Do this every single corner, every single ride.
~10 min review · 7 stepsGather these before you start practicing corners deliberately.
Follow this sequence in every corner. With repetition, it becomes muscle memory.
Complete all braking while the bike is upright, before you initiate the turn. The NHTSA reports that improper corner entry speed is a factor in 28% of single-vehicle motorcycle crashes. Target a speed that gives you 10–15% margin below what you think the corner requires.
Before you lean, move your eyes to where you want to go — the exit of the corner or the farthest point of road you can see. Your bike follows your eyes. This is the single most important cornering skill. The MSF curriculum calls it "looking through the turn," and it prevents target fixation — the #1 mental error in motorcycle crashes.
The standard cornering line is: outside entry → inside apex (mid-corner) → outside exit. This "outside-inside-outside" line maximizes your sight distance and gives the widest, gentlest arc through the corner. On public roads, stay in your lane — your inside apex should never cross the center line.
Push the inside handlebar gently forward. To turn left, push the left bar. To turn right, push the right bar. This is counter-steering — the only way a motorcycle turns above ~15 mph. Don't think about leaning your body; think about pushing the bar. The bike will lean beneath you naturally.
Once leaned in, maintain a steady, neutral throttle or apply very gentle throttle. This loads the rear tire and stabilizes the chassis. Abrupt throttle changes mid-corner upset the suspension and reduce available traction. The goal is smooth, constant maintenance throttle — just enough to keep the bike settled.
As you see the exit and your line straightens, begin to smoothly roll on throttle while allowing the bike to stand up. Progressive acceleration through the exit loads the rear suspension and drives you out of the corner with maximum stability. Your eyes should already be scanning the next section of road.
After each corner, mentally note: Did I look through? Was my line clean? Did I maintain throttle? This 2-second mental review compounds over thousands of corners. Professional road racers debrief every lap. You should debrief every ride. Over weeks, your cornering confidence builds from conscious procedure to unconscious competence.