Oscar & Juan Gálvez Racetrack
Oscar & Juan Gálvez Racetrack
In World Supercross, riders enter the start gate with their focus already narrowed and their vision finely tuned. Some competitors roll in with tinted motocross goggle lenses shielding their eyes from the intense stadium lights, the surface shimmering with stacks of tear-off laminates ready to be ripped away. Others keep their goggles hanging from the handlebars or snap the straps, shake their arms, or press their gloves against the grips — all part of the familiar pre–race goggle ritual as engines build and countdown clocks tick.
Whether their eyewear is already in place or part of the final seconds before launch, one thing is universal: every World Supercross rider carefully chooses and prepares their goggles long before the gate drops.
“People are looking for durability and performance but also the minimum of hassle,” says Shaun Simpson, one of the UK’s most successful Grand Prix motocross riders. “Even the tiniest details matter. You can’t ride at top speed with your eyes closed.”
Today’s top Supercross goggles — whether Scott’s Prospect, Oakley’s Airbrake or 100%’s Armega — are so advanced that the racing versions are almost identical to what fans can buy, with only a few custom colours or strap tweaks. The reason: the hardware is already world-class.
The goggle frame is the backbone of every high-performance motocross eyewear system. Modern frames are more compact, more durable and more technologically advanced than ever before, combining rigid sections for strength with flexible areas that enable a snug, universal helmet fit.
Frames have reduced in bulk to allow room for larger lenses, giving riders a wider field of vision—a major advantage in high-speed pack racing. They also integrate:
Multiple layers of high-density foam are bonded to the frame, providing:
This comfort is essential for long motos under hot stadium lights or in muddy, heavy-roost conditions.
Most premium frames are made from tough polycarbonate resins, shaped in extremely precise steel casts that withstand immense pressure. A single mold can cost over €100,000 and must be accurate to a thousandth of a millimetre.
Companies like Scott manufacture hundreds of thousands of goggles yearly, many using water-transfer painting techniques to give each frame its own unique finish.
Over the last 15 years, motocross goggle lenses have seen some of the biggest leaps in performance. Materials like Lexan deliver near-military grade protection.
Riders battling in traffic face constant “roost”: high-velocity rocks, mud and debris. A race lens not only needs to resist this impact, but must stay locked into the frame no matter what.
Jeremy Seewer, Ducati’s MXGP factory rider, sums it up:
“You get a lot of s**t in the face… Once or twice a year you get a rock so big it shakes your whole head.”
Modern lenses feature:
Premium lenses undergo strict testing, including being shot with a 3mm steel ball at 112 m/s — far above CE standards — to ensure maximum safety.
In muddy or rain-hit rounds, fans can easily spot two essential systems used in motocross vision management.
Thin laminated sheets stacked on top of the lens, used for instant clarity. Modern tear-offs:
A film housed in canisters that rolls across the lens when the rider pulls a cord.
Latest improvements include:
Both systems represent huge leaps in reliability compared to earlier generations.
Even the best lens won’t help if the goggle isn’t comfortable.
Riders rely on foam that is:
Not long ago, riders stuffed women’s sanitary pads into helmets to cope with sweat. Today’s foam technology has made that unnecessary.
Elite racers typically bring multiple pairs to every event, and many even have brand technicians preparing them. But for amateur riders and consumers, the ability to reuse goggles is a big selling point.
Jeffrey Herlings explains:
“A new goggle is like a new towel — it needs breaking in. I’ll run in a new set during practice so they’re perfect for racing.”
Shaun Simpson adds:
“You can un-click the lens, throw the goggle in the washing machine and it’s good to go. I’ve washed goggles 50 times with no issues.”
Modern straps are wider, grippier and more durable. Failures still happen in extreme weather, but overall, goggles have become one of the least-worrying pieces of equipment for riders pushing the limit.
From impact-resistant lenses to perfectly engineered frames, Supercross goggles represent a fusion of safety, clarity, comfort and performance. The modern rider depends on them not just for protection but for absolute confidence at top speed.
In the high-pressure environment of World Supercross, where every fraction of a second and every centimetre of visibility matters, today’s goggles are no longer just accessories — they’re essential tools for racing at the very edge.