Alternative option: If you want a similar retro-styled leather glove from a major US retailer, the Alpinestars Celer V3 (covered below) uses goat leather with touchscreen capability and is available on Revzilla.
The perforation means these are warm-weather gloves. They won’t cut it below about 55°F/13°C.
- Silver lining: That same perforation makes them fantastic in the heat. In Bangkok’s 95°F days, my hands stay comfortable.
- Alternative option: For cooler or wet conditions, skip to the Alpinestars Bogota Drystar XF below.
Our Review
We wrote a full review of the Pando Moto Ivy if you want the deep dive.
Super comfortable leather, no pinch points, CE Level 1 knuckle armor, reinforced palms, and touchscreen fingertips works on phone screens. I wear these daily in Bangkok and never get sweaty hands. Buy from Pando Moto with code ROAD for 10% off. My personal favorite, reviewed here.
- Touchscreen fingertips for easy navigation
- CE Level 1 knuckle protection under leather
- Abrasion-resistant palm reinforcements
- Perforation is only on the palms, not the tops
- No hard sliders on palm—softer padding only
Alpinestars Reef V2
The Reef V2 is the glove you grab when you want decent protection and touchscreen access without spending much. At $59.95, it undercuts most of this list by a wide margin, and it doesn’t feel like a compromise.
The Rundown
Alpinestars built the Reef V2 around stretch mesh and synthetic materials that keep it light and breathable. The stretch mesh on the back of the hand lets a lot of air through, so your hands won’t get clammy on summer commutes.
The knuckle protector is CE Level 1 rated, 3D-molded TPU that sits ergonomically over the knuckles without adding bulk. Synthetic suede on the palm gives you solid grip on the bars, and ADV riders on forums confirm it holds up even when standing on the pegs.
Touchscreen compatibility lives on the index finger and thumb through conductive synthetic leather. Both fingers register on capacitive screens, which means you can tap and pinch without removing the gloves.

What Stands Out
The price-to-protection ratio. CE Level 1 knuckle armor, touchscreen on two fingers, and a Velcro wrist closure for $59.95 is the lowest entry point on this list that doesn’t sacrifice safety certification.
The Trade-Offs
These are textile and synthetic gloves, not leather. Abrasion resistance won’t match a goatskin glove like the Pando Moto Ivy or the Celer V3 in a slide.
- Silver lining: The lighter materials make the Reef V2 more breathable and quicker to dry if you get caught in a shower.
- Alternative option: For leather construction at a similar price point, the Alpinestars Copper ($79.95) is the next step up.
The short cuff won’t tuck into a jacket sleeve the way a gauntlet will.
- Silver lining: Short cuff means you can get them on and off in seconds, which is exactly what you want for stop-and-go city riding.
Lightweight summer gloves with excellent airflow and flexibility for daily riding comfort. Offers basic impact protection while keeping hands cool and responsive.
- Excellent airflow keeps hands cool in heat
- Flexible fit allows natural hand movement
- Lightweight feel reduces fatigue on rides
- Touchscreen-friendly for quick phone use
- Limited protection vs full leather gloves
- Durability concerns with stitching over time
Alpinestars Copper
The Copper is Alpinestars’ purpose-built urban glove, and it shows. Everything about it is designed for the rider who spends most of their saddle time navigating city streets.
The Rundown
The outer shell uses a mix of synthetic leather and textile with strategically placed Lycra panels for stretch and airflow. PVC hard knuckle protection covers the back of the hand, giving you impact resistance without the bulk of a sport glove.
The palm is synthetic suede with padding on the fingers for vibration dampening on longer rides. Touchscreen compatibility is on the index finger, and it works reliably on phone screens and GPS units.
At $79.95, the Copper sits in a sweet spot for riders who want hard knuckle protection and touchscreen capability but don’t need (or want) a full leather construction.

