Mondraker Anark is an aluminium gravity bike for the 2026 season with 170 mm of rear travel and a 180 mm fork, built in a mullet configuration (29" front, 27.5" rear). It is available in three builds: the complete XR build for 6000 USD, the R build for 4600 USD, and a frameset with an Öhlins shock for 3200 USD. The Anark is Mondraker's first new model in a while without an electric motor, following a run of e-bike launches, the Zendit, Scree, and limited-edition Crafty, for the 2026 season.

The bike is designed for bike parks and freeride. Mondraker permits the fitting of a dual-crown fork, provided the recommended 180 mm travel is maintained.

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Zero Suspension System with 25% progression and kinematics derived from the Summum and Zendit

The Anark uses the Zero Suspension System that Mondraker employs across its entire range. The kinematics combine solutions from two models: the DH-oriented Summum and the enduro Zendit. Progression is 25%, anti-squat is 98%, and anti-rise is kept below 100%. An anti-rise figure below 100% allows the rear suspension to work independently of braking, without a tendency to stiffen under brake load.

The absence of a 29" rear wheel option differentiates the Anark from some competing platforms (e.g. Propain Spindrift), which offer compatibility with both wheel sizes.

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63.5° HTA and 480 mm reach in size M/L, five frame sizes

Geometry in the Standard setting: head tube angle (HTA) 63.5°, seat tube angle (STA) 77°, reach 480 mm in size M/L, chainstay 445 mm (fixed across all sizes), stack 653 mm. The flip chip in the Low position drops the HTA to 63.15°, the STA to 76.65°, and bottom bracket height from 345.5 mm to 341 mm, while also shortening the reach by 4 mm. The bike is available in five sizes: S, M, M/L, L, and XL.

Suspension pivot points are individually tuned for each frame size to maintain the same leverage ratio and kinematics regardless of size. This is a solution used on higher-end platforms that eliminates the problem of varying suspension character between sizes, a common issue with cheaper designs that share a single link across the range.

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XR build at $6,000 with Öhlins and T-Type, R build at $4,600 with RockShox Zeb

The higher-end XR build receives an Öhlins RXF 38 M.3 fork (180 mm) and an Öhlins TTX 22M.2 Coil rear shock (205x65 mm). The drivetrain is SRAM Eagle 90 T-Type in mechanical form (12-speed), brakes are SRAM Maven Base, and wheels are e*thirteen Grappler Core. The frame in this build features raw aluminium with no paint.

The more affordable R build at $4,600 uses the same frame in a black finish, with RockShox Zeb Base suspension up front and a RockShox Vivid Coil Select+ at the rear. Brakes are SRAM DB8 Stealth, drivetrain is SRAM Eagle 70 (mechanical, 12-speed), and wheels are WTB Sportterra. The $1,400 difference between the two builds comes down primarily to suspension (Öhlins vs RockShox) and wheels (e*thirteen vs WTB).

The frameset at 3200 USD is the XR-spec frame (raw aluminium) with the Öhlins TTX 22M.2 Coil shock included, but no fork or other components.

Configuration

Price (USD)

Fork

Shock

Drivetrain

Brakes

Wheels

Anark XR

6000

Öhlins RXF 38 M.3, 180 mm

Öhlins TTX 22M.2 Coil

SRAM Eagle 90 T-Type, 12s

SRAM Maven Base

e*thirteen Grappler Core

Anark R

4600

RockShox Zeb Base, 180 mm

RockShox Vivid Coil Select+

SRAM Eagle 70, 12s

SRAM DB8 Stealth

WTB Sportterra

Frameset (XR)

3200

not included

Öhlins TTX 22M.2 Coil

none

none

none

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An unpowered aluminium park bike in a range dominated by e-bikes

The Anark arrives at a time when Mondraker has been focused on electric models. The Zendit, Scree, and limited-edition Crafty are all e-bikes that dominated the brand's 2026 new releases. The Anark returns to the purely pedal-powered gravity segment, targeting riders looking for a dedicated bike park machine without the added weight of a motor and battery.

Mondraker positions the Anark as an evolution of the Foxy platform with kinematics borrowed from the Summum. The bike sits between a typical enduro and a full DH rig: 170 mm of rear travel and 180 mm up front is more than most enduro bikes offer, but less than a classic DH bike. The 63.5° head angle is aggressive by enduro standards, yet slacker than a typical DH bike. The 445 mm chainstay is short for a bike with a 29" wheel up front, which should translate into nimble handling on tight park trails.