Bristol, Newcastle and Southampton have been ranked the top cycling commuter cities in the UK, following research by Strava.

The cycling and running social media platform, which boasts over 46 million members worldwide, analysed millions of commutes to reveal the location of the most popular cycle routes, as well as areas that could benefit from investment in local infrastructure.

>> Save up to 31% with a magazine subscription. Enjoy the luxury of home delivery and never miss an issue <<

>>> British pro hospitalised after collision with van

Bristol has the most cycling commuters per 1,000 people at 28.9, followed by Newcastle with 20.8 and Southampton with 16.4.

Leeds took fourth with 14.6 with Cardiff narrowly behind in fifth with 14.5.

London ranked sixth, with 11.9, while Manchester and Liverpool finished bottom with only a lowly 7.7 and 6.6 per 1,000 respectively.

Meanwhile, Birmingham saw the biggest year-on-year growth of 10.8%.

The 35-55 age bracket proved to be the most active commuter group, followed by the 20-35 bracket.

London, unsurprisingly, has the greatest number of cyclist commuters in total, followed by Manchester, Bristol, Leeds and then Glasgow.

The research was compiled by Strava Metro 3.0, an arm of the company that allows city planners to analyse and plan for active commuting and improving transport infrastructure. The volume of data makes it the largest aggregated active transportation dataset in the world.

Globally, commuting by bike increased by 42% last year, according to Strava’s data.

The commuting activities of just the commuters logging their journeys represented a carbon offset of 46.2 million metric tons of CO2 in the last year. That’s enough to cover the annual output of Norway or Hong Kong.

Transport for London, a long-standing partner of Strava Metro, have renewed their contract for four more years, putting the platform at the centre of its work to improve the capital’s transport infrastructure.

The research shows a link between investment in cycling infrastructure and how many people within a certain city are commuting by bike.

Bristol, which topped the rankings, received an £11.4m grant as the inaugural Cycling City, whereas Liverpool, which ranked bottom, have only just announced initiatives aimed at improving cycling infrastructure.