What Stands Out
How quick they are to get on and off. The Velcro wrist tab keeps things simple, and the overall design prioritizes ease of use over aggressive protection. For a commuter glove, that’s exactly the right call.
The Trade-Offs
Riders report mixed comfort on rides longer than an hour. The fit is snug, and the synthetic materials don’t have the same give-over-time that leather provides.
- Silver lining: That snug fit is exactly why the touchscreen works well. There’s no material bunching at the fingertips to create dead zones on the screen.
- Alternative option: For all-day comfort in a similar price range, the REV’IT Mangrove 2 ($82.99) is worth a look.
Touchscreen is only on the index finger, not the thumb.
- Silver lining: For most phone and GPS interactions, the index finger is all you need. Pinch-to-zoom is the only thing you lose.
- Alternative option: The Pando Moto Ivy and Alpinestars Celer V3 both have multi-finger touchscreen capability.
Lightweight urban gloves that balance airflow and everyday protection, keeping hands cool while maintaining solid grip and control for commuting rides.
- Lightweight design reduces hand fatigue on rides
- Breathable build keeps hands cool in traffic
- Good grip and control for daily commuting
- Flexible fit allows easy, natural movement
- Limited protection vs full gauntlet gloves
- Stitching durability may wear with heavy use
REV’IT Mangrove 2
The Mangrove 2 is REV’IT’s newest entry in their lightweight adventure lineup, and riders are already calling its touchscreen capability some of the best they’ve experienced on a motorcycle glove.
The Rundown
REV’IT loaded the Mangrove 2 with mesh fabric and paneling that lets air flow freely through the glove. For summer riding or hot climates, it breathes like a dedicated off-road glove but brings the protection you’d expect from a road-rated piece of gear.
The glove uses REV’IT’s Connect Finger Tip technology, their proprietary conductive material that enables touchscreen operation. Buyer reviews on Revzilla and FortNine consistently rate the Mangrove 2’s touchscreen response above other gloves in this price range.
Build quality is solid for the $82.99 price point. The construction feels premium, and riders report excellent feedback through to the bike’s controls, with no mushiness or disconnect between your hand and the grip.

What Stands Out
The touchscreen performance. One Revzilla reviewer called it “probably the best touchscreen I’ve ever had on a glove,” and that tracks with the broader feedback. REV’IT’s Connect Finger Tip material delivers more consistent conductivity than what most competitors are using.
The Trade-Offs
The Mangrove 2 runs small. Multiple buyers recommend sizing up at least one size from your usual.
- Silver lining: REV’IT’s sizing chart is accurate if you measure your hand first. And a slightly roomier fit from sizing up can actually improve comfort on long rides.
- Alternative option: If you’re between sizes or prefer a more forgiving fit out of the box, the Alpinestars Reef V2 has a more relaxed fit profile.
As a mesh-heavy glove, it won’t provide the abrasion resistance of a leather glove in a crash.
- Silver lining: The combination of mesh airflow and REV’IT’s build quality means you’ll actually wear these on every ride instead of leaving them at home when it’s hot. The best protection is the gear you actually put on.
Lightweight, highly breathable adventure gloves with solid knuckle protection and all-day comfort. Built for hot-weather riding without sacrificing flexibility or feel.
- Excellent airflow keeps hands cool in heat
- Flexible fit with great bar feel and control
- Solid knuckle and palm protection for class
- Touchscreen-friendly fingertips work reliably
- Runs small, sizing up is often needed
- Limited protection for aggressive street riding
Alpinestars Celer V3
The Celer V3 is for the rider who wants real leather between them and the road but doesn’t want a bulky gauntlet hanging off their wrists. It’s a sport-oriented short cuff glove that works equally well splitting lanes as it does on a Sunday canyon run.
The Rundown
The entire glove is built around goat leather, which gives you genuine abrasion resistance without the stiffness of cowhide. Alpinestars used a hard PU knuckle protector for impact protection and added rubber grips at strategic points for better control feel.
Touchscreen compatibility comes from conductive suede material that runs the full length of the index finger and covers the thumb tip. Having it along the entire index finger rather than just the tip means you can swipe from any angle, not just straight on.
The V3 drops the third/fourth finger bridge that older Celer versions had, which gives your fingers more independent movement. It’s a small change that makes a big difference when you’re trying to precisely tap a specific point on a 4-inch screen.

