To get accurate power readings you need a device with real strain gauges that measure the physical force the legs are putting into the cranks. Smart bikes that estimate power from flywheel speed don’t count — see Cycling Power Benchmarks for why.

The good news is that you don’t need a Garmin Rally setup that costs more than a road bike to get scientifically accurate numbers.

The options, by price

1. Single-sided crank arm — ~USD 300

The most popular entry point. Replace the left crank arm with one that has a strain gauge bonded to its inside. It measures the left leg’s power and doubles it. Unless someone has a single-leg injury, the accuracy is more than enough.

  • Brand: 4iiii Precision 3
  • Cost: ~$300–330 new
  • Catch: Must match the bike’s existing crankset (e.g. Shimano 105, Ultegra, etc.)

2. Smart pedals — ~USD 450

Pedals with strain gauges built in. Major advantage: they swap easily between a road bike and an indoor bike.

  • Brand: Favero Assioma UNO (single-sided)
  • Cost: ~$450–500
  • Note: Widely considered as accurate as Garmin Rally for half the price. The DUO version doubles the price for dual-sided measurement.

3. Chinese-brand spider power meters — ~USD 300

The “spider” sits in the centre of the front chainring. Disruptive newcomer brands have made these affordable.

  • Brands: Magene (PES P515), Sigeyi
  • Cost: ~$300 for an entire crankset
  • Catch: Installation requires more mechanical skill than swapping a pedal or crank arm.

4. Used market — USD 150–200

Cyclists upgrade constantly. eBay and Facebook Marketplace routinely list used 4iiii or Stages left crank arms for well under $200. Verify the model matches the buyer’s drivetrain before purchase.

5. The pro option: Garmin Rally — USD 1,000+

Dual-sided pedals, fully calibrated, top of the market. For most amateurs this is equivalent to buying Alphafly racing shoes just to jog. Unless dual-sided measurement is genuinely useful, the value isn’t there.

Free or cheap ways to test FTP without buying anything

Before committing to a power meter, it’s worth getting a real reading once on someone else’s gear:

  • Cycling studios and performance labs. Many cities have indoor cycling studios for triathletes (not rhythm-based spin like SoulCycle). Drop-in passes are $20–30. Often equipped with Wahoo KICKRs, Tacx NEOs, or Wattbikes.
  • High-end commercial gyms. Look for a Concept2 BikeErg (uses wind resistance, accurate) or a Wattbike (gold standard). Standard LifeFitness uprights are usually no more accurate than a smart spin bike.
  • A cyclist friend’s setup. Most serious road cyclists or triathletes have a direct-drive smart trainer at home. Borrowing it for an hour costs nothing.

What a real FTP test looks like

The most common protocol is the 20-minute FTP test:

  1. 15–20 minute warmup with a few short hard efforts.
  2. 5 minutes very hard (“blow out the cobwebs”), then 10 minutes easy.
  3. 20 minutes at the hardest sustainable pace.
  4. 10 minutes cooldown.

Average power for the 20-minute effort × 0.95 = FTP.

A maximal one-hour test is the most accurate, but few amateurs can pace it well. The 20-minute protocol is the standard.

See also