Stop guessing when to service your bike.
Velox tracks every component on your bike and tells you exactly when something needs service — before it breaks, before it costs you a ride.
How it works
Configure your bikes
Tell Velox what you're riding and its service history.
Stay in sync
Connect Strava, Garmin, or Wahoo — Velox updates itself automatically. Until sync is live, a quick manual log does the job.
Get notified when it matters
Velox watches wear in km, riding hours, and days since last service. When something's approaching its limit, you get a push notification. Not a guess — a number.
The details other apps miss.
Swap parts freely. History follows.
Move your race wheels to the gravel bike. Put the trainer on. Swap a drivetrain mid-season. Counters freeze when a component comes off and resume when it goes back — across every bike in your fleet.
A clear service record for every part
Log a service in seconds. Each component keeps its own history — what was done, when, and at what mileage. No more "I think I oiled this three months ago." You'll know exactly when each part was last touched and what's coming due next.
Inspections and replacements — tracked separately
A headset doesn't need replacing. It needs checking. Your fork needs lower leg oil every 50 hours and a full service every 200. Velox tracks inspections and replacements as separate intervals per component — each with its own counter, its own due date, its own history.
Start free. Stay free.
Free
$0
Everything you need to track your bike. Yours to keep, forever.
- 1 bike
- 4 components: chain, cassette, front & rear brake pads
- km-based tracking with progress bars
- Push notifications when service is due
- Service history with notes
Coming later
Future additions for riders who want more. Nothing in the Free plan will ever move behind a paywall.
- Strava, Garmin & Wahoo sync
- Periodic push notifications
- Service log export (CSV)
- Statistics & insights
- Unlimited bikes & components
Free to download and use. No trial, no paywall.
Your next ride is fine.
Your fork in 200 km might not be.