Motorcycle theft is a problem that is not going away. Bikes are lighter and easier to steal than cars, and a determined thief can load one into a van in under 30 seconds. While no lock can make your bike 100% theft-proof, the right security setup makes it hard enough to steal that most thieves will move on to an easier target. The best approach is layered security: multiple deterrents that each take time and specialized tools to defeat.
Beste Motorcycle Lock and Anti-Theft Systems
Kryptonite New York Fahgettaboudit Chain
The most secure chain available. 14mm hardened manganese steel links that are practically impossible to cut with handheld bolt cutters. You need a serious angle grinder, which takes time, makes noise, and throws sparks. The included disc-style lock is pick-resistant and drill-resistant. The chain weighs about 15 pounds, so this is stationary security for home, work, or regular parking. Loop it through the rear wheel and swingarm, then anchor to something immovable like a ground anchor or heavy post.
Abus Granit Detecto 8077 Disc Lock
A disc lock with a built-in alarm that screams at 100 decibels if someone moves the bike. Hardened steel body with a 13mm locking bolt, resistant to prying and cutting. The accelerometer-based alarm triggers on movement rather than vibration alone, which reduces false alarms from wind or passing traffic. Compact and easy to carry with most models including a pouch. Always use the reminder cable that threads through your wheel so you see it before trying to ride away.
Oxford Monster Ground Anchor
A chain is only as strong as what you attach it to. The Oxford Monster is a bolt-down hardened steel anchor for garage floors or concrete pads. Four security bolts spin freely if someone tries to remove them with a wrench. Once installed, it sits flush with the ground and has a rotating shackle that accepts chains up to 16mm. Low-profile enough to park your bike over it.
Monimoto GPS Tracker
Locks and chains are physical deterrents, but a GPS tracker is your backup plan. Monimoto is motorcycle-specific and alerts your phone if the bike moves without the key fob nearby. It uses cellular data to transmit real-time location. Small enough to hide inside bodywork or under the seat. Replaceable battery lasts about 12 months. Monthly data subscription runs a few dollars. Uses both GPS and cellular triangulation for tracking even in urban canyons where GPS alone struggles.
Xena XX-6 Disc Lock Alarm
A more affordable alarmed disc lock. Stainless steel body with a 6mm locking pin. The built-in alarm triggers at 120 decibels, which is genuinely startling at close range. Motion sensor auto-arms after a few seconds of inactivity. Battery lasts about 6 months. Compact and light enough to carry every ride. At about half the price of the Abus, the Xena is a strong entry point into alarmed disc locks.
Building a Complete Security Setup
The most effective anti-theft setup combines multiple layers:
- Layer 1 (visual deterrent): Disc lock with alarm. Visible, noisy, makes a thief think twice.
- Layer 2 (physical barrier): Heavy chain anchored to the ground or an immovable object. Main defense against being lifted into a van.
- Layer 3 (tracking): Hidden GPS tracker. If layers 1 and 2 fail, this gives you and law enforcement a shot at recovery.
- Layer 4 (environment): Park in well-lit, high-traffic areas. Use CCTV parking. Cover the bike so thieves cannot identify make and model at a glance.
No single lock or device will stop a professional theft crew. But multiple layers add up. Each additional barrier costs the thief time, and time is what they cannot afford.
