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Giro Fixture II MIPS Helmet Review: Is the $60 MTB-Style Lid Worth It?

The Giro Fixture II MIPS hits MIPS + universal fit + 18 vents at $60 — the cheapest Giro MIPS helmet. After 6 months of commuter + light MTB testing, here is whether it beats the $50 Specialized Align II.

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Giro Fixture II MIPS Helmet Review: Is the $60 MTB-Style Lid Worth It?

Giro Fixture II MIPS Helmet Review: Giro''s $60 Answer to Budget MIPS Competition

Giro and Specialized split the sub-$75 MIPS helmet market between them. Specialized Align II at $50 is the budget volume leader; Giro Fixture II MIPS at $60 is the slight premium alternative. After 6 months of using the Fixture II for commuting, one group road ride, and two gravel trail sessions, here is whether Giro''s $10 premium over Specialized is worth it — and whether either $60 MIPS helmet makes sense vs spending $100 on the Giro Syntax MIPS.

Specs

AttributeGiro Fixture II MIPS
Safety systemMIPS (rotational impact protection)
ConstructionIn-mold polycarbonate + EPS
Vents18
Weight (UA/universal adult)320 g
SizesUA (54-61cm), UA XL (58-65cm)
AdjustmentRoc Loc Sport
Strap materialTri-glide nylon
VisorIntegrated (removable)
StandardsCPSC, EN1078
Price$55-65

The Fixture II is Giro''s utility helmet — targeting commuters, casual MTB riders, and first-time helmet buyers. The "MTB-style" rear coverage (extends lower on the back of the head) distinguishes it from road-focused helmets like the Syntax.

What $60 MIPS Buys You

Three things separate $60 MIPS from $30 non-MIPS helmets:

  1. MIPS layer — rotational injury protection, the same technology in $300 race helmets
  2. In-mold construction — plastic shell bonded to EPS foam vs stuck-on shell (better impact distribution)
  3. Real Roc Loc Sport adjustment — one-handed dial vs fixed straps

Under $40, you get MIPS in a budget frame (Specialized Align II). Above $80, you get more vents and refined fit (Giro Syntax). The $50-70 range is where you get MIPS + utility reliability.

Check current price: Giro Fixture II MIPS Helmet →

6-Month Real-World Test

Daily Brooklyn commute (4 miles, mixed traffic): No issues. Fixture II runs slightly warmer than the Syntax (18 vents vs 25) but unnoticeable under 75°F. The integrated visor is useful for morning sun glare.

One group road ride (30 miles): At ride speeds of 15-20 mph, the Fixture II feels heavier than the Syntax (320g vs 285g) but not distractingly so. Heat management fine in 70°F weather.

Two gravel trail rides: The MTB-style extended rear coverage is meaningful here — one low-speed crash (clipped a root at 8 mph) impacted the back of my head. The extended rear coverage gave peace of mind that road helmet coverage would not.

Roc Loc Sport vs Roc Loc 5: Sport is basic — single dial, no side-to-side micro-adjustment. It holds position fine but feels less refined than the 5 Air on the Syntax.

Giro Fixture II MIPS vs Alternatives

HelmetPriceWeightMIPSVentsBest for
Giro Fixture II MIPS$60320gYes18Budget MIPS, commuter/MTB hybrid
Specialized Align II MIPS$50320gYes16Cheapest serious MIPS option
Bontrager Solstice MIPS$65340gYes13Trek ecosystem users
Bell Draft MIPS$50330gYes19Road-focused budget
Bontrager Starvos WaveCel$90350gWaveCel14WaveCel alternative to MIPS
Giro Syntax MIPS$100285gYes25Performance step up
POC Omne Air MIPS$130290gYes17Premium all-rounder

Choose Giro Fixture II MIPS if: you want MTB-style rear coverage + Giro brand for $60.

Choose Specialized Align II if: pure budget priority + don''t care about brand.

Choose Bell Draft MIPS if: same price range, road-focused, Bell brand preference.

