A bicycle bell sound is a small thing that does heavy narrative work — one ring on a quiet street and the audience already knows someone is passing behind the rider on screen. These 29 bicycle bell recordings cover the common shapes: a single brass ding from a classic commuter bell, a double trill, the rotary flick of an old-fashioned rotary bell, and the muted softer ding of a small handlebar bell on a kid's bike. Each take is mono, dry and trimmed close to the strike.
City-life and vlog editors reach for the brighter single-ring takes because they cut through traffic and dialogue beds without help. For period or town-scene work, the rotary and old-school bicycle sounds carry the right amount of warmth — modern electronic bells would read wrong. Animation and game UI designers use the double-trill takes as confirmation chimes outside the cycling context entirely. Worth noting — the bicycle bell sound carries about 30 metres realistically, so if your scene puts the cyclist farther away, drop the gain rather than reaching for a different sample. Free to grab, no signup wall.