A map of 10 Biking Trails in Kouvola.
For Mielakka Bikepark orientation, downhill and lift-served summer services, and the latest notices from the destination, start from the Visit Kouvola Mielakka Bikepark page(1). The City of Kouvola publishes wider cycling maps and network background on its outdoor cycling pages(2). Visit Kouvola and the Mielakan Rinnekeskus card both underline that Mielakka is not operating during the 2025–2026 winter season while the City of Kouvola looks for a new operating partner—check the city’s website and social channels before you travel for year-specific access, rentals, and events(1)(2). The trail is about 5.7 km as a loop around Mielakka hill beside Kouvola centre in Kymenlaakso. From the Mielakka sports corner you are quickly among tennis and archery facilities, then into forest paths that swing past Kouvolan Vuorimunkin hiekkakenttä before closing back toward Mielakan rinnekeskus. The same corridor overlaps in places with Mielakan kuntorata and Mielakan latu near the early climbing tracks, and near the north end you can extend onto Latu Mielakka-Pappikallio or Kuntorata Mielakka-Pappikallio if you want a longer day on the same hill network. A route listing on Jälki.fi for Mielakan kierros—aligned with this distance and start coordinates—describes roughly 99 m of ascent per lap, a mix of lit fitness-path riding at the beginning and narrower forest tread with roots and small natural obstacles, a footbridge over a deeper ditch plus a second crossing along the bottom, and yellow-style tape, arrow, and paint markings on the ground(3). It also reminds riders that after crossing the ski-slope band the line climbs a wider track that downhill riders may use: stay alert, yield predictably, and carry a bell on shared tread(3). The same material notes walking, trail running, and ski-poling as companion uses on the loop—keep speeds moderate when sight lines shorten(3). Ski.fi’s 2022 piece on the refreshed Mielakka bike park focuses on colour-graded lift lines, children’s bike park finishes, and coaching—useful context for how the hill pairs bike-park riding with forest-loop MTB in one destination(4).
Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola–Utti is about 12.7 km point-to-point through Kouvola in Kymenlaakso, tying the city centre and sports belt to the Utti direction with a finish in the Utin ampumarata postal area. It sits in one of Finland’s larger municipal bike networks: the City of Kouvola documents roughly 375 km of paths between built-up areas, plots them as blue lines in the city map service, and publishes a 1:30 000 cycling PDF for trip planning(1). VisitKouvola groups short, medium and long ride ideas across the region—from Kymijoki shore touring to multi-day itineraries like South-East by Cycle—so this connector is best read as part of that wider menu(2). Staged examples also appear on VisitKouvola’s cycling trips page(3). Along the ride, stops cluster into a few recognisable areas rather than a single anonymous strip. About 3 km into the route, Nevatien pallokenttä and Viitakummun ulkokuntoilupiste sit in the Viitakummu woods beside school blocks; a few hundred metres east, the Paaskoski winter ski line and Käyrälammen ulkoilureitti bring lean-tos and campfire rests within easy reach of the same green wedge, including Viitakummun laavu on Latu Paaskoski. Closer to Utinkatu, KSAO and Tornionmäen koulun liikuntasali mark the institutional sports strip—Tornionmäki is also named on the city’s Kouvola–Utti bus timetable as a request stop(4). Mansikka-ahon lähiliikuntapaikka and the Mansikka-ahon playing fields add neighbourhood outdoor training before the dense Kouvola sports park: Urheilupuiston uimahalli, Kouvolan jäähalli, Kouvolan keskusurheilukenttä, Kouvolan keilahalli and linked outdoor gyms step you through Palomäki jump hills, Jaakonpuisto and multiple calisthenics nodes. This belt intersects Kymijoen ulkoilureitti, shares junctions with Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola–Valkeala, Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola–Kuusankoski and Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola–Myllykoski, and parallels Urheilukeskuksen latu Kouvola and Urheilukeskuksen kuntorata Kouvola when you want skis or a run instead of wheels. Toward the northeast, Tyrrin ampumaurheilukeskus marks the route end in the Utti postal area; Utin valaistu kuntopolku forms a short lit loop around Utin urheilukenttä for runners who arrive by bike. The published bus corridor between Kouvola Matkakeskus and Utti lists Hallituskatu, Utinkatu, Karjalankatu and highway links—it helps orient drivers and visitors but is not a substitute for the city’s blue-line cycle map, which is what cyclists should follow for legal and safe routing(1)(4).
