watchmybike

Best Bike Tracking Apps in 2026: Honest Comparison

Marien van Os

13 min read

Best Bike Tracking Apps in 2026: Honest Comparison

Best Bike Tracking Apps in 2026: Honest Comparison

If you're serious about cycling, you've probably wondered: How many kilometers are on my chain? When did I last replace my brake pads? How much have I actually spent on this hobby?

Spreadsheets work, but they're tedious. Strava tracks rides, but not components. So what are your options in 2026?

I've tested the main contenders. Here's an honest breakdown of what each does well—and where they fall short.

Quick Comparison

Feature WatchMy.Bike ProBikeGarage Componentry Biker mainTrack Geer VeloBuddy Strava
Component tracking ✅ Unlimited ✅ Unlimited ✅ Unlimited ✅ Yes ✅ Yes ✅ Yes ✅ Yes ⚠️ Basic (4 items)
Strava sync ✅ Automatic ⚠️ Premium only ✅ Automatic ✅ Optional ✅ Automatic ✅ Automatic ✅ Automatic N/A
Garmin/Wahoo sync ❌ No ❌ No ✅ Yes ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No N/A
Maintenance alerts ✅ Distance + time ✅ Distance-based ✅ AI-powered ✅ Usage-based ✅ Yes ✅ Distance + time + calendar ✅ AI-powered ❌ No
Public profiles ✅ Custom URLs ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No
Works without Strava ✅ Yes ✅ Yes ⚠️ Needs Strava/Garmin/Wahoo ✅ Yes ❌ Requires Strava ❌ Requires Strava ❌ Requires Strava N/A
Native mobile app ✅ PWA + Web ✅ Yes ✅ iOS + Android ✅ iOS + Android ✅ iOS ✅ PWA + Web ✅ iOS + Android ✅ Yes
AI features ✅ Smart import ❌ No ✅ Wear predictions ✅ Photo ID ❌ No ❌ No ✅ Predictions ❌ No
Bike fit storage ❌ No ❌ No ✅ Yes ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No ❌ No
Photo galleries ✅ Yes ⚠️ Limited ❌ No ✅ Per component ⚠️ Limited ❌ No ⚠️ Service photos ❌ No
Cost tracking ✅ Yes ✅ Yes ❌ No ❌ No ⚠️ Limited ❌ No ✅ Yes ❌ No
Price Free / €3.99-6.99/mo Free / $2.99/mo 2-mo trial / $4/mo Free (currently) Free / €3/mo Free (2 bikes) / €2/mo Pro Free (1-2 bikes) / Premium Free / €12/mo

The Contenders

ProBikeGarage

Best for: Cyclists who want established, reliable component tracking.

ProBikeGarage is the market leader with over 100,000 downloads and years of development behind it. It does the basics well: add bikes and components, set maintenance reminders, track costs, and sync with Strava (Premium). The team is actively developing new features including family accounts for households with multiple cyclists and partnerships with bike shops and manufacturers.

Strengths:

  • Established platform with large user base
  • Free tier for basic tracking
  • Native iOS and Android apps
  • Premium adds Strava sync, elevation tracking, and storage
  • Active development with regular updates
  • Working on B2B integrations (bike shops, retailers)

Weaknesses:

  • Free tier requires manual distance entry
  • No public sharing or showcase features
  • Strava sync only on Premium
  • No AI features

Verdict: The safe, established choice for component tracking. If you just want maintenance reminders and don't care about showcasing your builds, it's a solid option.


Componentry

Best for: Cyclists who use Garmin or Wahoo (not just Strava) and want AI-powered maintenance predictions with bike fit storage.

Componentry stands out in one key way: it's the only tracking app that syncs with Strava, Garmin, AND Wahoo. If you're not on Strava but use a Garmin or Wahoo head unit, this is your best option for automatic activity syncing. It uses AI to predict wear based on manufacturer recommendations and your personal riding style.

Strengths:

  • Syncs with Strava, Garmin, AND Wahoo (unique in this market)
  • AI-powered wear predictions based on your riding patterns
  • Native iOS and Android apps
  • Bike fit storage (save your position across bikes)
  • Unlimited bikes and components on paid plan
  • 2-month free trial (no credit card required)
  • Clean, modern interface
  • Team plans for clubs

Weaknesses:

  • No free tier after trial ($4/month)
  • Requires Strava, Garmin, or Wahoo—no true standalone mode
  • No public bike profiles or showcase features
  • No photo galleries
  • No cost tracking
  • Android app still relatively new (was in pre-register for a while)

Verdict: The clear winner if you're on Garmin or Wahoo instead of Strava. The bike fit storage is a nice touch for serious cyclists who've invested in a professional fit. But at $4/month with no free tier and no showcase features, it's purely a maintenance tool—and a premium-priced one at that.


