Our Best Miles Are Still Ahead

Building the next 50 years depends on what we do together right now.

Our 2026 Fundraising Goal

2100000
698449

3,116 Donations

$224 Average Gift

With your help, our goal is to raise $2.1 million in 2026.

And thanks to the generosity of members like you and disciplined expense management, we’re generating real momentum toward that goal heading into the second half of the year.

That momentum is worth celebrating. It’s also worth being clear-eyed about: the challenges we’re facing are structural, and the work of making Adventure Cycling more valuable, relevant, and useful to every rider will take sustained commitment well beyond this year. Every dollar raised this summer funds that work: better routes, stronger advocacy, and digital tools that make it easier than ever to plan your next adventure.

If every member gave $50 above what they donated last year — or every life member gave an additional $250 — we’d have the resources to accelerate that work and complete year one of our goal.

We know not everyone will give, which means every gift matters more.

Building for the Next 50 Years

Improvements in 2026 that impact you and the riders to come

Eastern Canada Route: an 889-mile bicycle route connecting Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, and Quebec City, with 80% of the route on dedicated bike paths, launching this fall. An accessible and fun complement to our newest bikepacking epic, the Golden Gravel Trail.

National Bicycle Touring Portrait Collection: digitize a historic archive of cyclists from across America to make it permanently and publicly accessible online.

New Routes Website Experience: unify the Adventure Cycling Route Network, US Bicycle Route System, and Short Routes under one cohesive experience, giving users intuitive filtering by distance, region, route type, and more so they can find the right ride for their interests, time, and goals.

U.S. Bicycle Route System: surpass 25,000 miles nationwide, reaffirming Adventure Cycling’s leadership role in building the infrastructure of bicycle travel in America.

Short Routes: partner with organizations and tourism bureaus to create local collections of short routes where you live and want to ride

Campfire Chats: a members-only online series where presenters share knowledge and facilitate connections, alongside two in-person member events to celebrate 50 years.

Advocacy: Continue to rack up advocacy wins and launch a new online hub for member engagement, attend and sponsor the National Bike Summit, and deepen partnerships with mission-aligned organizations.

Drop-in Rides: thousands of cyclists riding our three iconic routes while thousands of others follow the adventure live through our dot-watching map.

What Your Support Made Possible Last Year

2025: A year of genuine mission work

57,298

Miles in the Adventure Cycling Route Network

3,804

Miles in the new Golden Gravel Trail alone

24,144

Miles in the U.S. Bicycle Route System

12,000

Maps and digital routes sold

500+

Participants in our guided tours program

1,200+

New members joined Adventure Cycling

Routes & Mapping

We developed three new routes: the Vancouver Crossing Loop (314 miles — our first route entirely within Canada), the Klamath Mountains Loop (329 miles, launched December 2025), and the Golden Gravel Trail (3,804 miles — launched March 10, 2026). We added 4,447 miles to our network and made 100% of our routes available on Ride with GPS. We also expanded the U.S. Bicycle Route System by nearly 950 miles — bringing the nationwide total to 24,144 miles.

Community & Experiences

Over 1,200 new members joined Adventure Cycling. More than 500 riders joined us on guided tours, and 300 attendees celebrated our 50th anniversary kickoff event at the Jubilee in the Desert this January. We launched ambassador partnerships with Lael Wilcox, Ryan Van Duzer, and Sarah Swallow, and re-energized advocacy partnerships with the League of American Bicyclists, East Coast Greenway Alliance, and Bikepacking Roots. We also began digitizing 40 years of photographs from the National Bicycle Touring Portrait Collection; 114 volunteers expressed interest in helping preserve the visual history of American bicycle travel.

Why We Need Your Help

2026: Moving forward together.

Earlier this year, we spoke candidly about our financial trajectory and the structural adjustments required to ensure organizational longevity. Thanks in large part to the generosity of members like you, unexpected estate gifts, and further cost-cutting measures from staff, 2026 is generating real momentum toward reversing our initial projections of a deficit year.

But momentum is not the same as security, and a good year shouldn’t obscure the harder truth. The challenges we named earlier are structural, not seasonal. Membership has been declining for years, and the work of reversing that, of making our case to a new generation and proving our value to every rider who depends on us, will take sustained effort and sustained resources well beyond this year. That kind of long-term investment is exactly what’s hardest to fund and easiest to defer, which is why it depends on members who believe in where we’re headed and are willing to back it now, while the turning is still underway.

Your support this year builds the foundation for the years that follow.

And the foundation is wider than it’s been in some time. In recent months, the ACA Board and representatives of Save ACA — the group of founders and past leaders who organized in opposition to the building sale — have been meeting regularly to rebuild trust and chart a shared path forward. Those conversations have led to something real: Save ACA is winding down, and its members are moving into roles supporting the organization’s future. Read the full joint statement here. It is a meaningful step, and it matters for where Adventure Cycling goes from here.

The trail doesn’t build itself.

