After two decades of its signature VPP suspension, Santa Cruz has rebuilt the Tallboy from the ground up for Gen 6 — a four-bar Horst-link rear end, 10mm more travel at both ends, a 300g lighter frame and a CC-carbon-only lineup that starts where many trail bikes finish.

Why Santa Cruz walked away from VPP

For roughly two decades, the dual-short-link VPP (Virtual Pivot Point) layout has been the thing that made a Santa Cruz a Santa Cruz. So the real headline on the sixth-generation Tallboy isn't the extra travel — it's what's missing. VPP is gone, replaced by a four-bar Horst-link rear end.

Santa Cruz's reasoning, as reported by Bikerumor, is that it had got all it could out of VPP on this bike and wanted lower anti-squat and anti-rise plus slightly less progressivity. The four-bar layout also strips weight and frees up the seat tube for a longer dropper. Crucially this is a Tallboy decision, not a company-wide funeral — Enduro-MTB notes VPP still lives on other models such as the Nomad.

“a moderately progressive suspension that eats bumps while being spritely and sporty.”
Santa Cruz Director of Product, via Singletracks , On the design brief for the new kinematics

Tallboy 6 by the numbers

Gen 6 at a glance

130mm
Rear travel
+10mm vs Gen 5
300g
Frame weight saved
simpler four-bar linkage
65.1deg
Head angle
high setting · 64.8 low
6
Frame sizes
XS-XXL, proportional geo

Source: Bikerumor / Santa Cruz

Tallboy 6 vs Tallboy 5

Tallboy 6Tallboy 5
Rear travel 130mm 120mm
Fork travel 140mm 130mm
Rear suspension Four-bar Horst link VPP dual-link
Frame material CC carbon only C & CC carbon
Claimed frame weight from ~5.73lb (2.6kg) approx 300g heavier
In-frame storage Glovebox V2 Glovebox

Specs: Bikerumor / Singletracks

What the reviewers are saying

First rides and verdicts

Independent verdicts from across the cycling press — follow each link for the full review.

Jeff Kendall-Weed

Playful, fast, grin-inducing

“This is the bike that turns a three-hour loop into a five-hour adventure because you just can't stop smiling and sending it.”

Read the full review
AMB Magazine

Calm, efficient pedalling

“The new suspension platform delivers a remarkably calm and stable pedalling feel. Even with the shock fully open, there's very little unwanted movement under seated pedalling.”

Read the full review
Contender Bicycles

Efficient climber, snappy descender

“The Tallboy climbs very well for a bike in the 140/130mm travel range. Pedal bob is minimal, and the bike feels efficient under power.”

Read the full review
Enduro-MTB

Sensitive rear end, but noisier

“The Tallboy impresses with an extremely sensitive rear suspension that swallows bumps effortlessly.”

Read the full review

The honest tally

What's good
  • Lighter frame (~300g) with 10mm more travel front and rear
  • Lower anti-squat gives a calm, traction-rich pedalling feel uphill
  • Still rides bigger than its numbers — playful and quick to manual
  • Glovebox V2 storage and clearance for up to a 240mm dropper
  • Six proportional sizes so every rider gets the same handling
Watch-outs
  • CC carbon only — no alloy or budget C-grade frame, so it is pricey
  • Testers found stock tyres and brake pads underwhelming for hard riding
  • Enduro-MTB noted extra trail/cable noise and tight tyre clearance at the seatstay bridge
  • VPP loyalists lose the signature feel that defined Santa Cruz

Price ladder and buying one in SA

Tallboy 6 build kits (US MSRP)
Loading chart…
View data table
US MSRP
Frame 3899 $
Deore 4999 $
90 5899 $
GX AXS 6999 $
XT Di2 7499 $
X0 AXS RSV 9299 $

In Rand (approx, @ today's rate): Frame: ~R64 300 · Deore: ~R82 500 · 90: ~R97 300 · GX AXS: ~R115 000 · XT Di2: ~R124 000 · X0 AXS RSV: ~R153 000

USD recommended retail; SA pricing is set locally. · Source: Santa Cruz / Singletracks

In the US the Tallboy 6 runs from a $3,899 (~R64 300) frame-and-shock up to the $9,299 (~R153 000) X0 AXS RSV flagship, with the cheapest complete bike — the Shimano Deore build — at $4,999 (~R82 500) (Singletracks). European pricing spans a 3,799 euro frameset to 9,499 euro for the X0 RSV, per Velomotion.

There's no official rand pricing yet — South African retail is set by the local distributor on top of import duty, shipping and VAT, so it rarely tracks a straight currency conversion. Check the live BikeBuy catalogue below for the real ZAR numbers as stock lands.

Live SA prices: Santa Cruz Tallboy

We match the BikeBuy catalogue by title — here's what current Santa Cruz Tallboy stock is going for in South Africa.

Santa Cruz ditching VPP for a four-bar Horst link on the Tallboy — right call?

Tap to vote — see how readers lean

Tallboy 6 FAQ

Is VPP dead at Santa Cruz? +

No. The Tallboy moved to a four-bar Horst link, but Santa Cruz still runs VPP on other models such as the Nomad. This is a Tallboy-specific kinematics change, not a brand-wide switch.

How much travel and what wheel size? +

130mm rear and a 140mm fork — up 10mm at each end from the Gen 5 — on 29in wheels, with clearance for up to 2.5in tyres.

Is there an aluminium or cheaper carbon version? +

Not for Gen 6. It's CC carbon only across all six sizes. The cheapest way in is the frame at $3,899 (~R64 300) or the Shimano Deore complete build at $4,999 (~R82 500).

What does it weigh? +

Santa Cruz claims a frame from about 5.73lb (~2.6kg). Complete bikes were tested at roughly 13.2kg for a size L X0 AXS RSV by Enduro-MTB and Velomotion; builds generally land around 29-31lb.

When can I get one in South Africa and what will it cost? +

Pricing here is set by the local Santa Cruz distributor plus duty and VAT, so there's no fixed rand figure tied to the $3,899 (~R64 300)-$9,299 (~R153 000) US range. Watch the live catalogue prices above as stock arrives.

Sources & further reading

The bottom line

The Gen 6 Tallboy is the boldest rewrite in the model's history: dropping VPP for a four-bar Horst link buys 10mm more travel, about 300g less weight and a calmer pedalling platform, and early first-rides agree it still rides bigger and more playfully than its 130mm suggests. The trade-offs are a CC-carbon-only price of entry, some flagged trail noise, and the symbolic loss of the suspension layout that defined the brand.

For a do-it-all 29er trail bike that climbs efficiently and punches above its travel downhill, it looks like a winner — just budget for tyre and brake upgrades, and for a South African price that the distributor, not the dollar, will set. This is a compiled, cited round-up rather than our own test; ride one before you commit.