The main decision with power meters is where on the bike to measure. Pedal-based meters (Favero Assioma, Garmin Rally) are the most portable — they transfer between bikes easily and measure single or dual sided depending on the model. Cleat compatibility matters: Favero uses a Keo-style cleat; Garmin Rally makes SPD-SL (RS series) and SPD (XC series) variants. Crank-arm meters like 4iiii bolt onto existing cranks — an efficient upgrade without replacing your crankset. Dedicated power meter cranksets (SRM, Campagnolo with power, SRAM with power) integrate measurement into the component itself. Dual-sided measures both legs independently for true power; single-sided measures one leg and doubles it, which works well for most training purposes.
The 124 products cover every approach. SRM leads at the top with the PM9 crankset system, available with THM and Campagnolo interfaces in multiple spindle configurations. 4iiii's Precision 3+ bolt-on models cover Dura-Ace R9200, Ultegra R8100, and 105 R7100 in dual and single-sided versions. Favero's Assioma PRO pedals are available single or dual sided. Garmin Rally covers Look Keo/SPD-SL (RS series) and SPD (XC series) in both measurement configurations. Campagnolo Super Record 13 WRL and SRAM Red E1 round out the crank-integrated options.
Pair your power meter with a cycling computer to display your data. Browse bike pedals if you're weighing pedal-based measurement, or see cranksets and chainrings for crankset compatibility context.