Remember, most drivetrain work is fairly easy, however if a chain connector is installed incorrectly, or the chain is excessively worn, or not reinstalled properly, it can lead to chain failure resulting in a crash. If you’re not confident, have the local bike shop check it before you ride it hard.

TL;DR
“If you replace the chain on time, you can usually avoid buying wheels and drivetrain components” -something along those lines, anyways. It’s a link to lifestyle choices, basically. A cassette wears out at the same time as the chain (if one component wears out so does the other. Well, not bloody if, if you leave the chain too long you’re buying a new cassette as well)….and chainring teeth are slightly expensive too. often a revision to the guidelines means if you buy from SRAM/Eagle, changing at 0.8% with an approved checker is all you need for a chain, if not you’re probably selling cassette teeth for coke if you don’t make the changes. Of course like most of us it depends where you live, for me just getting it in a banana box from the UK.

Okay so what is “chain stretch” actually, and why does it eat cassettes. (Hint: the chain isn’t actually stretched like a rubber band, but “elongated to 0.125 inch”. Just kidding, it’s all wearing down at the pins/rollers link(s) and surface mating/coupling/building what have you. The pitch no longer matches perfect last 3 links with the cassette and chainrings, the mismatch shows teeth on the cassette that will invariably wear lollygags and screw with Eddy Merckx just trying to travel, and if it gets really bad? Skip City or Crash Street. In brief, replace that chain uphill right now. It’s cheaper than a cassette, and each tooth modelling. /before winter. Replacing a chain when it’s truly worn out isn’t cheap, since the worn chain will “machine” the cassette and chainrings into its own matching (worn) shape—so the new chain won’t mesh cleanly anymore.

Quick replacement thresholds (0.5% vs 0.75% vs 1.0%)

Different drivetrains and chain-checkers use difference thresholds. The best practice is: (1) do what your drivetrain manufacturer says, and (2) use the checker they recommend, or one that other people have had great success with on this chain.

Common chain wear guidelines (general purpose, NOT brand-specific)
Drivetrain type Typical “replace by” wear reading Why it’s commonly lower/higher
Single-speed / 2-sprocket ≈ 1.0% Tolerates wear better; not as fussy shifting, overall.
5–10 speed derailleur derailleur drivetrains ≈ 0.75% Wider chains/cogs should historically be generally somewhat less sensitive to elongation.
11–13 speed derailleur drivetrains ≈ 0.5% More sensitive, tighter tolerances, thinner cogs make elongation more costly, sooner.
Example of brand-specific guidance: SRAM Eagle At 0.8%, change with approved checker Manufacturer-specific spec; use their ecosystem first, if they have one.
If you’re intentionally trying to maximize cassette life, lean toward the earlier advice. When chain wear exceeds the optimal limit, the teeth throughout the drivetrain tend to start wearing faster.

How to measure chain wear accurately (two practical methods)

Method 1 (most riders): with a chain checker tool

A good chain checker can be quickly checked and repeated. Ruler-style go/no-go tools drop in at a certain wear; others show multiple points (0.5%, 0.75%, 1.0). Some modern chains (like SRAM Flattop / T-Type) can benefit from a checker that considers the size of the rollers and the contact point.

Tool mismatch can mislead you. For example, Shimano says if you use non-Shimano chain gauges, “their evaluation results report early chain replacement,” and suggest their gauge for their chains.

Method 2 (back up/ballpark): measure with a ruler

A check with a ruler is cheap, and can be done anywhere. It’s sensitive to eyesight and lighting, and alignment, but it makes for a very reassuring “sanity check” when you think your chain tool might be giving a weird answer.

When to replace the cassette (and how to confirm it’s worn)

Cassettes don’t have a simple “wear number” that’s easy to measure at home, such as a chain metric. In practice, when it comes time to replace a cassette it’s generally done by feel under load, combined with an appreciation of tooth shape/wear patterns.

