Chain Wear Measurement: When to Replace Your Chain (and When the Cassette Has to Go Too)

Learn how to measure bicycle chain wear accurately, what 0.5%, 0.75%, and 1.0% “stretch” really mean, and how to decide whether you can replace just the chain—or if your cassette (and chainrings) are already worn too.

TL;DR

What “stretching the chain” actually is (and why it wears cassettes)

Chains don’t “stretch” like rubber bands. The most common “stretch” readings are readings of chain elongation resulting from wear at the pins and bearing surfaces. When chains elongate they have a longer pitch than the spacing on the cassette teeth. This mismatch tends to cause acceleration of the wear of the teeth and results in skipping under load—particularly on the cogs you use most.

Tip: The frugal cyclist’s motto: to replace a chain too soon is cheap; to let it run past the wear point is to turn one chain replacement into a chain plus one cassette and plus one set of chainrings.

Tools to measure chain wear (plus those to avoid)

Info: If you ride SRAM RED AXS: SRAM states the AXS Flattop chain should be replaced on a measured 0.8% on one of its approved chain checkers. That measurement threshold differs from the generally used 0.5%/0.75% rules of thumb. (support.sram.com)

Step-by-step: How to measure chain wear (3 ways that work)

Method 1 (fast): Measure with drop-in chain checker

  1. Shift into a middle rear cog (and a middle/front chainring if your bike has 2x/3x) so your chain line is fairly straight. Pedal a few revolutions to place the chain on the top run and stop with a section that’s easy to access.
  2. Place the checker into the chain per the tool instructions. If the tool requires tension to read correctly, apply it consistently (don’t just let the chain sag). (parktool.com)
  3. Read the wear mark (commonly 0.5 / 0.75 / 1.0). Write it down in a note on your phone so you can see what’s actually happening over time.
  4. Repeat in a second spot on the chain. Chains don’t always wear perfectly evenly—especially if you ride in grit and water.

Method 2 (simple): Measure with a go/no-go gauge

  1. Hook the tool into the chain exactly as directed (placement matters—some tools reference rollers vs plates).
  2. Check the lower wear side first (often 0.5). If it drops in, your chain is at least that worn.
  3. Flip and check the higher wear side (often 0.75). If it drops in, the chain is more urgently worn.
  4. If you have SRAM Flattop or SRAM T-Type: confirm your checker is approved/compatible; Park Tool notes using the CC-4.2 for those chain types. (parktool.com)

Method 3 (most universal): Measure with a ruler (the 12-inch / 24-link check)

  1. Put the bike in a stand (or have a helper hold it steady). Shift to a gear that gives you good access to the upper chain run.
  2. Pick a rivet/pin and align it to the 0-inch mark on a ruler.
  3. Count 24 links (12 full inches on a new chain) and check where the rivet/pin lands relative to the 12-inch mark. Park Tool describes this ruler method as a standard approach. (parktool.com)
  4. Interpretation (approximate): 0.5% wear is about 0.06 inch over 12 inches (~1/16 inch). 0.75% wear is about 0.09 inch over 12 inches (just under ~3/32 inch).
  5. If your measurement is borderline, re-check with the chain under light tension and re-check in a second location.

Wear limits: What number should make you replace the chain?

The narrower the chain (and/or the more rear gears you have), the less wear it takes to start chewing up the cassette. Park Tool publishes these widely used replacement guidelines by type of drivetrain. (parktool.com)

Practical chain replacement thresholds (verify against your manufacturer if they publish a different spec)
Type Replace chain by… Why this is common practice
Single-speed / two-sprocket ~1.0% More tolerant of wear, fewer shifting demands. (See derailleur drivetrains as well: Park Tool owns links.) (parktool.com)
5–10 speed derailleur drivetrains ~0.75% Helps produce gear restoration rather than shoe junkies for cassette and chainring. (parktool.com)
11–13 speed derailleur drivetrains ~0.5% Tighter tolerances, earlier replacement better on expensive cassette. (parktool.com)
SRAM RED AXS (Flattop) 0.8% (on an approved checker) Per SRAM this is the replacement point for this chain model.
Rohloff Caliber 2 guide (mm per link) 0.075mm per link for aluminum sprockets; 0.1mm per link for steel sprockets Rohloff apparently publishes different limits for these two materials. (rohloff.de)
Warning: If you’re in the 11-13 speed range, and you want the best odds of saving your cassette, don’t wait until “it starts skipping.” Skipping is often what happens after the cassette teeth have been worn to match an elongated chain.

