5-step guide

Cleaning your bike chain after winter salt exposure

Winter road salt attacks metal. Before you ride this spring, your drivetrain needs a good cleaning. Here’s how.
Step 1

Inspect before touching

30 seconds of inspection can save you a $200 cassette.

The test that matters is stretch. With a chain checker, 0.5% or more means the chain is done. At 0.75%, your cassette also needs to be replaced. Without a chain checker: pull the chain forward on the largest chainring. If you see a full tooth between the chain and the chainring, replace it.

Next, look at the links. Pedal backward slowly. If you find a link that skips or doesn't pass perfectly through the derailleur, it's "jammed" or bent. Orange surface rust comes off with degreaser. Rust between the rollers does not.

Not sure? Call us to schedule a tune-up appointment.

Step 2

Remove the salt and old lubricant

Water alone does nothing. The salt remains stuck to the old lubricant, everywhere in the chain, and it takes a real degreaser to dislodge it.

The right product: a bicycle degreaser. We use the Muc-Off Bio Chain Degreaser ($26.29) or the Mint'N Dry ($12.99) for a tighter budget.

Quick method: apply degreaser directly to the chain, brush each section with a chain brush, turn the pedal to go around.

Clean method: the Muc-Off X-3 Chain Cleaning Kit ($64.99). You install it on the chain, pedal backward for 30 seconds, and the chain comes out clean.

Step 3

Rinse and dry thoroughly

Never lubricate a wet chain, as this seals the water inside. It will rust from the inside without you seeing anything.

Rinse: lukewarm water, damp cloth or garden hose. Never use a high-pressure jet. This forces water into the bottom bracket bearings and chain rollers.

Dry: clean cloth, link by link, then 15-20 minutes in the open air. In a hurry? A hairdryer on low heat will do the job.

The test: the chain should be metallic gray, clean. Not black, not orange, otherwise, degrease it again.

Step 4

Lubricate with the right product

Spring and fall, it's wet lube. Thaw, showers, puddles. Wet lubricant stays put despite the water. Our choices: Muc-Off Wet 120ml ($19.41) or Muc-Off All Weather ($17.99).

Dry summer, it's dry lube. Lighter, attracts less dust, keeps the drivetrain clean. We like Muc-Off Dry 120ml ($19.49) and Dirt Care DRY ($18.95).

E-bike: the motor doubles the torque on the chain, causing it to wear out 1.5 to 2 times faster. Forget wax-based lubricants. Muc-Off E-Bike Wet ($29.99) is designed for this.

Application: one drop per link, inside the roller (not on the outer plates). Turn the pedal 20 times. Wipe off the excess immediately with a clean cloth.

Step 5

Finish the job: cassette, chainrings, pulleys

A clean chain running on a dirty cassette will become dirty again in 5 minutes.

Cassette: Wipe with a cloth between each sprocket. For stubborn deposits, a string passed between the sprockets dislodges grime like nothing else.

Chainrings: Use a cloth soaked in degreaser on each tooth. Pay particular attention between the chainrings: that's where the gunk hides.

Derailleur pulleys: The two small wheels accumulate all the black paste from winter. Use a toothbrush and degreaser. If the teeth are rounded, replace the pulleys.

Not comfortable doing it yourself?

We'll take care of the entire transmission process.

A drivetrain not properly cleaned after winter is the #1 reason for workshop visits in spring. We offer tune-ups that include complete drivetrain cleaning (chain, cassette, chainrings, jockey wheels).
Frequently asked questions about chain cleaning

Everything you need to know to clean your chain properly.

Not necessarily. If you rinse it after every winter ride, it can be fine with a good cleaning. If left untouched all winter, there's a high chance it will be stretched or the rollers seized. Use a chain checker: at 0.5% stretch, it needs to be replaced.
No. Classic WD-40 is a penetrating oil, not a lubricant. It strips away old lubricant and evaporates. The result: your chain will be drier than before and will wear out very quickly. Use a proper degreaser to clean, then a proper chain lubricant. The WD-40 Bike Chain Lube range, on the other hand, is a different product that is suitable.
It depends on the conditions. Dry weather: full cleaning every 300-500 km. Rain, mud, or salt: every 100-200 km. Between full cleanings, simply wiping with a clean cloth after each ride greatly extends the lifespan.
The chain wear indicator (around $15-20) is the only reliable test. At 0.5% stretch, change it. At 0.75%, the cassette is probably also due for replacement. Without an indicator: pull the chain forward on the largest chainring. If a full tooth appears between the chain and the chainring, it's stretched to the point of needing replacement.
Same steps, higher frequency. The motor generates more torque, so the chain wears out 1.5 to 2 times faster than a normal bike. Avoid wax-based lubricants: they don't last. A quality wet lube or a specific eBike lubricant is better. Check for stretch every 500 km instead of 1000 km.