Dirt Bike Brake Brackets
for Caliper Stability and Precision Fitment
GBrakes® Dirt Bike Brake Brackets are precision-machined from billet aluminum or chromoly steel to keep calipers locked under the harshest off-road conditions. Spec’d for rotor diameter, offset, and suspension travel, they eliminate flex and misalignment that cause uneven pad wear or rotor rub. Built for bikes that get thrashed in ruts, rocks, and jumps, not for showroom floors. Select the dirt bracket designed for your bike.
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More Info
Brake brackets are the backbone of any dirt bike’s stopping system. When you’re smashing through rock gardens, slamming into ruts, or landing crooked off a step-up, even a little bracket flex can throw off caliper alignment and mess with pad-to-rotor contact. That’s how you get fade, uneven wear, and lever feel that doesn’t match your input. Gbrakes Dirt Bike Brake Brackets are engineered for this kind of abuse. Built in the USA from billet aluminum or chromoly steel, not cast, we spec every piece for strength, alignment, and long-term performance. No guesswork, no wandering tolerances, and no shortcuts in materials. These brackets lock your caliper where it belongs, even under high torque and suspension travel.
Whether you’re upgrading to a floating rotor, running oversized front setups, or just stacking long days in punishing terrain, these brackets are made to hold true. We size for offset, rotor diameter, and caliper spacing, so you’re not improvising with the wrong fit. You’re not just replacing a part, you’re building a system that stays dialed in when the rest of the bike is taking hits.
Because out there, your brakes don’t get second chances.
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Caliper Drift: Under hard braking, stamped brackets flex just enough to push calipers slightly out of square with the rotor. Doesn’t sound like much? It’s enough to throw off piston balance, distort pad engagement, and create uneven bite pressure. You’ll feel it as brake noise, pulsing, or delayed clamp response.
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Rotor Rub: Even a fraction of a millimeter off-axis creates intermittent pad contact. That means constant low-grade drag, heat buildup, power loss, and vibration at speed. Over time, it warps rotors, eats pads, and ruins ride quality.
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Uneven Pad Wear: Misaligned brackets = misaligned calipers. One pad gets cooked. The other stays cool. That leads to pad tapering, premature wear, and sudden drop-off in braking performance when you least expect it.
- Bracket Damage: Off-road hits, potholes, bottom-outs, and high-torque flex will bend or fracture low-grade stamped steel. Once a bracket deforms, nothing mounts true again. Your whole brake system loses consistency.
Installed properly, Gbrakes brackets tie rotor, caliper, suspension, and wheel path together in fixed precision. That means flat pad wear, tight lever feel, zero drag, and no brake-induced wobble at speed.
Browse below for Dirt Bike brake brackets
We spec by use, weight, and real ride conditions, not catalog filler. Fixed, floating, oversized pick based on how you ride. We’ll make sure it stops.
Showing 13–24 of 27 results
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270mm Relocation Bracket – SP023
$99.00 Add to cart -
270mm Relocation Bracket – SP041
$99.00 Add to cart -
270mm Relocation Bracket – SP045
$99.00 Add to cart -
270mm Relocation Bracket – SP047
$99.00 Add to cart -
270mm Relocation Bracket – SP059
$99.00 Add to cart -
280mm Relocation Bracket – SP054
$99.00 Add to cart -
280mm Relocation Bracket – SP055
$99.00 Add to cart -
280mm Relocation Bracket – SP056
$99.00 Add to cart -
280mm Relocation Bracket – SP057
$99.00 Add to cart -
280mm Relocation Bracket – SP058
$99.00 Add to cart -
280mm Relocation Bracket – SP060
$99.00 Add to cart -
320mm Relocation Bracket – SP050
$99.00 Add to cart
- Consistent pad pressure ensures stable stopping power.
- Zero bracket flex prevents vibration or caliper shift under load.
- Parallel caliper alignment removes uneven friction and pad rolling.
- Improved modulation means crisper control, especially in rock sections or slick terrain.
- Caliper rub or dragging after suspension movement
- Uneven pad wear or rotor grooves
- Vibrations during braking—especially rock surfaces
- Visible bracket flex or bolt creep after riding
- Inconsistent lever pressure, particularly on lean
- Bike Model + Year – Each bracket is model-specific.
- Rotor Size – Compatible with 220mm, 240mm, wave, or slotted profiles.
- Caliper Brand – Works with Brembo, Nissin, Bosch, etc., on wheel combo.
- Suspension Travel – Alignment is tested across full stroke, sag, or travel position.
- Accessory Clearance – Brackets route clear of skid plates, guards, luggage, and knobby chain rub.

Integrating Brackets with Brake System Upgrades
- Oversized rotors need precise bracket fit to eliminate shift/movement.
- Upgraded calipers require correct alignment for piston sweep across pad.
- Braided lines need bracket clearance to prevent rubbing during flex.
- Wheel changes or bigger tires can affect bracket routing, refit ensures clearance.
How Brackets Influence Brake Feel, Not Just Fitment
- Locks in piston angle so the pad makes full contact with the rotor face—no rolling or off-center bite.
- Stabilizes retraction after release, minimizing residual drag and keeping your lever travel consistent.
- Holds torque under shock so caliper clamping force stays centered, even under fast load/unload cycles like braking bumps or trail chatter.
You might not see a bracket flex on the trail, but you’ll feel it. Especially on high-speed descents, switchback compression zones, or whenever you’re loading the front end hard. If your lever feel gets worse mid-ride or your pads are glazing without heavy braking, suspect your bracket.
This is the connective tissue of the system. Without a dialed-in bracket, even the best pads and rotors can’t work at full potential. Get that geometry tight, and everything clicks, bite, modulation, and confidence. That’s how braking should feel.

Installation Best Practices
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Clean all mating surfaces, mount brackets to flat hubs with no paint, powder, or debris interfering with contact. Precision starts at the base.
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Verify bracket alignment after full suspension cycle; re-check torque under full load, not just on the stand.
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Spin wheel: no drag. Brake lever: steady pad contact with zero sponginess or pulsing.
- Inspect after the first ride, ensure clamped hardware hasn’t shifted or settled under heat.
One install. Sealed control. No second-guessing at speed.