TL;DR
For most derailleur bikes, replacing the chain early is the cheapest way to save the cassette and chainrings.
General rules: replace at ~0.75% wear for 5–10 speed; ~0.5% for 11–13 speed; ~1.0% for single-speed.
SRAM’s spec for Eagle and RED AXS Flattop chains is replace at 0.8% using an approved checker.
If a brand-new chain skips under load on certain cogs, the cassette is likely worn to match the old chain—plan on replacing cassette.
Best practice: measure in more than one spot, with very light chain tension, and don’t force a go/no-go gauge into place.

What “chain stretch” really is (and why it destroys cassettes)

Bicycle chains don’t stretch like rubber bands; instead, the effective pitch increases due to wear at the pins and sliding surfaces inside each link. This minute elongation lets your chain ride up the cogs’ teeth under load, “re-machining” your cassette to fit a longer pitch.

The primary goal of measuring chain wear is to replace the chain before it gets so long that a new one can’t mesh with the teeth—otherwise, it’ll skip (often on the small, most-used cogs).

The 3 most useful ways to check chain wear

The 3 most useful chain wear measurement methods
Method Best for Advantages Disadvantages/quirks
Drop-in chain checker (e.g. Park Tool CC-4.2 style) Day-to-day checks on most modern drivetrains Fast; measures real thresholds (0.5/0.75/1.0); easy repeatability Needs correct technique (light tension, clean-ish chain) to avoid false readings
Go/no-go hook checker (e.g. Park Tool CC-3.2 style) Quick checks if you already have one Simple; reasonably priced; widely available Can be fooled by roller play & pushing hard—don’t jam it in; measure on inner plates as described
12-inch rule (or calipers) Checking tool readings; troubleshooting Cheap; helps understand what you’re measuring More fiddly/easy to mess up when rushed; must align pins carefully; misreading risk
suspicious of your checker’s result? (too fast wear, or “good forever”)? verify with the ruler method once, to see if both show the same trend. the two approaches measure different things, but you want a story—not just a magic number.

How to use a chain checker correctly (so you don’t replace too soon—or too late)

Most “my tool says my chain is worn” complaints come from two mistakes: (1) not applying light tension, and (2) forcing the go/no-go into a spot that nearly fits, instead of confirming with the ruler. Park Tool specifically emphasizes keeping light chain tension for accurate readings, as well as a gentle approach (“don’t force it”).

Common mistakes:

What the numbers mean: 0.5% vs 0.75% vs 1.0%

A 0.5% wear reading means the chain has elongated by that percentage over its original length. The longer it is, the higher the risk your cassette teeth are also worn to fit the old chain.

General chain replacement thresholds
Drivetrain type Replace chain at (guideline) Reason
Single-speed / two-sprocket ≈ 1.0% wear Wider chains tolerate greater wear
5–10 speed derailleur ≈ 0.75% wear Earlier swap protects cassette best
11–13 speed derailleur ≈ 0.5% wear Narrower chains/cogs are more sensitive

If your cassette is expensive (usual for 11–13 speed), swapping the chain early saves money. Use these rules unless your drivetrain brand says otherwise.

Brand-specific guidance: why your number might not match your friend’s

If you find conflicting guidance:

  1. Follow your drivetrain manufacturer if they give a specific number.
  2. If not, go with the common threshold for your speed (see table above).
  3. If saving cassettes is your priority, swap chains a little early on pricey drivetrains.

Ruler method (12-inch check): how to check chain wear without a tool

Ruler checks are slower, but invaluable for verification. Park Tool says: “Line up a rivet at 0, then see where the 24th rivet lands at 12 inches. If it’s more than 1/16 inch past, replace the chain.”

  1. Apply light tension to the taut chain.
  2. Pick a chain rivet and line up with ruler’s 0-inch mark.
  3. Count 24 rivets ahead; that rivet should land at 12 inches on a new chain.
  4. Check how much it passes 12 inches. The more the increment, the more worn.
  5. Repeat in another area of chain to check for irregular wear.