The most reliable real-world test: does a new chain skip on your cassette?

It’s an all-too-familiar thing: your old chain may have been just “fine”, but when fitted, a new chain suddenly skips (jumps) on the cassette under load—sometimes not in every gear, but only in your most-used cogs! This is due to the worn teeth on your cassette and the old worn chain having effectively worn-in together, and a new chain no longer mating perfectly.

Visual inspection: what worn cassette teeth look like

On some drivetrains, particularly those that have shovel-like teeth built for digging into chains, the worn sprocket teeth can form a hooked profile. When a new chain rides on them, it can be “trapped”, before releasing suddenly, feeling like it is skipping or clunking under power. Ultimately where this issue appears, think worse-case scenario, and plan for a new cassette.

A practical decision flow (chain or cassette first)

Symptoms Where to throw your wallet How to check and confirm
Shifting feels ‘sloppy’, chain wear reads near/over limit Worn chain (and possibly cogs) Check wear with chain length change (14.2)
New chain already skips on only 1–3 favorite rear cogs Worn cassette (those cogs) Can tell part way through ride, even when indexing is spot on.
Skips and sometimes not in load, but across many gears Chainrings worn, derailleur/hanger issues Check teeth on chainring, and that derailleur setup/hanger alignment is correct. (shop to confirm)
Grinding sound, skips if in load and wear seems rapid Contaminated + incorrect lube Clean drivetrain properly and lube to suit conditions, and check minutes [sic: “miles” should read “miles”.].

Common mistakes that take you to a bad reading (or cost you a new part):

How to make your chain and cassette last longer (realistic habits)

Tools checklist (what you actually need)

FAQ

Should I replace new chain 0.5% or 0.75%?

Refer to your manufacturer instructions first. A rule of thumb is ~0.5% wear for chains on 11 speed and up, ~0.75% on a 5-10 speed, and around 1.0% for single speed.

Some SRAM resources even suggest replacing at 0.8%? SRAM guidance says replace when it’s x% on a chain checker. Is that a good guide?

Some SRAM guidance (for example SRAM Eagle support content) quotes 0.8% on an approved chain checker as the spec for replacing. That’s a brand/ecosystem-specific spec—so if you run that, follow it (and use an approved checker).

Can I just swap my chain, and leave my cassette as-is?

Often yes—but only if you’re replacing the chain “in good time”. The usual process is: replace the chain (at the right wear point), then test, and if the new chain skips on a full cassette under load, that’s your cue to replace the cassette as well.

My chain tool and ruler are in conflict, who wins?

Do some fact-checking first—try checking in a few other spots in the chain, and make sure you’re using the tool correctly. If you are, consider whether your checker is suitable for your type of chain and, if all else fails, default to using whichever tool and method is deemed most appropriate by your drivetrain manufacturer (eg Shimano recommends measuring their chains with their chain gauge).

I ride a lot, should I check my chain wear often?

It depends on your conditions, but that’s basically how you avoid surprises on your cassette replacement bill. Lots of folks check chain wear roughly monthly; check more often if you’re in something gunky like grit, mud, or a week of high mileage.

How to tell you’ve replaced the right parts: New chain (and soft cassette if you went that route), check. Roll out on a safe area, and make sure chain is reliably hooking in (not jumping off gears), not too loud, and makes predictable shifts on the cassette.

References

  1. Park Tool: When to Replace a Worn Chain
  2. Park Tool: CC-4.2 Chain Checker (wear points and general guidelines)
  3. SRAM Service: Chain Wear Indicator (tool page)
  4. SRAM Support: SRAM Eagle Chains section (includes replacement guidance)
  5. Sheldon Brown: Bicycle Chain and Sprocket Engagement and Wear (why new chains can skip on worn sprockets)
  6. Shimano Stories: How to Check Your Chain Length (includes chain wear measurement notes and gauge guidance)
  7. Cycling Weekly: How often should you replace your chain and cassette?

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