Every $50 gets us one member closer to year one of our three-year goal. Every gift — at any level — tells us you believe the best miles are still ahead.

DONATE $1000 OR ABOVE
Receive an Ortlieb
50th Anniversary Tote
DONATE $10 OR MORE
Be entered to win
a Co-Motion Tumalo

Questions? Reply to any campaign email or write to us at questions@adventurecycling.org

Have questions? We have answers.

About the fundraising need

For several years, Adventure Cycling’s financial picture was obscured by a series of one-time windfalls — a forgiven PPP loan, Employee Retention Tax Credits, and estate gifts — that masked an underlying decline. When we adjusted for those anomalies, net cash from operations in 2024 was negative $1.5 million. We’ve done significant work to right-size the organization, and 2025 was our first genuinely positive year in some time.

The original plan was to use proceeds from the sale of our Missoula headquarters to fund the transition work of becoming fully sustainable — new systems, stronger membership infrastructure, program innovation. When members voted not to sell the building, we respected that decision fully. But it meant we needed a new path to the same destination. That path runs through fundraising: $750,000 more than our usual annual goal, each year for three years.

In 2025, the Adventure Cycling board recommended selling our Missoula headquarters as a way to generate the capital needed to fund the organization’s path to long-term financial sustainability. Members voted on the proposal, and the majority voted against the sale. The board accepted that outcome, and the building was taken off the market. It is not for sale.

We understand this was a difficult and emotional decision for many members, and we’re grateful for the engagement — even when it was hard. The vote clarified something important: members want Adventure Cycling rooted in the current building, and they want more say in decisions of this magnitude. We’ve heard that, and we’re acting on it.

While our board is currently exploring whether leasing space within the headquarters is financially viable and could generate meaningful revenue to help offset operating costs, it is not expected that this arrangement would generate the funds needed to meet the additional fundraising goal. That work is underway, but we don’t yet have firm figures to share. We’ll keep members informed as that picture becomes clearer.

Ending 2025 with positive operating income — even modestly — was a genuine achievement, and we’re proud of it. But a single positive year doesn’t undo years of decline or create the financial runway we need to invest in the future.

We’re forecasting a significant operating loss in 2026, driven largely by continued membership decline and a smaller tour slate as we pilot a new partnership-based model. At the same time, we no longer have building sale proceeds to fund the transition work of making ACA sustainable for the long haul. Positive 2025 results gave us momentum — this campaign gives us the runway to build on it.

We’ll be honest: falling significantly short would mean making difficult choices about programs, staffing, and services. We’re not in a position to absorb a large funding gap without consequences. That’s part of why we’re being transparent about the need now, early in the year, rather than waiting until the situation becomes critical. The sooner we know where we stand, the better we can plan, and the more options we have. Your gift helps us avoid those hard choices and focus on the work that matters.

That’s our honest projection. Three years of $750,000 above our usual fundraising goal would give us the capital to complete the transition work of making Adventure Cycling financially sustainable — stronger membership infrastructure, modernized systems, diversified revenue, and programs that generate both value and income. We believe that with that runway, we can get to a place where this level of emergency fundraising is no longer necessary. We’ll report transparently on our progress each year so you can hold us to that.

About how donations are used

Your donation goes directly toward the programs and infrastructure that make Adventure Cycling possible: route research and development, advocacy work on the U.S. Bicycle Route System, guided tours and community experiences, member programs, and the organizational systems that hold it all together. This campaign specifically funds the transition work of making ACA sustainable — the investments in membership value, digital infrastructure, and program innovation that set us up for the next fifty years.

We’re committed to keeping administrative and fundraising costs lean so that the majority of every dollar reaches the mission directly. You can review our full financials here.

Yes. Adventure Cycling Association is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Donations are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law. You’ll receive a gift acknowledgment for your records after your donation is processed.

Membership gives you access to member benefits — discounts on maps and tours, Adventure Cyclist magazine, member-only events, and more. It’s a transaction with real value on both sides.

A donation is a gift to the mission beyond what membership covers. It funds the work that doesn’t pay for itself — route research in remote areas, advocacy for the U.S. Bicycle Route System, community programs, and the organizational investments that make Adventure Cycling viable for the long term. Many of our strongest supporters do both: they’re members because they love the benefits, and donors because they believe in the mission.

Membership dues cover a portion of what it costs to run Adventure Cycling, but not all of it. The routes we research and maintain, the advocacy work we do on your behalf, the community programs we run — these require more than dues revenue alone can support. Especially right now, as we work to rebuild the organization’s financial foundation, donations make the difference between a program that survives and one that thrives. Your dues say you value what we do. A donation says you want us to keep doing it.

About organizational health and leadership

Adventure Cycling is currently being led by our Interim Executive Director, Maxton Caplanides. Max comes into this role as VP of Community Engagement and with a decade of service to ACA. As lead fundraiser and head of Membership, he understands our membership and its needs. Max will lead day-to-day operations, while the board, with external support, focuses on strategy and governance, including the work needed to recruit a permanent ED.

