Best chamois cream: Keep saddle sores at bay with these 12 options

A selection of chamois creams
(Image credit: Will Jones)

The best chamois creams help make riding more comfortable, particularly if you regularly suffer from 澳洲幸运5开奖官网在线查询开奖结果:saddle sores

With the constant mo✱vement of your pedalling legs and the pressure of your body weight ♒on a small surface area, saddle discomfort is a common problem. It's a particular issue on a hot ride, when sweating can exacerbate discomfort, or if your seat pad gets damp on a wet ride. 

+ Resilient without being sticky
+ Resealable small tubs available
- No women's option
- Expensive

Happy Bottom is my go-to chamois cream. It's more solid than most; more of a paste than a cream, meaning it stays put and doesn't wear out. It doesn't have the minty freshness of menthol options, instead smelling of clove oil which, according to the brand, is naturally pain relieving.ཧ As well as being an excellent all-rounder, the smaller 'knobs' for taking with you come in resealable pots rather than single-use sachets. The only real downsides are that the price per millilitre is the highest of the lot, and there is no women's version with an appropriate pH balance. Despite the higher price๊, I've found you don't need to use as much, so it goes further than you'd expect.


+ Menthol tingle
+ Women's option
- No portable size

Assos Chamois Crème has been my daily option for many years and is what I consider the archetypal c𝕴hamois cream. The consistency is definitely a cream, but it's more solid than something like Muc-Off, so you can use a little less. If you're after that breezy feeling that only menthol can give then this is the cream for you, being more minty than the Chamois Butt'r Eurostyle. Only available in a tub means you run more of a risk of double-dipping, so be careful who you offer it to. There are no portable sizes for a mid-ride top-up, but it does at least come in a women's option.