Biker (NEW - Launched Nov 2025)

Best for: Cyclists who want AI-powered setup and standalone capability with native apps.

Biker is the newcomer that's making waves. Launched in late 2025, it uses AI to identify up to 6 components from a single photo of your bike—just snap a picture and it recognizes your drivetrain, brakes, wheels, and more. It works with or without Strava, has native iOS and Android apps, and connects you with local bike shops for service booking.

Strengths:

  • AI photo identification (snap a photo, auto-detect components)
  • Works standalone OR with Strava sync
  • Native iOS and Android apps
  • Bike shop integration for service booking
  • Clean, modern interface
  • Currently free while building user base

Weaknesses:

  • Brand new platform (launched Nov 2025)
  • No public bike profiles or showcase features
  • No cost tracking yet
  • Smaller community
  • Free pricing likely temporary

Verdict: The most innovative new entrant. If you want AI-powered setup and native apps without being locked to Strava, Biker is worth trying. But note: no public profiles—it's tracking-only.


mainTrack

Best for: Strava users who want automated component tracking with a polished interface.

mainTrack connects directly to Strava and automatically syncs your distances to components. It's one of the more polished options in this space, with a clean design and thoughtful UX. iOS-only for native app, but web works everywhere.

Strengths:

  • Excellent Strava integration
  • Automatic distance sync
  • Clean modern interface
  • Maintenance predictions
  • Solo developer who's responsive to feedback

Weaknesses:

  • Requires Strava—no standalone mode
  • iOS-only for native app
  • No public bike profiles
  • Limited photo capabilities

Verdict: Great if Strava is central to your cycling life and you're on iOS. Less useful if you have bikes you don't track on Strava (commuters, vintage bikes, indoor trainers).


Geer

Best for: Strava users who want a simple, focused maintenance reminder tool and appreciate good design.

Geer is an EU-based app (Estonia) that's carved out a niche with excellent copywriting and a clean, modern design. It syncs with Strava and offers smart maintenance suggestions based on component types. However, it's intentionally minimal—purely focused on tracking component mileage and sending maintenance alerts.

Update: Geer has reintroduced a free tier. You can now track up to 2 bikes and 5 components for free. The Pro plan (unlimited bikes and components) costs €2/month or €1.67/month billed yearly.

Strengths:

  • Clean, witty interface with great UX
  • Auto Strava sync
  • Service recommendations built-in
  • Component swapping between bikes
  • Customizable intervals (mileage, time, calendar)
  • Push and email notifications for maintenance reminders
  • Indoor vs outdoor ride differentiation for wear tracking
  • Privacy-focused, EU-based, user-funded
  • Works on any device (PWA)—including full desktop experience
  • Free tier available (2 bikes, 5 components)

Weaknesses:

  • Free tier limited to 2 bikes and 5 components
  • Very limited scope—only does maintenance tracking
  • Requires Strava—no standalone mode
  • No public bike profiles or showcase
  • No photo galleries or bike documentation
  • No cost tracking or analytics
  • No App Store presence (install from browser)

Verdict: Geer does one thing well: remind you when components need service. The return of a free tier makes it easier to try, and the Pro plan at €2/month is competitively priced. If maintenance reminders are all you need and you're a Strava user, it's a solid pick—just know it won't do anything beyond that.


VeloBuddy

Best for: Data-driven cyclists who want AI-powered maintenance predictions.

VeloBuddy takes a different approach: it uses AI to analyze your riding patterns, weather conditions, and component wear to predict when maintenance is actually needed—not just when you've hit an arbitrary distance. Native apps for both iOS and Android.

Strengths:

  • AI-powered maintenance predictions that learn your patterns
  • Weather-aware wear calculations (wet rides = faster chain wear)
  • Tire pressure calculator based on weight and terrain
  • Watt loss tracking from worn components
  • Ride impact analysis
  • Service history with photos and notes
  • Cost tracking with future projections
  • Native iOS and Android apps

Weaknesses:

  • Requires Strava—no standalone mode
  • No public bike profiles
  • Free tier limited to 1-2 bikes
  • AI predictions need data to become accurate (give it time)

Verdict: Best fit for performance-focused cyclists who want intelligent insights beyond simple distance counters. The AI features are genuinely innovative—if you care about how wet rides or rough terrain affect your chain, VeloBuddy thinks about this stuff. Just know you're locked to Strava.


Strava (Gear Feature)

Best for: Casual tracking if you're already paying for Strava Summit.

Strava lets you add gear and see total distance, but that's about it. You can add 4 components per bike (shoes, saddle, tires, chain) and set distance alerts.