Our previous Executive Director resigned after concluding that he was not the leader Adventure Cycling needed at this time. Leadership transitions are never easy, and we’re grateful for his contributions to Adventure Cycling. The board will share updates with members when they decide the time is right to conduct a leadership search.

Our board of directors has been actively engaged throughout this transition — attending meetings, engaging directly with staff, and taking on a more hands-on oversight role than is typical during stable periods. We’ve worked to ensure that the leadership transition hasn’t disrupted program delivery or day-to-day operations, and we believe that’s largely been the case. The board is committed to being more transparent about board decision-making going forward. They plan to build a governance webpage and host member webinars where you can hear directly from leadership and ask questions.

Significantly. Two or three years ago, the organization was carrying costs it couldn’t sustain, operating on financial assumptions that turned out to be overly optimistic, and managing programs and systems that needed investment or reinvention. Since then, we’ve reduced staff by 30%, cut expenses by over $1 million, restructured our membership model, launched major new routes including the Golden Gravel Trail, deepened key partnerships. We’re a leaner organization — and in many ways a more focused and honest one. We have real work still to do, but the trajectory has changed.

Several things. We have much stronger fincancial leadership and controls in place now. We’re taking a more agile approach to planning, setting clear priorities and success metrics rather than locking into long-range assumptions that may not hold. We have plans to build more tangible value into membership to curtail the decline of memberships. And we’re being more transparent with members so that if challenges emerge, you hear about them early rather than after the fact.

About transparency and accountability

Yes. We believe financial transparency is fundamental to the trust you’ve placed in us. See 990s and annual reports here. See our Candid Profile or our Charity Navigator profile.

We’ll provide regular campaign updates throughout the year — including progress toward our fundraising goal, how funds are being deployed, and what they’re making possible. At the end of the year, we’ll share a full accounting of where the campaign dollars went and what changed as a result. We’re also committed to annual impact reporting that connects financial performance to program outcomes, so you can see the full picture, not just the numbers.

With the support we received in 2025, we increased program outputs despite having fewer staff. We launched three new routes. We expanded the U.S. Bicycle Route System by nearly 950 miles. We welcomed 500+ riders on guided tours. We kept the organization moving forward through significant internal turbulence. Your gift in 2026 funds the next chapter of that work — and we’ll show you exactly what it built.

The board is committed to deeper member engagement and more robust feedback mechanisms going forward. That includes the governance webpage they plan to build and regular member webinars. Whether future decisions rise to the level of a formal member vote will depend on the nature of the decision and our bylaws, but the commitment to keeping you informed and giving you meaningful ways to weigh in is real and ongoing.

About the campaign itself

Absolutely, and thank you. Our year 1 goal will be complete if every member gives $50 more than they donated last year (not including member dues). Any gift above $50 is welcome and meaningful. If you’re able to give at the $1,000 level or above, you’ll become a member of our Tailwind Society — our community of leadership donors who receive special recognition. If you’d like to discuss a major gift or a multi-year commitment, please reach out directly to: development@adventurecycling.org

The Tailwind Society is Adventure Cycling’s community of donors who give $1,000 or more annually. Members of the Tailwind Society receive special recognition in appreciation of their leadership-level support.

The Century Circle is our monthly giving program. Century Circle donors give a recurring monthly gift — at any level — providing Adventure Cycling with reliable, sustained revenue that helps us plan and invest with confidence. Monthly giving is one of the most impactful ways to support the organization because it compounds over time and reduces our dependence on one-time gifts.

Yes — and we’d love it if you did. Monthly giving through our Century Circle program is one of the most valuable forms of support we receive. A recurring monthly gift — even a modest one — gives us predictable revenue we can plan around, which is especially important as we work to stabilize the organization’s finances. You can set up a monthly gift here.

All donations will go into our general operating fund, where they are most needed at this time.

About membership

Your life membership has always meant more than a transaction to us — it’s a statement of belief in this organization and its mission. The most meaningful thing a life member can do right now is make a donation above and beyond that commitment. If every life member gave $250 above their usual annual gift, we’d complete year one of our additional fundraising goal entirely. You can give at that level, or at whatever level feels right, here. If you’d like to talk about your support more personally, reach out to our team directly at development@adventurecycling.org.

Yes, and we’d be glad to have you back. You can renew your membership and make a donation in the same transaction on this page.

If you have questions about your membership history or want to talk through the options, contact us at memberships@adventurecycling.org.

In 2026 we’re focused on rebuilding what it means to be an Adventure Cycling member: stronger benefits at higher tiers, premium recognition items, easier renewal flows, and more ways to engage through webinars, member events, Drop-In Rides, and a voice in shaping the tour slate. We’re also working to make our routes and digital tools more accessible to members, and we’re investing in the advocacy work that benefits every cyclist who uses our infrastructure. We also heard your desire for more U.S.-based stories in the magazine, so we’ve made that shift. Membership declined in part because we weren’t delivering enough visible value. We know that, and we’re fixing it.