Sheldon Brown’s advice: 1/16 inch past = new chain; 1/8 inch past = too late (cassette likely worn; new chain may skip).

When to change the cassette (the real-world decision tree)

No quick number determines cassette replacement. In practice, replace based on how the bike rides (skipping after a new chain install) and by inspecting tooth shape.

The home cassette test: new chain + load

  1. Replace the chain at spec’d wear point (not way past limit).
  2. Set shifting and make sure derailleur hanger is straight.
  3. Ride under steady load in most-used gears.
  4. If the new chain skips on any cogs, those cogs are usually worn enough to warrant a new cassette.
  5. If no skipping, keep cassette and track new chains per cassette from now on.

Visual signs often seen on a worn cassette:

Skipping is diagnosis-sensitive: it can also come from a worn chainring, incorrect chain length, a stiff link, poor indexing, or a bent derailleur hanger. If you’re unsure, fix any adjustment issues first, then re-test under load.

When to replace chain and cassette together

Practical scenarios (what to do at common wear readings)

Quick actions by wear reading
Your measurement Most likely situation Recommended action
11–13 speed chain at ~0.5% Common replacement point for narrow chains Replace chain now; usually saves cassette
9–10 speed chain at ~0.75% Replacement point, wider derailleur chain Replace chain now; cassette often survives
Single-speed chain at ~1.0% End of life for most single speeds Replace chain; check chainring/sprocket for wear
SRAM Eagle/RED AXS chain at ~0.8% Brand’s specific replacement point Replace chain (using approved checker)
Ruler: ≈ 1/16 inch past 12 inches Time to replace chain Replace soon; cassette probably still OK
Ruler: ≈ 1/8 inch past 12 inches Cassette likely as worn as chain Plan on chain + cassette; test for skipping after chain swap

How to make your chain and cassette last longer (without overcomplicating it)

A common money-saving pattern is: replace chains on time and cassettes can last through several chains. The common money-wasting one is: run chain too long, then need to buy chain + cassette + chainrings all at once.

A simple replacement routine you can actually follow

  1. Pick your measurement method (chain checker is easiest; ruler is best cross-check).
  2. Set your threshold (manufacturer-specific number, or general guideline for your speed).
  3. Check wear regularly: dry road = maybe monthly; gritty/wet = check more often.
  4. Log your readings (a notes app works). You want to see the trend over time.
  5. When replacing the chain, do the cassette test: load, favorite gears, feel for skipping.

FAQ

Do I need to replace the cassette every time I replace the chain?

Definitely not. If you replace the chain at the proper wear point, you can almost always keep the cassette. Test for skipping under load after you install a new chain—if it doesn’t skip, and shifting’s adjusted well, just keep riding.

Why do people say to replace 11–13 speed chains earlier (around 0.5%)?

Because 11–13 speed cogs and chains are narrow and sensitive to pitch changes. Park Tool and others guide replacement at or before 0.5% to prevent expensive drivetrain wear.

SRAM says 0.8% for Eagle/RED AXS. Does that make older guidance wrong?

No—it means you should follow the maker’s advice for your chain. SRAM’s 0.8% advice (with approved checker) is explicit. Use the specific number if you have it.

My go/no-go only fits if I press really hard. Is my chain worn?

Pressing hard means “not yet” at that threshold. Confirm what length the gauge measures for confidence, and make sure to place the gauge as the tool manufacturer instructs (e.g. on the correct plate/roller). Always use light tension, as described by Park Tool and Sheldon Brown.

What’s a good way to sanity-check my chain checker reading?

The 12-inch ruler method—count 24 rivets, line up with 0 and see if the last lands at 12 inches. This verifies your checker and helps spot suspicious readings. Be consistent in technique and gauge placement.

If my cassette is worn, do I also need new chainrings?

Not necessarily; chainrings often outlast cassettes. But if you replace the chain and cassette and still get skips/noise (with good shifting), inspect chainrings for hooked teeth and swap as needed.

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