Strengths:

  • Already integrated if you use Strava
  • Automatic distance tracking
  • Simple setup

Weaknesses:

  • Only 4 component slots per bike
  • No maintenance scheduling
  • No cost tracking
  • No component history when you swap parts
  • No public showcase

Verdict: Fine for basic "how far has my chain gone" tracking. Not a real gear management solution.


WatchMy.Bike

Best for: Cyclists who want tracking AND showcasing in one place.

Full disclosure: this is my platform. But here's an honest assessment.

WatchMy.Bike combines component tracking (like ProBikeGarage) with automatic Strava sync (like mainTrack) and adds something no competitor offers: public bike profiles with custom URLs.

Strengths:

  • Automatic Strava sync OR manual entry—your choice
  • AI-powered component import (paste specs, auto-categorizes gear)
  • Up to 3 bikes on free tier, 10 on Alloy, 50 on Carbon
  • Public profiles with shareable links (all tiers, including free)
  • Photo galleries for each bike
  • Works with or without Strava
  • Cost tracking and analytics
  • Component stories and history
  • Full web app—great on desktop/tablet for managing your entire stable on a big screen

Weaknesses:

  • Newer platform (launched 2025)
  • Smaller community than ProBikeGarage
  • No native App Store app (PWA works on mobile, but some prefer native)
  • Some advanced features require subscription

Verdict: Best fit if you want both tracking functionality AND a way to show off your builds. The AI-powered import makes adding components fast (just paste specs from a website), and the standalone mode makes it unique for collectors and custom builders. The showcase angle is what really sets it apart—no other tracking app does this.


Which Should You Choose?

Choose ProBikeGarage if:

  • You want an established platform with proven track record
  • You don't mind manual distance entry on free tier
  • You want native mobile apps
  • You don't need to showcase bikes publicly

Choose Componentry if:

  • You use Garmin or Wahoo instead of (or alongside) Strava
  • You want AI-powered wear predictions
  • You've invested in a bike fit and want to save your measurements
  • You don't need a free tier and are okay with $4/month
  • You don't need photos, cost tracking, or showcase features

Choose Biker if:

  • You want AI photo identification for quick setup
  • You want native apps AND standalone capability
  • You're comfortable with a newer platform
  • You don't need public profiles or cost tracking

Choose mainTrack if:

  • Strava is essential to your cycling
  • You want set-and-forget automation
  • You prefer a polished, focused interface
  • You're primarily on iOS

Choose Geer if:

  • You literally just want maintenance reminders, nothing more
  • Privacy matters to you (EU-based, user-funded)
  • You have 1-2 bikes and want to stay on the free tier
  • You don't need photos, cost tracking, or showcase features

Choose VeloBuddy if:

  • You want AI-powered maintenance predictions
  • You're performance-focused and care about watt loss, tire pressure optimization
  • You want to understand how weather and terrain affect wear
  • You prefer native mobile apps

Choose Strava's built-in gear if:

  • You just want basic mileage tracking
  • You're already paying for Summit
  • You only track 1-2 bikes casually

Choose WatchMy.Bike if:

  • You want automatic sync but also standalone capability
  • You'd like public profiles to share your builds
  • You have multiple bikes (road, gravel, commuter, etc.)
  • You're into custom builds, collecting, or want to show off your garage
  • You want one platform for tracking AND showcasing
  • You prefer managing your gear on a big screen (desktop/tablet)

The Gap in the Market

What surprised me researching this: the market is still split. Apps either focus on tracking (ProBikeGarage, Componentry, Biker, mainTrack, Geer, VeloBuddy) or showcasing (Pedal Room, Velospace—though both are struggling). Nobody was doing both well.

That's actually why WatchMy.Bike exists. I wanted one place to track my components AND show off my builds without maintaining two different platforms.

The landscape has shifted in 2025/2026:

  • Biker entered with AI features and standalone mode (like us)
  • Componentry carved out the Garmin/Wahoo niche
  • Geer reintroduced a free tier after previously going paid-only, with a competitive Pro plan at €2/mo
  • ProBikeGarage is expanding into B2B partnerships
  • Showcase platforms (Pedal Room, Velospace) continue to struggle

Whether the showcase angle matters to you depends on how you use your bikes. If you just want maintenance reminders, the simpler tools work fine. If you're proud of your builds and want a permanent home for them online, the showcase angle matters.


Try Before You Decide

Most of these tools have free tiers or trials, so you can test them yourself:

The best app is the one you'll actually use. Pick the one that fits your workflow.


Last updated: March 27, 2026

What bike tracking setup do you use? I'm always curious how other cyclists manage their gear. Feel free to reach out or share your WatchMy.Bike profile once you've set one up.

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