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The Best Motorcycle Maintenance Apps in 2026

·9 min read

Owning a motorcycle is the easy part. Keeping it on the road — chains lubed, oil fresh, valves in spec, gear within its safe lifespan — is where most riders start forgetting things. The right app turns "I think I changed that maybe last spring?" into a quick glance at a dashboard.

We spent the 2026 riding season living inside the most popular motorcycle maintenance apps, on a mix of a Yamaha MT-09, a Honda CRF300L and a Ducati Monster. Here's the honest rundown of what works, what doesn't, and who each one is actually for.

What to look for in a motorcycle maintenance app

Before the list, a quick checklist of what separates a useful app from glorified spreadsheets:

  • Per-bike service intervals with mileage and time-based reminders.
  • GPS ride tracking or at least .gpx import.
  • Gear locker — helmets and airbag vests have expiration dates.
  • Fuel and expense logs for cost-per-mile analytics.
  • Multi-bike support — most riders eventually own more than one.
  • Offline access — service bays and back roads aren't friendly to spotty signal.

1. MotoCare

Yes, we're biased — but the reason we built MotoCare is that nothing else hit all six of the boxes above. MotoCare gives you a per-bike garage with service intervals you can customize (oil, chain, valves, brake fluid, coolant, tires), a gear locker that warns you when a helmet hits its 5-year mark, GPS ride tracking with lean-angle stats, and cost-per-mile analytics across every bike.

Best for: riders who want one app for service, gear, mods and rides.

Pricing: free tier, MotoCare Pro at $2.99/mo or $24.99/year.

2. Drivvo

Drivvo started as a car-focused fuel and expense tracker, and the motorcycle support reflects that. Fuel economy and cost analytics are best-in-class, the UI is clean, and the free tier is generous. Service reminders exist but are mileage-only, and there's no GPS ride tracking or gear tracking.

Best for: commuters who mostly care about fuel economy and running costs.

3. Fuelly

Fuelly is the OG fuel log. Great community averages — you can compare your MPG against thousands of other riders on the same bike. Maintenance logging works but feels bolted on, and the mobile app hasn't seen serious work in years.

Best for: data nerds who want community benchmarks.

4. RoadBook (formerly REVER)

RoadBook is a ride-first app — route planning, GPS recording, ride sharing. It's excellent at what it does, especially the curated "best motorcycle roads" maps. The downside: maintenance tracking is almost nonexistent, and the Pro tier is expensive if you only want it for rides.

Best for: tourers and weekend riders who plan routes.

5. Calimoto

Calimoto's winding-road algorithm is genuinely magical — ask it for a 200km loop and it'll send you down roads you didn't know existed. Like RoadBook, it's a ride app, not a maintenance app. Pair it with something else for service tracking.

Best for: riders who care more about the next ride than the last oil change.

6. Simply Auto

Simply Auto is a multi-vehicle tracker with deep service history support. It works fine for motorcycles but treats them as just another vehicle — no lean angles, no gear, no motorcycle-specific defaults. If you're already using it for a car, adding the bike is zero friction.

Best for: multi-vehicle households who want one app for everything with wheels.

How they compare at a glance

AppServiceGPS RidesGearFuel
MotoCareYesYesYesYes
DrivvoBasicNoNoYes
FuellyBasicNoNoYes
RoadBookNoYesNoNo
CalimotoNoYesNoNo
Simply AutoYesNoNoYes

So which one should you use?

If you own one bike and only care about fuel economy: Drivvo or Fuelly. If you live for the next great road: Calimoto or RoadBook. If you want a single app that actually owns the full life of your motorcycle — service, gear, mods, rides and costs — we obviously think MotoCare is the one.

Final tip: pick the app you'll actually open

The best motorcycle maintenance app is the one you'll open after every ride. Pick the one whose UI doesn't make you sigh. The data only matters if you log it.