PeloVelo helps cycling clubs organise the week’s group rides, see who’s riding, and find each other on the road — without another WhatsApp thread.
Every Sunday club run, midweek chaingang, and Wednesday social — all visible to your members, with the details that actually matter.
Distance, elevation, meeting point and ride leader for every upcoming ride — sorted by date so members always know what’s next.
Tap a ride to see who’s signed up, with brief profiles and any notes — like “meeting at Top of Kingsdown” for riders joining en route.
One tap to join a ride or let the group know you can’t make it — so leaders always have an accurate headcount.
The features below round out PeloVelo for launch — built from real feedback from club ride leaders and committees.
Current conditions along the route, so riders know what to wear before they leave the house.
Set the main meeting point — and let riders joining en route add their own pick-up spot.
Add the regular coffee stop to a ride so everyone knows where the group’s heading afterwards.
Theme the app with your club’s own colours, so it feels like yours from the moment members open it.
Set up named groups with a colour and a min/max speed, so riders can find the pace that suits them.
Flag members who are new to cycling or new to the club, so leaders and regulars know to look out for them.
Live location is only visible to members of your own riding group — not the whole club.
Connect your accounts to bring routes in and send completed rides straight back out.
From 10 minutes before the start until the ride’s expected finish, riders in your group can see roughly where everyone is — handy for joining mid-route, regrouping after a mechanical, or working out who’s off the back.
If your club currently juggles a Facebook group, a WhatsApp chat and a spreadsheet of routes, this replaces all three — and early clubs help shape the launch.
Every ride, route and rider list in one app — not buried in chat history.
Run separate rides for different paces or routes on the same day, each with its own leader and sign-up list.
Brief profiles let new riders see who’s leading, who’s coming, and what to expect before they turn up.
Distances in miles, elevation in feet, and routes named the way your club already names them.