The case for waxing your chain — even if you've never cleaned one properly.
A blunt, numbers-first argument for switching from wet lube to chain wax, written specifically for the rider who's been splash-and-dashing for years and assumes wax is a faff. It isn't. The numbers don't care about your habits — and the savings are bigger the worse those habits are. About a five-minute read.
The cost-to-run number you're looking at is the optimistic one.
ZFC's published cost figures already include chain replacement across a 6,000 km test cycle, and the gap is large enough on its own to make the argument: a top-tier wax routinely costs four to ten times less per useful kilometre than a mid-tier wet lube once you factor chain wear in. But that's only the part ZFC measures.
The bits that don't make it into any spreadsheet:
- Cassette and chainring wear.A worn chain doesn't just need replacing — it eats the cogs and rings it's been running on. Catch a chain at 0.5% elongation and you swap a chain; miss it and you're replacing the cassette and (eventually) the chainrings too. On a modern 12-speed drivetrain that's easily another £150–£300 per cycle.
- Cleaning consumables.Degreaser, brushes, rags, chain cleaning baths, replacement gears for the chain cleaner that grinds itself to dust — wet-lube maintenance has a parts list. Wax doesn't.
- Your time.An honest wet-lube routine is a wipe-down after every ride and a deep degrease every few hundred kilometres. That's an hour a fortnight if you do it. A wax re-treatment is around fifteen minutes including kettle time, and you do it ten times less often.
- Kit and laundry. Black streaks on right calves and socks. Oil on bib shorts. The drive-side leg of every pair of jeans you cycle in. None of this is in any cost-to-run figure, but you pay for it.
- Environmental cost. The runoff from wet-lube chain cleaning is functionally a small oil spill, repeated weekly, going into a drain. Waxing produces almost no waste. If that matters to you, it matters.
Take the cost-to-run column on the top picks page and add 30–50% for everything above. That's the actual gap.
Most wet-lube riders aren't actually maintaining their chain.
This is the part nobody says out loud. The wet-lube product instructions say "wipe excess off after application" and "degrease periodically". Almost nobody does. The honest routine for most wet-lube riders is: shake the bottle, drip oil down the chain while back-pedalling, sometimes wipe with a rag, ride off. The chain accumulates a black sticky paste of fresh oil mixed with old oil, road grime, and metal particles, and that paste is what you're actually riding on.
That paste is also the reason your chain wears so fast. Each particle of grit suspended in oil is a tiny grinding wheel sitting between the pin and the bore. ZFC's test rig deliberately accumulates this contamination — the fairest comparison to real-world chain life is ZFC's "wet contamination" block, and the wear numbers there are sobering.
Here's the awkward consequence: when a recommendation engine — any recommendation engine — tells a splash-and-dash rider to switch to immersive wax, the suggested journey is two steps: start cleaning your chain properly, then also adopt a completely new lubrication method. That feels like a cliff. So the recommendation gets ignored, and the chain wears out, and the cycle repeats.
Two starting points, same destination.
Whether the switch is small or large depends entirely on where you actually start, not where you'd ideally start.
You already clean properly.
You wipe after every ride, deep-degrease every few hundred km, you're already buying decent lube. The transition is a one-time degrease followed by a different application step. Within two weeks you'll wonder what took so long. Lower effort overall than what you're doing now, by a long way.
Recommended start: top immersive wax — or a wax-compatible drip if you don't want to deal with melting wax at all.
You've been splash-and-dashing for years.
The first month is genuinely more work than what you're currently doing — the chain has to be properly degreased once (this is a one-time job, not a forever job), and you have to learn the wax routine. After that month, total maintenance time drops to a fraction of what it was. Long-term, this is the biggest reduction in faff available to you.
Recommended start: top wax-compatible drip — drip application is the smallest behavioural change. Move to immersive wax in 6 months once the routine feels normal.
The historical objections to waxing are now obsolete.
The case against waxing used to be real. Stripping a factory chain meant hours of sloshing it through citrus degreaser and white spirit, drying it, brushing it, repeating until it ran clean. That's where the "waxing is faff" reputation comes from. Three things have changed:
- Purpose-built strip degreasers exist now. One soak, one rinse, done. The job that used to take an evening takes twenty minutes and produces less mess than a single oil drip.
- Pre-degreased chains are sold ready to wax.If you'd rather skip the strip step entirely, you can buy a chain that arrives already prepped — fit it, wax it, ride.
- The protocol is well-documented.ZFC's test brief and detail reviews include exact application instructions for every product they've tested. There's no guesswork left. See the ZFC protocol explainer for the methodology.
What's left is a one-Saturday set-up, then about fifteen minutes of work every few hundred kilometres. The cliff is gone.
What you actually gain.
Stripped of marketing language:
- A drivetrain that lasts years rather than seasons. On-road, off-road, mixed-use — same answer.
- A chain that's clean enough to handle without gloves. No oil on calves. No marks on bib shorts. No more black smudge running down the back of every right-leg trouser cuff.
- A bike that looks like a bike, not a tar-coated approximation of one. Frames stay clean, gear hangers stay clean, jockey wheels stay clean.
- Less time at the workstand by a factor of three or four, once the routine's established.
- A meaningful drop in environmental footprint. No more weekly oil-and-degreaser runoff into a drain.
The honest decision.
Decide based on what you actually do, not what you wish you did.
If you splash-and-dash today and don't deep-clean — start with a top wax-compatible drip lube. Smallest behaviour change, biggest immediate gain. Move to immersive wax later if you want to.
If you already maintain meticulously— go straight to the top immersive wax. You're already doing the harder thing.
If you're training for or doing a specific event — see event-specific recommendations. Multi-day races and ultra-endurance change the calculation.
If you want to compare specific lubes head-to-head — open the compare tool or the Pro Charts workbench.