The marked hiking and mountain bike connector through Repovesi National Park is published by Metsähallitus as Patikointi-ja maastopyöräreitti Repovesi – Mäntyharju on Luontoon.fi(1). VisitKouvola’s trail overview explains how the park’s paths link cliffs, lakes, and resting places, and where to download the park map(2). Metsähallitus also summarizes bike access for visitors in the short English PDF Repovesi for Mountain Bikers(3). Visit Mäntyharju stresses that cycling in the national park is limited to the agreed tracks and maintenance roads on the park map, not the general hiking path network(4). The route is about 20.4 km as one continuous line and is not a loop. Kouvola anchors the southern end in Kymenlaakso; hikers on Repovesi trails share many of the same resting points, so keep speed sensible and expect people on foot near bridges and lookout spurs. From the Karhulahti shore band near Olhavanlahti you pass canoe landings, a bookable Karhulahti vuokrakota, and the Olhava laavu cluster beside Finland’s famous Olhava climbing cliff—worth a stop even if you do not climb. Approaching Lapinsalmi, the Lapinsalmi pysäköintialue lots give access to the suspension bridge and Määkijänsalmi Ketunlossi hand ferry across Kapiavesi (Ketunlossi does not run in winter, per visit information). Määkijä vuokrakota and its fireplace sit a short detour from the ferry line for a longer break. Along Valkjärvi the trace passes rental campfire spots and Valkjärvi varausleiritupa for overnight planning. About 9 km in, Mustalamminvuoren näkötorni rewards a climb with views over the maze of small lakes. Kuutinkanava is a long lakeside section with Kuutinkanava grillikatos and several wells for water. Near Saarijärvi paikoitusalue, Tolosentalo marks the park maintenance yard with a well in the yard. Repoveden Kirnukankaan laavu and Kirnukangas tulentekopaikka pair with Hauklammenvuori viewpoints on walking spurs described in regional trail copy. Lojukoski vuokrakota and Lojukoski tulentekopaikka face quiet water before the trace reaches Tervajärvi pysäköintialue and Talas tulentekopaikka toward the south. For the full Mäntyharju–Repovesi itinerary, Retkipaikka’s ride report describes a 33–40 km day from Mäntyharju Kisala to Saarijärvi parking with laavu hops in between(6). Fillaristi adds ground-level riding notes—graded and partly gravelled paths with plenty of fist-sized stone, short duckboard bits, and steep pitches where pushing is normal(5).
