Cycling saddle pain is often treated too quickly as a simple saddle problem. In practice that is only part of the story. Very often the full load distribution is wrong: the pelvis becomes unstable, the reach pulls you forward or the position creates too much pressure and friction for the saddle to support you properly.
You work directly with me, Lloyd Thomas. I assess how your pelvis behaves under load and whether the bike is supporting you well enough for the saddle to work as intended rather than only chasing the painful contact point.
Saddle pain rarely comes from one factor alone. Saddle height, setback, tilt, reach, pelvic control, clothing and riding posture can all influence pressure, friction and shear forces.
The goal is to identify the real driver of the symptom in your case instead of assuming the saddle itself must be wrong.
I start with your movement off the bike and then analyse the position under load. I am not only asking where it hurts. I want to know why the system is losing support in that area.
The order matters. I do not just swap the saddle and hope it helps. I identify which change will actually make the biggest difference.
Use the next step that best matches your situation, then move into the right service or advice page.