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Bike Seats & Saddles

(77 products)

Your saddle is where it all comes together — the right bike seat supports your sit bones, matches your riding position and keeps you comfortable from the first kilometre to the last. We stock bike seats and saddles for every rider: cushioned comfort saddles, lightweight road saddles, trail-ready MTB saddles, plus kids' and BMX options.

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How to Choose the Right Bike Seat

The right bike seat can completely change how your ride feels.

The most comfortable bike seat isn't always the widest or the softest — it's the one that matches your body and riding style.

After years of helping riders choose saddles across Melbourne, we've found four things solve most comfort issues: sit-bone width, seat shape, the right amount of padding and choosing a saddle that suits how you ride.

1. Sit-bone width (the single most important factor)

Your weight should rest on your two sit bones (ischial tuberosities), not soft tissue.

If a saddle is too narrow, pressure shifts into the wrong areas and often causes numbness or discomfort.

Most adults measure between 100mm and 145mm across the sit bones, and the ideal bike seat is usually around 20–30 mm wider than that measurement.

You can measure at home by sitting on corrugated cardboard or foil placed on a hard surface and measuring the distance between the two deepest impressions.

2. Saddle shape: Flat, Waved or Curved

Shape changes how your body interacts with the saddle.

Flat saddles

Suit riders who move around more and rotate their hips forward (common for road and performance riding).

Waved saddles

Hold riders in a more stable position and suit upright riding.

Curved saddles

Sit between the two and balance support with movement.

Many modern bike saddles also include a pressure-relief channel or cut-out to reduce soft-tissue pressure — especially useful for longer rides and popular on comfort and women's-specific designs.

3. Padding — more isn't always better

Extra cushioning sounds comfortable but can become uncomfortable over longer rides.

Thick padding compresses and can increase pressure on sensitive areas.

Wide, softer bike seats work well for short, upright rides and commuting. Firmer saddles with supportive foam generally perform better for longer distances because your sit bones remain properly supported.

4. Saddle materials & rail types

Rails connect the saddle to your seat post and affect weight, ride feel and durability.

  • Steel rails — durable and affordable
  • Titanium rails — lighter with improved vibration damping
  • Carbon rails — lightest option for performance-focused riders

For most riders, fit and shape matter far more than rail material. A premium rail won't fix a bike seat that's the wrong width.

5. Match the saddle to how you ride

Riding position changes where your weight sits, so choosing the right saddle category makes a big difference.

  • Comfort bike seats — casual riding, commuting and e-bikes
  • Road bike saddles — longer rides and performance cycling
  • MTB saddles — trail, gravel and off-road riding
  • Kids bike saddles — sized for younger riders
  • BMX saddles — compact and durable for park and street riding

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