- 【WARM & WINDPROOF】 – Avoid getting cold feet on your winter rides with all-rounder cold weather overshoes these shoe cover integrated with inside fleece lining keeps your feet warm, dry, and cozy during the cold winter riders.
- 【DURABLE & STRONG】 – The seams at the bottom of the cycling shoe covers are rubberised is very well constructed to prevent wear and tear and a better, closer fit around the sole and increased water resistance when you cycle.
- 【REFLECTIVE STRIPES AND LOGOS】 – Enhancing your visibility in low-light conditions, we’ve incorporated reflective stripes at the rear and reflective logos on the sides of the bike shoe covers. By the night it ensures you are seen fully visible when light hits the shoes and ensures the safety of the rider.
- 【ELASTICATED CUFF WITH ZIPPER CLOSURE】 – The Cycling Booties come with robust and reliable zip closure at the rear, along with elasticated cuffs which provide easy to wear experience, so you can easily put it on and off your feet in seconds,besides the cycling gaiters are very lightweight and portable. You can fold and store them in pockets and bicycle bags.
- 【FITS MOST CLEATED CYCLING SHOES 】- Our bike shoe cover’s cleat and heel pad openings are generously sized to accommodate a wide range of cleated cycling shoes, including road, gravel, and MTB, ensuring a perfect fit for most riders.
Cycling Shoe Covers
GEWAGE Cycling Shoe Covers -Warm Bike Shoe Covers – Windproof Mountain Road Cycling Overshoes – Cycling Shoe Cover for Men Women
$25.99
LP –
I’ve only been able to use these a couple of times since the temperatures are just dropping low enough to actually use over shoes. My initial impression is that I don’t think I’ll be using these in really cold temps. I don’t think these would be quite warm enough below 40F but in the 40’s and above they seem fine. You might be able to use them at lower temps with wool socks. I have other heavier over shoes, and these are a nice option to bridge the gap between cold and very cold riding.
So I find these pretty comfortable once they are on. They stay in place well and I didn’t have any trouble with the material getting int he way of the cleats. The only thing I would have done differently is I would have gone size up. I wear a 11.5 shoe and I ordered the XL size. I find them very tight to get on especially navigating the cleat into the over shoes. Once they are on they are fine, its just the slight annoyance of getting them on and off.
Also, the reflective material on these combined with the bright green definitely make you more visible.
All things considered I like these, and I’m sure I will put in a lot of miles with them.
***Update. After several rides in cooler weather and in some light rain, these feel just as nice as any other over shoes have.
LP –
Gregory Mason –
They are easy to get on and remove, keep feet dry in Chilly Chicago 17 degree mornings! Keep the salt spray away !!
Gregory Mason –
Alex –
I ordered the GEWAGE Cycling Shoe Covers -Warm Bike Shoe Covers – Windproof Mountain Road Cycling Overshoes – Cycling Shoe Cover for Men Women.
I ordered the XXL. I tried these on EU size 48 (US 14) shoes and they fit extremely well. Not too tight or too loose.
I have a couple of cycling shoe protectors that work to some degree. These shoe protectors look like they’ll work better and hold up better. These fit over the two BOAs that I have on each shoe. I did have to work the shoe cover over the BOAs with care, but doing the was not difficult or time consuming. Once on the shoes, the covers fit moderately tight to the shoe. But there was a gap at cuff above the ankle. Since these are for cold weather, I’ll be wearing at least one layer of leg snd that gap should go away. I’ve already packed my leg warmers for my home move and, do, can’t test that theory but I’m 95% sure they’ll be okay.
On the bottom side of the shoe, i like that there are rubber grippers over top of the fabric to protect the fabric from getting worn out when walking in the shoes. There is a gripper at the toe and there is a gripper in the middle of the shoe at the arch. At the rear of the shoe cover there is an opening that’s large enough to encompass your rear shoe rubber gripper without the fabric getting in the way. The shoe cover is designed so that the opening of the shoe around your heal pads isn’t exposed to scuffing on the ground. It is designed so that the opening goes around the back edge of the shoe , not the bottom of the shoe.
I tried these shoe covers on both SPD-SL and Speedplay Zero cleats and they fit well without any interfering with the cleats.
On my shoes which have little vent cut outs in the tow area on the bottom side of the shoe the shoe cover covers those vents (thats a good thing) and that will help to reduce any cold wind or water infiltration coming up from the road while peddling.
I held them under warm running water for more than a minute with my hand inside and pressed from the outside on the areas where yhe water was running. No water infiltrated at either the black material or the yellow accent/visibility material. It did not seem like water made it past the flap of material on the inside of the zipper during my test and this was with water running directly on the zipper at a high rate for one minute. I do suspect that because the protective flap under the zipper is open on one side for the length of the zipper that you may eventually get some water infiltration to your socks if you are caught in a rain storm for an hour. But, thus should be minor.
Because I’m in the middle of a home move, I not tested these on the road. It really isn’t cold enough here to get a good test on the road anyway. I’ll try and update later in the season.
Overall, 5 stars from me for now.
Alex –
Alex –
The GEWAGE bike shoe covers really appear to work well. I have to say “appear” because it hasn’t yet been really cool enough to require them. But I can say that trying them out on my trainer in my 50 degree F basement, my feet got pretty warm after an hour, certainly warmer than ever while just wearing my bike shoes.
Sizing is important, as is the type of bike shoes you wear. I got a EU size 43, about a size 9, or so, US, for my size EU 42 bike shoes. And my bike shoes, while they look like regular road shoes, are 2-hole MTB shoes, for 2-hole MTB cleats. That matters because the shoes are not flat; they have raised, hard bumpers all around and the cleats sit in sort of a canyon carved out by the bumpers. Getting the covers past the bumpers was a struggle. But the covers are stretchy and rubbery, and while I was ready for them to just rip apart as I pulled on them, I got them on. Any question about whether these covers are tough and rugged was answered right there.
I also want to say a word about the zippers because these are often a point of failure on all sorts of things: considering how tight the covers were on the shoes and that I really had to yank on the zippers to close them, they didn’t slip, or bind, or come apart at any time.
Ultimately, the covers were quite snug but I think also because the shoes are, as bike shoes are, quite stiff, I never felt like the covers were tight at all; just rather warm after a while.
Getting them off was much easier; I just yanked them off and stopped worrying about tearing them. They peeled off like a tight orange rind and none the worse for wear.
While the covers were on the cleats were fully exposed and with plenty of clearance to clip in. Of course, regular road cleats protrude much more, but I had no problem with the MTB cleats.
About sizing I am torn on whether or not to recommend a size larger. But I think they fit as expected, certainly for standard road shoes. The next size up would have been easier for me but it’s ok – I just have to allocate a bit more time for getting them on.
Looking forward now to some cooler weather for an outside ride.
Alex –
FidlrJiffy –
Ordered the XL size, which is supposed to fit size 11-12. The thing tore apart when I was trying to get it on. It MIGHT fit a size 9 with a lot of effort. Definitely not for size 11-12!
FidlrJiffy –
Gregory Mason –
Perfect fit for my Mavic mtb shoes (size 42/43 European)
Gregory Mason –