For route facts, seasonal rules, and the latest service status around Repovesi National Park, start with the RepoTour page on Luontoon.fi(1). Visit Kouvola outlines how walking and cycling access works at Lapinsalmi, along Ketunlenkki, and toward Olhava and Tervajärvi, including where to pick up maps and what to expect from the shoreline and cliff scenery(2). The wider Reporeitti renewal in Kymenlaakso and South Savo brought a roughly 40 km linked outdoor corridor between Repovesi and Mäntyharju, with the Kouvola-side leg on the order of 18 km in early Yle reporting as earthworks and shelters were added—useful background when you read older trip notes alongside today’s marked bike line(3). RepoTour is a long mountain-bike ride through Kouvola’s Repovesi landscapes. The mapped line is about 42.7 km end to end as one continuous path, not a loop. From the northern sector you pass Orilampi-linked forest roads and the Särkilampi–Murjanvuori service cluster: Särkilammen varaustupa ja sauna sits near route junctions, and Murjanvuoren taukopaikka offers a roofed rest shelter with a fireplace for a proper break early in the day. The middle of the ride concentrates services around Lapinsalmi and Kapiavesi—several Lapinsalmi parking areas, the hand-cranked Ketunlossi cable ferry at Määkijänsalmi Ketunlossi, campfire sites, rental kota spaces, and canoe launches if you combine biking with a short paddle. Karhulahti and Olhava add lakeside fireplaces, rental kota, and access toward Olhavanvuori’s cliffs; Mustalamminvuoren näkötorni rewards a short detour with elevated views. Farther along, Saarijärvi paikoitusalue and Tolosentalo anchor the national-park maintenance hub, Pitkälammen taukopaikka and Vuorentaustan maja sit on the big-lake shore, and Tervajärvi pysäköintialue supports arrivals from the west. The southern end threads Määkijä rentals and fireplaces before finishing near Lojukoski’s reservable kota and landings. Where the line overlaps other marked trails, you meet hikers on shared tread—Tervarumpu reminds faster riders to yield and to watch speed on long slopes toward Kuutinkanava, Mustalampi, and Lojukoski where sight lines and room to pass are limited(4). Kouvolan Pyöräilijät’s annual RepoTour event uses the same Reporeitti backbone with extra signage and feed stations; their notes stress carrying water and being able to follow a GPX trace in addition to field markings(5). Together with the Ketunlenkki walking loop, Repoveden maastopyöräilyreitit, the Orilampi–Ukkolammentie bike-and-hike link, and the Repovesi–Tihvetjärvi paddling line, RepoTour is the main long bike traverse of the park’s Kouvola side. Kouvola sits in Kymenlaakso; the national park’s rules on dogs, fires, and litter still apply along the ride.
Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola-Kuusankoski is an about 6.5 km point-to-point ride in Kouvola and the Kymenlaakso region, threading Kuusankoski’s river neighbourhoods toward Kouvola city-centre streets and paths. It sits inside a large municipal bike network: the City of Kouvola lists roughly 375 km of bike paths between built-up areas, with paths shown as blue lines in the city map service and on the downloadable cycling map(1). Much of the wider riverside story is told on the Kymijoki outdoor trail page, which describes a roughly 25 km marked ring tying Kouvola, Kuusankoski and Koria to the Kymijoki shoreline(2). From Kuusankoski, the riverfront clusters around Kuusankosken rantapuiston ulkokuntoiluvälineet and the developing Rantapuisto green space by Kymijoki, where the municipality has added a pedestrian bridge, grill shelter and lawns by the water(4). Around the Niivermäki woodland beside Veturi, you can break for Niivermäki Luontotorni and the short Niivermäen luontopolku through the 2014 nature reserve—rapakivi cliffs, old spruce forest and interpretation boards(5). Independent trip writing on Retkipaikka stresses how the full riverside ring mixes river views, rest structures and easy city access, including reaching the trail from the railway station and optional city bikes(3). Where your ride meets the Kymijoen ulkoilureitti alignment, expect a waymarked riverside recreation line (white posts with orange tips on the river circuit) and occasional steep bank sections: most of the ring is rideable on a normal bike, but stairs, boardwalks and bank geometry sometimes mean walking the bike or using signed bypasses for cyclists(2). From central Kouvola the same network links onward to Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola-Myllykoski, Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola-Utti and Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola-Koria along shared junctions. Paddlers can tie in where the path meets Kymijoen varsi near the Kuusankoski shore.