Choose Giro Syntax MIPS ($100) if: you can stretch budget — lighter, more vents, better dial.

Choose POC Omne Air MIPS ($130) if: premium preference + brand prestige.

Honest Pros and Cons

Pros:

  • MIPS at $60 (cheapest Giro MIPS option)
  • MTB-style extended rear coverage (useful for commuting falls)
  • Integrated removable visor (useful for sun)
  • Universal Adult sizing simplifies purchase
  • Giro brand quality + 2-year warranty
  • Works for commuter + casual MTB + budget road

Cons:

  • 320g weight (heavier than premium MIPS helmets)
  • Only 18 vents (runs warm above 75°F)
  • Roc Loc Sport dial less refined than 5 Air
  • Universal sizing means less custom fit
  • 2 sizes only (UA and UA XL) — no narrow fit for smaller heads
  • Visor rattles at high speeds on rough roads
  • Straps can fray at buckle contact point after 1-2 years

Setup Notes

  • Adjust Roc Loc Sport dial to snug, not tight. One finger between chin and strap.
  • Test fit with head shake — helmet should not shift >5mm.
  • Remove visor for road use if you prefer lower aesthetic profile.
  • For 58cm heads (borderline UA/UA XL), try UA first — it covers 54-61cm.
  • Replace after any impact — even parking lot drops compress EPS foam.
  • Replace every 5 years for UV degradation.
  • Hand-wash padding to extend life and prevent funk.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Giro Fixture II MIPS worth $60?

For anyone needing budget MIPS who prefers Giro brand: yes. For pure cheapest-MIPS buyers, Specialized Align II at $50 saves $10 with nearly identical function.

Fixture II vs Specialized Align II?

Fixture II has integrated visor (Align II doesn''t). Align II is $10 cheaper. Both have MIPS, comparable vents, similar fit. Functional coin flip — pick the brand you prefer or the color that matches your bike.

Is it safe for ebike riding?

Yes — CPSC covers bicycle use up to Class 3 (28mph). For Class 4+ mopeds above 28mph, use a moped helmet.

How does it compare to the Syntax MIPS?

Syntax MIPS ($100) has 35g less weight, 7 more vents, better Roc Loc 5 dial, and aero-optimized shape. For $40 more, it''s the better helmet — but Fixture II is fine for budget-constrained buyers.

Universal Adult sizing — will it fit?

UA covers 54-61cm. UA XL covers 58-65cm. Between sizes (58cm): try UA first. Larger heads (62cm+): UA XL.

Is the integrated visor useful?

For morning/afternoon sun commutes: yes. For pure road riding (aero position): remove it. For MTB/trail: yes.

Does it breathe well in summer?

18 vents is adequate below 75°F. At 80°F+ ambient, you will feel the heat. For summer-heavy riding, upgrade to Giro Syntax (25 vents).

What''s the difference from the original Fixture?

Fixture II (2023+) added MIPS, updated shell shape, and integrated visor. The original Fixture is still sold in some markets without MIPS — avoid it, the MIPS upgrade is worth $15.

Bottom Line

The Giro Fixture II MIPS is the right helmet for budget-conscious riders who want MIPS protection at $60 with MTB-style utility. The 320g weight and 18 vents are compromises vs the $100 Syntax, but for commuter and casual use, adequate.

For pure budget MIPS, the Specialized Align II at $50 is nearly identical. For better long-term performance, stretch $40 more to the Giro Syntax MIPS. For $130+, the POC Omne Air MIPS is the refined choice.

Every tier of MIPS helmet is substantially safer than a non-MIPS alternative. Within the $50-70 budget tier, the Fixture II is a reasonable pick.

Check current price: Giro Fixture II MIPS Helmet →


Upgrade options: Giro Syntax MIPS Helmet for performance + 25 vents, or POC Omne Air MIPS Helmet for premium fit. Pair any helmet with a Garmin Varia RTL515 Radar Tail Light for rear traffic awareness.

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