About the founder

MTB Facts is built by a rider who would rather ride than worry about maintenance.

I’m a mountain biker and UX designer and researcher based in Colorado. My work focuses on understanding everyday pain points and finding better, more practical ways to solve them.

Like many riders, I care about keeping my bike in good shape, but I don’t want maintenance tracking to take more time or mental effort than the riding itself.

Over time, especially after becoming a mom, I noticed how easy it was to lose track of service intervals. Ride hours live in one place, maintenance notes live somewhere else, and memory fills in the gaps when it shouldn’t have to.

Why I’m building this

Mountain bike maintenance is based on time and usage, but most riders don’t have a clear, reliable way to track either. Service often gets delayed or forgotten, not because riders don’t care, but because tracking is fragmented and manual.

MTB Facts focuses on making maintenance easier to keep up with by grounding it in real ride data. The goal is to remove guesswork and reduce mental overhead, so riders can stay ahead of service without constantly thinking about it.

How I approach this work

MTB Facts is being built thoughtfully and intentionally. Ride data is used only to support maintenance tracking and service reminders. The product does not analyze performance, replicate training features, or create social comparisons.

This is an early-stage project developed iteratively, with a focus on clarity, responsibility, and long-term usefulness.

Get in touch

Questions or feedback are welcome at
mtbfacts@gmail.com

Two cyclists, a woman and a man, taking a selfie in a forest with autumn leaves and trees. They are wearing helmets and sunglasses, smiling, and one making a shaka hand sign.
A woman and a young boy wearing helmets and sports gear on a wooden platform outdoors in a mountainous area with cloudy skies, trees, and autumn-colored foliage.