The Trail lineup spans a wide range of budget-conscious builds, with material upgrades to the drivetrain, suspension, and braking as you move up the ladder. The entry-level Trail 8 and Women's 8 rely on a basic 75mm coil fork, mechanical disc brakes, and a 7-speed microSHIFT drivetrain. Moving up to the Trail 6 and 5 introduces 100mm coil forks and hydraulic disc brakes, which significantly improve stopping power and modulation. The Trail 5 also marks the transition to a simpler 1x10 microSHIFT drivetrain, dropping the front derailleur for easier maintenance and chain retention.
At the top of the standard range, the Trail 1 and 2 feature 12x142mm rear thru-axles, 10-speed Shimano CUES drivetrains, and internally routed dropper posts. The Women's SE 4 diverges slightly, utilizing a SmartForm C2 alloy frame with a Boost 148 rear thru-axle, a longer 120mm SR Suntour coil fork, and tubeless-ready WTB rims. Across the board, Cannondale specs WTB tires, though the tread patterns vary from the fast-rolling Ranger on lower builds to the more aggressive Trail Boss and Breakout on the higher-end and SE models.