Indoor trainer bike fit is the more specific version of indoor fitting. It is for riders with a dedicated smart-trainer setup, a permanent winter bike, a rocker plate or a fixed indoor station that needs to work repeatedly over longer structured sessions.
You work directly with me, Lloyd Thomas. I assess the bike, the trainer environment and the rider together so the whole station supports the kind of training you actually do.
Very small errors become obvious when the same indoor station is used again and again in the same static pattern. If your trainer bike feels different from your outdoor bike and you do not know whether to match it or adapt it, this page is the better match than the broader indoor page.
I look at saddle position, bar height, reach, cleat setup and how the trainer itself changes the feel of the bike. The real question is whether the whole indoor station is supporting the type of load you place on it.
This page is for riders whose indoor station has become its own problem. The trainer bike, the room setup, the front-end support or the static loading pattern is now part of what needs to be solved.
If the issue is a Peloton platform, Peloton Bike Fit is more specific. If you only know that indoor riding feels worse than outside, Indoor Bike Fit is the broader starting point.
No. Sometimes that is the right answer, but sometimes the indoor station needs its own small adjustments because the load pattern is more static.
Yes. That is common when the setup is close enough to feel acceptable briefly but not well supported for longer structured sessions.
Use the booking hub. It gives you the cleanest path to the right appointment type.
Use the booking path if you already know what you need, or start with the closest service page and decide from there.