When to replace the cassette (and how to tell that it’s already worn)

Cassettes can sometimes look “fine” and still be worn enough to reject a new chain. The most reliable real-world test I’ve come across is whether a brand-new chain skips under skhard pedal load on some specific cogs. I know of no real-world test other than that one.

The confirmation test: install a new chain and lean into it.

  1. Change out your chain, for whatever reason (to other wear benchmarks) but at the right wear threshold, and ensure it’s the right speed/type, and is installed correctly.
  2. Find a safe spot where you can send it a little brief, hard max-power, perhaps find a steady little incline, and start pedaling.
  3. Give the cogs you use most a testing foot: if the chain “jumps” or skips on those cogs under a load on them, that cassette is at least fairly worn, and ‘probably’ is due for replacement.
  4. If just one: of course, it can be a worn cog lav; but make sure to double-check derailleur indexing, and make sure the hanger isn’t bent, before going ordering Parts 1 & 2.

Visual and “feel” signs your cassette may be worn

Chain only vs. chain + cassette: a working guide

What to do next based on your wear reading and how your bike feels

What to do next based on your wear reading and how your bike feels

What you measure / notice Most likely best move Why
Chain under the limit (example: 11–13 speed reads <0.5%) Keep riding; re-check on a schedule You’re in the safe zone for protecting the cassette. (parktool.com)
Chain just reached the limit (example: 11–13 speed reads ~0.5%) Replace chain soon Replacing now maximizes the odds the cassette will accept the new chain. (parktool.com)
Chain well past the limit (example: 11–13 speed reads 0.75%+) Plan on chain right away; prepare for cassette, too Teeth may already be concaved to match the old long chain.
New chain skips under load on certain cogs Replace cassette (and check chainrings) Skipping with a new chain is a strong indicator that the cassette is worn enough to reject it.
New chain does not skip, but shifting is poor Adjust indexing and inspect hanger/cables before buying parts Many “wear-like” symptoms are adjustment-related.

How often to check chain wear (and what changes the answer)

There’s no universal mileage because grit, rain, cleaning habits, chainline, and power output matter a lot. KMC notes chain life can vary widely depending on conditions and use (they cite a broad range from extreme e-MTB to road riding). (kmcchain.eu)

Common chain wear measurement mistakes (and how to avoid them)

Quick maintenance habits that slow wear (and protect your cassette)
Note: How can you confirm that you did everything right after you replaced a chain (if you’re like most people)? Make sure the shifting is indexed; check that the derailleur hanger is straight; check that the routing of the chain through the derailleur is correct and the chain isn’t installed backwards if it’s directional (it is on a bunch of 11/12-speed chains.) Do the skip test under load.

FAQ

Do I always need to replace the cassette when I replace the chain?
A: No. If you replace the chain before it passes the wear limit (commonly ~0.5% on 11–13 speed, ~0.75% on 5–10 speed), you often can keep the cassette for multiple chain cycles. (parktool.com)
Why does a new chain sometimes skip on an “okay-looking” cassette?
A: Because cassette wear is about tooth shape and pitch matching. An old elongated chain can wear the cassette teeth into a pattern matching that old chain. When you put a correctly-sized new chain, it may ride up and skip under load on the most-worn cogs.
What’s the best chain checker to buy if I don’t want compatibility surprises?
A: Look for a checker that explicitly supports your chain type. For example, Park Tool markets the CC-4.2 as compatible across a wide range of chains (including SRAM Flattop/T-Type and up to 13-speed) and it reads 0.5/0.75/1.0 wear points. (parktool.com)
SRAM says 0.8% for RED AXS—why is that different from the usual 0.5% advice?
A: Different chains and drivetrains can have different replacement specs. SRAM explicitly states their RED AXS chain replacement point as 0.8% on an approved checker, so you should prioritize the manufacturer’s spec for that system. (support.sram.com)
Is the ruler method accurate enough?
A: Yes—if you measure carefully, align pins consistently, and keep light tension on the chain. It’s also a good cross-check if you suspect your chain checker is affected by roller play or compatibility issues. Park Tool includes ruler measurement as a standard method. (parktool.com)
What if my chain reads 0.5% but everything still shifts fine?
A: That’s common. Wear limits are preventative. The goal is to replace the chain before shifting problems and cassette damage start—especially on 11–13 speed drivetrains where the recommended limit is ~0.5%. (parktool.com)

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