In-Depth Review
Cervélo Áspero-5
2025 vs Previous Generation
Cervélo didn’t just refresh the Áspero — they rebuilt the aero equation entirely. Here’s exactly what changed, what stayed, and whether it’s worth the upgrade.

When Cervélo launched the original Áspero-5, it redefined what a gravel race bike could be. Then in 2025 they did it again — same platform, radically different execution. The aero numbers jumped so dramatically that reviewers initially questioned the test conditions. They weren’t wrong to ask. Here’s the full breakdown.
The Áspero Lineage: Context Before Comparison
The original Áspero-5 (launched circa 2022–2023) was already a departure from the gravel category. While most gravel bikes were still playing defense — geometry aimed at comfort, tire clearance as the headline — Cervélo approached gravel racing from the opposite direction: take S5-derived aero shapes and stretch clearance to 45mm. The result was a bike that won races because it was genuinely fast, not merely tolerable on mixed terrain.
The 2025 iteration doesn’t abandon that philosophy — it deepens it. The development team returned to the Garford wind tunnel with one question: given that gravel-specific slick tires (Vittoria Terreno Dry, Schwalbe G-One Speed) are now the dominant choice at Unbound and Gravel Worlds, how do we optimize for that tire/bike system rather than worst-case knobby tire CdA?
Key distinction: The original Áspero-5 was designed around 40mm gravel tires. The 2025 model was wind-tunnel developed with 38mm slick tires as the primary configuration — a subtle but consequential shift toward pure gravel racing.
Geometry & Fit: What Changed, What Didn’t
| Parameter | Previous Áspero-5 | 2025 Áspero-5 | Delta |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stack (size 54) | 572mm | 575mm | +3mm |
| Reach (size 54) | 390mm | 388mm | −2mm |
| Head tube angle | 71.5° | 71.5° | — |
| Chainstay length | 420mm | 418mm | −2mm |
| Max tire clearance | 45mm | 45mm | — |
| BB drop | 72mm | 72mm | — |

The Aero Overhaul: Where the Real Story Is
This is where the 2025 Áspero-5 separates itself from anything that came before it in the gravel category. Cervélo’s wind tunnel data, tested at 45 km/h, shows the 2025 model saves 37 watts over the previous Áspero-5. For context, 10W is considered meaningful in road bike aerodynamics. 37W is transformative.
Previous Áspero-5
Baseline
Already the fastest gravel bike in its class
2025 Áspero-5
−37W
At 45 km/h vs previous generation
Key Engineering Changes
- Hourglass Head Tube — Borrowed from the S5. Reduces frontal area at the fork crown junction, historically one of the worst aero spots on a frame.
- Truncated Airfoil Tubes Throughout — The previous model applied these selectively. The 2025 iteration runs them across every primary tube, creating consistent attached flow around the entire frameset.
- Tighter Wheel-to-Tube Integration — The seat tube now hugs the rear wheel more closely, reducing turbulent wake from the tire. The BB shell was also revised to manage airflow exiting below the bottom bracket.
- Integrated Cockpit as Standard — The 2025 Áspero-5 ships with Cervélo’s integrated bar/stem unit. The aero claims are based on this configuration; running an aftermarket cockpit partially erodes the gains.
- Fully Internal Cable Routing — All cables are routed internally with new entry/exit ports shaped to minimize junction drag.
Weight: The Honest Trade-off
The 2025 frame is not lighter — approximately 50–80g heavier for the frameset depending on size. The integrated cockpit adds another ~100–150g over a conventional stem and bar. The aero-first engineering approach prioritizes CdA over scale weight, which is the correct call for gravel events where the majority of energy output fights aerodynamic drag at racing speeds.
Previous Áspero-5
~7.75 kg
Complete build (Rival AXS)
2025 Áspero-5
~7.90 kg
Complete build (Force AXS)
At Unbound pace (~200–260W for competitive amateurs), 150g over 354km costs roughly 10–15 seconds on climbs. The 37W aero saving, even at gravel speeds averaging 28–32 km/h, is worth multiples of that. The trade is unambiguously correct.

Ride Quality: Stiffer, But Not Harsher
One surprise from early testers: the 2025 Áspero-5 feels stiffer at the BB and head tube without feeling harsher through the saddle. This is partly attributable to the revised seat stay junction and high-modulus carbon in the main triangle. Compliance is managed where it matters — the seatpost and fork — while lateral stiffness is dialed up for sprint and climbing efficiency.
Compared to the previous generation, the sprint feel is noticeably crisper. The 2022/23 model was excellent but carried a slight softness associated with its deeper, more voluminous tube shapes. The 2025 model’s truncated profiles and revised layup eliminate that. You feel the road more, but the frame reacts more precisely to power input — a deliberate race-optimized trade-off.
On rough terrain: The stiffer main triangle actually pairs well with a wider tire at lower pressure. Riders who maxed out 45mm knobby tires on the previous model may want to dial back toward the 38–42mm sweet spot that matches the 2025 frame’s tuning intent.
Spec Evolution at Build Level
| Component | Previous Áspero-5 | 2025 Áspero-5 |
|---|---|---|
| Drivetrain | SRAM Rival AXS / Force AXS | SRAM Force AXS / Red AXS |
| Cockpit | Cervélo HB10 bar + separate stem | Cervélo aero integrated bar/stem |
| Wheels | Zipp 303 Firecrest | Zipp 303 S (tubeless) |
| Tires | Vittoria Terreno Dry 40mm | Vittoria Terreno Dry 38mm |
| Seatpost | Cervélo standard round post | Cervélo aero seatpost |
| Cable routing | Internal (partial) | Fully internal |
Should Previous Áspero-5 Owners Upgrade?
Upgrade if you…
- Race competitively at Unbound, BWR, or Gravel Worlds
- Hold 30+ km/h averages on gravel — aero gains compound above 28 km/h
- Want the integrated cockpit setup
- Are buying new anyway and the delta is reasonable
Hold off if you…
- Ride mixed-terrain adventure rather than pure racing
- Regularly run 42–45mm tires with aggressive tread
- Prefer a conventional bar/stem setup
- Are price-sensitive — the previous gen at a discount is still elite

The Verdict
The 2025 Cervélo Áspero-5 is not an incremental update — it’s a generational leap in gravel bike aerodynamics. The 37W saving over the previous model is real, repeatable, and large enough to matter at every competitive level. The weight penalty is marginal and easily rationalized. The handling tightening is a net positive for racing. If you’re in the market for the best aero gravel race bike available, this is it — and it isn’t particularly close.
9.5/10
Aerodynamics
8.5/10
Ride Quality
8.0/10
Value vs Prior Gen