What Stands Out
The conductive suede running the full length of the index finger. Most gloves only put conductive material on the very tip, which means you have to tap at exactly the right angle. The Celer V3 gives you more surface area to work with, and it shows on touchscreens.
The Trade-Offs
Ventilation is limited. This is a leather glove without perforation, so your hands will run warm in summer heat.
- Silver lining: That solid leather construction is exactly why the Celer V3 will perform better in a slide than any mesh glove on this list. It’s a protection-first design.
- Alternative option: For hot-weather riding with touchscreen capability, the REV’IT Mangrove 2 or Pando Moto Ivy (perforated leather) are better choices.
The fit runs slightly small, particularly at the cuff.
- Silver lining: The cuff loosens up after a few rides as the leather breaks in. Most riders report the tightness is brief.
I wore these for two years through high heat and humidity, with minimal wear and no tears or broken seams. Slight discolorations, but still strong and supple leather. Super high quality.
- Excellent abrasion resistance from goat leather chassis
- Hard PU knuckles and reinforced palm for impact protection
- Touchscreen fingertips and rubber grips for control in traffic
- Stretch panels and pre-curved fingers reduce fatigue on long rides
- Limited airflow-perforation makes them warm on very hot days
- Sizing runs snug especially around cuff—consider going up one size
REV’IT Sand 5
The Sand line has been REV’IT’s flagship ADV glove for years, and the Sand 5 brings meaningful upgrades to a formula that was already working well. If you’re logging serious miles on an adventure bike, this is the touchscreen glove built for your kind of riding.
The Rundown
REV’IT combined drum-dyed goatskin leather on the palm with 3D air mesh on the back of the hand and a 4-way stretch fabric between the fingers. The result is a glove that breathes like a summer glove but grips and protects like a touring glove.
Protection got a rethink for version 5. The knuckle system uses a split TPR design that’s lighter and more flexible than the Sand 4’s setup, and the palm sliders have been upgraded from TPR to TPU for better abrasion resistance. Temperfoam underneath the knuckle protector and at the cuff adds impact absorption.
REV’IT’s Connect Finger Tip technology handles the touchscreen duties, and it works just as well here as it does on the Mangrove 2. The $129.99 price reflects the premium materials and the extensive size range (XS to 4XL).

What Stands Out
The blend of off-road breathability and on-road protection. The Sand 5 doesn’t make you choose between airflow and armor. The split knuckle design flexes with your hand instead of fighting against it, which matters when you’re gripping bars for 8 hours.
The Trade-Offs
At $129.99, the Sand 5 costs more than twice the Reef V2 and significantly more than the Mangrove 2.
- Silver lining: The goatskin palm, upgraded TPU sliders, and Temperfoam padding represent a genuine step up in materials and long-haul comfort. You’re paying for components that hold up over tens of thousands of miles.
- Alternative option: The REV’IT Mangrove 2 at $82.99 shares the same Connect Finger Tip technology in a lighter, more affordable package if protection isn’t your top priority.
These are warm-weather gloves. REV’IT makes the Sand 5 H2O for riders who need waterproofing.
- Silver lining: A dedicated warm-weather glove will always outperform a waterproof glove in the heat. If you ride in mixed conditions, owning both the Sand 5 and a waterproof glove is better than compromising with one do-everything pair.
- Alternative option: The Alpinestars Bogota Drystar XF below is a solid wet-weather touchscreen option.
Lightweight, breathable, and protective adventure gloves for all-terrain riding.
- Superior ventilation for maximum airflow
- Advanced knuckle protection for impact resistance
- Enhanced grip and flexibility for better control
- Limited wrist coverage due to short cuff
Alpinestars Bogota Drystar XF
When the forecast says rain and you still need to access your GPS or phone, the Bogota Drystar XF is the glove that doesn’t make you choose between dry hands and touchscreen access.
The Rundown
This is a full gauntlet-style glove with Alpinestars’ Drystar XF membrane providing waterproof, breathable protection. The 80g PrimaLoft Silver insulation adds warmth for cool-weather riding, making the Bogota a true three-season option for commuters and tourers.
The outer construction uses goat leather on the digits for a balance of comfort and abrasion resistance, with reinforced synthetic suede on the palm for durability and grip. An over-injected seamless knuckle protector provides impact protection without creating pressure points.
Touchscreen capability is built into both the thumb and index finger, so you can tap and swipe even with the waterproof membrane between you and the screen. At $154.95, it’s the most expensive glove on this list, but it’s also the only one that keeps your hands dry in a downpour.

