Trail Performance Planning Cost Estimate:
-
Trailytic Performance Tiers Explained:
Trail Types
Silver Tier Includes:
-
Professional, proprietary Trailytic performance analysis of the covered trail footage.
-
One Trailytic-directed priority resurfacing period per year, focused on berms, jump transitions and water damaged areas where surface degradation most impacts ride quality.
-
Trail geometry remains unchanged under Silver coverage.
-
Trail resurfacing consists of limited, data-directed surface corrections intended to restore ride quality and durability in worn sections. Resurfacing does not include trail realignment, feature reconstruction, structural revisions, or major drainage modifications.
​
Gold Tier Includes:
-
Professional, proprietary Trailytic performance analysis of the covered trail footage.
-
One Trailytic-directed revision period per year, which may include:
-
Berm geometry adjustments
-
Jump and transition geometry adjustments
-
Targeted drainage improvements where directly related to performance degradation
-
Priority trail resurfacing
Revisions are prioritized to maximize safety, ride quality, and long-term sustainability. -
Culvert Installation
-
-
Comprehensive before-and-after Trailytic performance reporting, documenting measurable changes in trail dynamics and performance metrics.
XC Trail
Select XC Trail if your trail system consists primarily of narrow-tread singletrack with no constructed berms or jumps. XC trails are typically lower speed, geometry-driven by terrain rather than built features, and experience moderate wear patterns.
​
DH / Flow Trail
Select DH / Flow Trail if the trail includes constructed berms, jumps, or flow-oriented features, regardless of size. These trails experience higher speeds, increased loading on berms and landings, and accelerated wear in braking and transition zones.
​
High-Traffic Bike Park
Select High-Traffic Bike Park if the trail exceeds approximately 3 feet in width, includes large-volume or repeated features, and experiences heavy, sustained rider traffic resulting in rapid surface and structural wear. These trails typically require frequent intervention to maintain safety and ride quality.
​
Community Bike Park
Select Community Bike Park if the trail system includes purpose-built bike park features intended for public or local use, such as small jump lines, pump-style features, or learning-focused zones, but does not experience destination-level traffic or extreme wear rates.
Community bike parks typically see:
-
Moderate to high localized use
-
Repetitive feature wear
-
Lower speeds and smaller feature volumes than high-traffic bike parks