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Women Bikers and Moto Creators Rewriting India’s Road Stories

From rally racers to solo riders, these women creators are turning bikes, reels, and resilience into movement.

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For years, Indian biking culture was treated like a space built mostly for men. Today, that idea is collapsing one reel at a time. A new generation of women riders, racers, stunt athletes, and motovloggers is not just entering the scene; they’re leading it. Some are racing internationally, some are documenting solo journeys across brutal terrains, and some are teaching audiences that bikes are not just machines, they’re freedom, identity, and independence. Through content, these creators have transformed the road into a storytelling platform. Here are the women riders reshaping India’s moto culture online and off.

Vishakha Fulsunge: The woman who made motovlogging feel possible for Indian girls

India’s first female motovlogger is still riding ahead of the curve

Mumbai-based Vishakha Fulsunge, popularly known as “BikerGirl,” is widely recognised as India’s first female motovlogger. Through bikergirl_93, she built a strong and loyal audience by documenting the raw reality of long-distance riding.

Her content thrives on endurance and honesty. From Leh-Ladakh rides to difficult terrains like Spiti Valley, she turned solo travel into a visual diary of resilience. Instead of polishing every frame, she lets viewers see breakdowns, repairs, exhaustion, and triumph together.

What also makes her content important is the message behind it. Every ride quietly pushes against the idea that biking is a “male” space. Through travel vlogs, bike reviews, and motivational storytelling, she created representation where there was very little before.

Also read: 5 Moto-Creators for Auto Trends, Reviews & Riding Culture in South India

Aishwarya Pissay: Bringing world-level motorsport into everyday digital storytelling

A racer turning discipline, injury, and recovery into inspiration

Aishwarya Pissay is not just a creator; she’s a world champion. Based in Bengaluru, she became the first Indian motorsports athlete to win a world title after securing the 2019 FIM Bajas World Cup in the Ladies’ category.

Through miss.pissay, she gives audiences access to a side of motorsport people rarely see: the training, recovery, crashes, setbacks, and preparation behind elite racing. As a factory rider for TVS Racing, her content balances technical racing insights with deeply personal moments.

She frequently documents her recovery journey after injuries, making her platform feel less about perfection and more about persistence. Even while collaborating with global brands and speaking at major forums, her focus stays fixed on one goal: becoming the first Indian woman to finish the Dakar Rally.

Priyanka Kochhar: Making motorcycles feel mainstream, stylish, and accessible

The creator proves fashion and racing can exist together

With over 2.2 million followers, Priyanka Kochhar has become one of India’s biggest automotive creators through bikewithgirl.

What separates her from traditional bike creators is range. One reel could feature a superbike, another a bulldozer, another a funny observational skit around traffic or riding culture. Her “ride everything” approach makes motorcycling feel less intimidating and more entertaining for mainstream audiences.

Originally an editorial model and anchor, she slowly transitioned into professional racing, eventually earning podium finishes on the national circuit. Her content style mixes humour, reviews, lifestyle, and adrenaline without losing relatability.

She also challenges the stereotype that biking demands a certain “type” of woman. Her page openly blends glamour, racing, and technical knowledge, forcing people to rethink outdated ideas around gender and motorsport.

RiderGirl Vishakha: Turning solo expeditions into emotional storytelling

A rider who made adventure content deeply personal

Known through ridergirlvishakha, Vishakha Fulsunge built another massive digital identity with over 1 million YouTube subscribers alongside her strong Instagram presence.

An MBA graduate who stepped away from the corporate route, her journey became bigger than biking itself. She holds five India Book of Records titles, including being the first woman to ride to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and the first and fastest woman to complete the Narmada Parikrama.

Her content doesn’t just focus on destinations. It captures loneliness, social judgment, bike repairs, safety concerns, and emotional fatigue, things women riders rarely spoke openly about online before.

Even her catchphrase, “This is Tumchi Vishakha from Aamchi Mumbai,” keeps the tone deeply personal. Viewers don’t feel like spectators; they feel like companions on the ride.

Anam Hashim: Turning stunt riding from spectacle into serious sport

The athlete redefining what women can do on two wheels

Anam Hashim is one of India’s most recognised female stunt riders and cross-country rally racers. Based in Pune, she first gained nationwide attention after becoming the first woman to scale Khardung La, the world’s highest motorable road, on a 110cc scooter.

But her career didn’t stop at viral feats. She evolved into a competitive international stunt athlete and became the only Indian stunt rider to secure a podium finish at the 2017 Gymkhana Stuntride Competition in Indonesia.

Her content focuses heavily on technical skill, physical discipline, and the athletic side of stunt riding. Wheelies and stoppies may look cinematic online, but Anam constantly pushes the conversation toward professionalism and training.

She also runs initiatives around adventure sports and professional stunt training, making her platform educational as much as inspirational.

These creators are doing more than riding motorcycles. They’re changing who gets seen on the road. Through races, solo journeys, breakdowns, victories, and everyday riding stories, they’ve built a space where women are no longer treated as exceptions in biking culture. They’re becoming the face of it.

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