What Stands Out
Maintaining touchscreen functionality through a waterproof membrane is genuinely difficult to engineer. Most waterproof gloves either skip touchscreen entirely or do it so poorly that you end up pulling the glove off anyway. Riders report the Bogota actually works without excessive pressure.
The Trade-Offs
The gauntlet length and insulation make this glove too warm for summer riding in hot climates.
- Silver lining: That’s exactly why this glove exists alongside lighter options. The Bogota covers the temperature and weather range that mesh and leather gloves can’t.
- Alternative option: For warm-weather touchscreen needs, any of the other six gloves on this list will serve you better.
The gauntlet cuff takes longer to get on and off compared to a short-cuff glove.
- Silver lining: A proper gauntlet seal over your jacket sleeve keeps wind and rain from sneaking up your arms. On a rainy highway run, you’ll be glad you took the extra five seconds.
A waterproof, insulated touring glove built for cold and wet rides, with solid protection and good bar feel. Best for mid-season to winter conditions.
- Excellent waterproofing keeps hands dry
- Warm insulation for cold-weather riding
- Good flexibility and control feel for touring
- Strong knuckle protection with comfort
- Too warm for hot or humid climates
- Limited airflow in warmer conditions
Comparison Table
| Glove | Price | Style | Material | Touchscreen Fingers | Waterproof | CE Rated | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pando Moto Ivy | $109 | Short cuff | Perforated goatskin | All fingertips | No | CE Level 1 | City riding, hot weather |
| Alpinestars Reef V2 | $59.95 | Short cuff | Textile/synthetic | Index + thumb | No | CE Level 1 knuckle | Budget, casual riding |
| Alpinestars Copper | $79.95 | Short cuff | Synthetic/textile | Index finger | No | No | Urban commuting |
| REV’IT Mangrove 2 | $82.99 | Short cuff | Mesh/textile | Connect Finger Tip | No | Yes | Summer, hot-weather ADV |
| Alpinestars Celer V3 | $109.95 | Short cuff | Goat leather | Index (full) + thumb | No | No | Sport/road riding |
| REV’IT Sand 5 | $129.99 | Short cuff | Goatskin + 3D mesh | Connect Finger Tip | No | Yes | ADV touring |
| Alpinestars Bogota Drystar XF | $154.95 | Gauntlet | Goat leather + Drystar XF | Index + thumb | Yes | Yes | Wet/cold weather touring |
Buying Guide
Touchscreen Technology Isn’t All Equal
The biggest variable across these gloves isn’t protection or materials. It’s how well the touchscreen actually works in practice. REV’IT’s Connect Finger Tip technology (found on the Mangrove 2 and Sand 5) and Pando Moto’s all-finger conductivity (on the Ivy) consistently outperform basic conductive patches on single fingertips. If touchscreen reliability is your top priority, those three gloves should be at the top of your list.
Match the Glove to Your Riding Season
A touchscreen glove that stays in your tank bag because it’s too hot or too cold is useless regardless of how well it swipes. Be honest about when and where you ride. If you’re a year-round commuter, you may need two pairs: a mesh or perforated leather glove for warm months and a waterproof option like the Bogota for the rest.
Fit Matters More Than You Think
A glove that’s too loose will bunch material at the fingertips, and bunched material kills touchscreen accuracy. You want the conductive material sitting flush against your fingertip with minimal dead space. This is why the Copper’s snug fit actually benefits its touchscreen performance, and why you should follow sizing charts carefully on the Mangrove 2 and Celer V3, both of which run small.

Don’t Overlook the Basics
Touchscreen compatibility is the headline feature of this article, but don’t let it overshadow the fundamentals. Check the CE rating, look at the palm and knuckle protection, and make sure the glove is comfortable enough that you’ll actually wear it every ride. A pair of gloves with perfect touchscreen response and no armor is a bad trade. Several options here, like the Reef V2 and Ivy, prove you can have both without spending a fortune.
If you’re still unsure which direction to go, our guide to finding the best motorcycle gloves breaks down what to look for across every riding style. And for riders in hot climates, the best summer motorcycle gloves roundup covers more warm-weather options beyond what’s listed here.
Final Thoughts
This decision really comes down to three things: your climate, your budget, and how much you value touchscreen reliability over other features.
Whatever you pick, just make sure it fits properly. The best touchscreen glove in the world won’t help if excess material at the fingertip turns every tap into a guessing game. Measure your hand, check the sizing chart, and order accordingly.
For more on motorcycle tech that pairs well with touchscreen gloves, check out our best motorcycle GPS roundup and our guide to the best motorcycle phone mounts.
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