The route is about 4.3 km as one point-to-point path in southern Kouvola, linking Anjala with the Susikoski area on the Kymijoki river. For current details on the Susikoski rest area, river access, and how to approach from Anjala village by bike, City of Kouvola publishes South Kymijoki recreation information that also covers winter ski and snowmobile routes that follow the riverbank between Anjala bridge and Susikoski bridge(1). That material notes Susikosken taukopaikka near Susikoski bridge: a half-open shelter, fire pit, table, composting toilet, and supplied firewood, maintained by Huhdanniemen metsästysseurue (phone 040 097 8123)(1). You can reach the stop from Anjala church village along Ruokosuontie almost to the end by car or bicycle, then walk or ride the last few hundred metres along the field edge(1). Separately, Retkipaikka has reported on Kouvola’s longer Kymijoki ulkoilureitti, a flagship ring route that shows how riverbank walking and cycling have been developed across the city; this short Anjala–Susikoski line sits in the same southern Kymijoki recreation landscape even though it is not the 25 km ring itself(2). Susikoski is a logical node for river recreation: Melontareitti Susikoski-Kuovinkallio starts from the same rest-point idea on the water, Melontareitti Huhdaniemi-Susikoski runs the neighbouring paddle line, and Kymijoen reitti, Inkeroinen-Talluslahti Itään is a longer canoe spine that also lists Susikosken taukopaikka along its timeline. On land, Pyöräilyreitti Myllykoski-Anjala-Inkeroinen continues the municipal bike network from Anjala toward Inkeroiset, while Kirkkovuoden luontopolku offers a short nature foot loop past Anjalan Sihvakan uimala. Winter visitors may already know Anjalan latu and Anjalan kuntorata from the same Anjala sports cluster. Mid-route, around the Anjala local-services cluster, you pass Anjalan koulun kaukalo and liikuntasali, Anjalan Sihvakan uimala, Suosalon leikkikenttä, and Anjalan urheilutalo and urheilukenttä—useful landmarks for water, play, and sports if you are combining a bike outing with a family stop. The Susikoski shoreline is a natural turnaround and picnic point before linking to longer cycling or paddling options. For network planning beyond this segment, the municipality links a map layer of bike paths and states there are about 375 km of cycling routes in Kouvola’s built-up areas and links between them(3). Fishing along Kymijoki requires permits in most cases; the South Kymijoki pages summarize permit areas and safety near the strong current(1).
Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola-Myllykoski is an about 13.7 km point-to-point ride in Kouvola in the Kymenlaakso region, linking Kouvola’s centre with the Myllykoski bank of the Kymijoki valley on municipal bike paths. The City of Kouvola lists roughly 375 km of bike paths between built-up areas, with paths shown as blue lines in the map service and on the downloadable cycling map(1). The Kymijoki outdoor trail page describes a roughly 25 km marked riverside ring through Kouvola, Kuusankoski and Koria; this connector often meets that network near the Kouvola end and follows the same broad riverside recreation story(2). Retkipaikka’s ride report on the full Kymijoki ring stresses easy access from the railway area, city bikes for visitors, and stretches where bike and foot lines split or rejoin with boardwalks and bridges worth a slower look(3). Visit Kouvola rounds up longer Kymijoki valley cycling ideas if you want to extend a short urban link into a day ride(4). From the Sarkola sports block the route crosses into central streets and paths—think shopping streets and Kouvolatalo—before trending toward Kouvolan kylä, where Kouvolankylän kulttuuripolku branches as a separate walking loop. Further out, Rabbelugn’s riding arena and maneesi sit back from the river; closer to Myllykoski you pass Kymijoen talviuintipaikka on the bank. Saviniemen urheilualue gathers the stadium, school gyms and winter rinks at the Myllykoski end, and the same cluster links onward to Saviniemen latu, Saviniemen valaistu kuntopolku and Pyöräilyreitti Myllykoski-Anjala-Inkeroinen. Where the path meets Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola-Kuusankoski or Pyöräilyreitti Kouvola-Utti you can chain trips toward Kuusankoski or the airfield direction; Soutu-/melontareitti Myllykoski-Alakylä intersects the river corridor for paddlers. Near Sarkola, Kuntorata Sarkola-Eskolanmäki and the parallel ski and running loops on Töröstinmäki sit a short detour away for runners and skiers.
Cycle through scenic city routes or embark on longer trips
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