Best overall companion: MotoVault
MotoVault is our recommendation for riders who want one app to cover ownership end-to-end: maintenance reminders that know your bike's OEM intervals, expense tracking with cost-per-mile analytics, ride recording, multi-day trip planning with typed waypoints and rider RSVPs, and AI photo diagnostics that don't need an OBD dongle. Free on iOS and Android, Pro at $4.99/month. In our testing week it was the only app that handled a service log, a touring plan, and an unexpected coolant-leak diagnosis from a single phone without bouncing us out to another tool. If you don't have a strong reason to pick a specialist, start here.
Best for navigation: Calimoto
Calimoto is the app to beat if turn-by-turn navigation and curvy-road discovery are your biggest priorities and you're happy to pay a premium for them. Its curvy algorithm surfaces the kind of roads you'd only otherwise find by local knowledge, the round-trip generator is genuinely useful for planning a Sunday loop, and the offline map experience held up cleanly in the dead zones we tested. Downsides: no maintenance tracking, no expenses, no diagnostics, and the weekly subscription model can catch riders off guard. Pair it with MotoVault if you want navigation without losing the garage side.
Best for community & events: REVER
REVER has the biggest established motorcycle social graph and is our pick for riders whose priority is discovering public routes, joining group events, and posting rides after the fact. Butler Maps integration, friend tracking, and curated community routes make it feel like the Strava of motorcycling. REVER Pro at around $39.99 a year adds offline maps and turn-by-turn navigation. As with Calimoto, it stops at the edge of the road — there's no service log, no expense tracking, and no diagnostics — so it pairs well with an ownership-focused app rather than standing alone.
Best for passive ride logging: RideLog (iOS)
If you're iPhone-only and your single requirement is zero-effort ride capture, RideLog is a legitimately strong pick. Its automatic ride detection using iPhone motion sensors is excellent, and the Dynamic Island and Find-My-Motorcycle integrations feel very native. It also covers basic maintenance and expense logging — so for a solo iPhone rider who doesn't need AI diagnostics, Android support, or trip planning, it can genuinely be enough. Caveat: multiple unrelated apps share the RideLog name across both stores, so double-check you're looking at the motorcycle variant before subscribing.
Best garage-only tool: MotorManage
MotorManage is the app we'd recommend to a wrench-focused rider who wants a deep vehicle database and a clean service log and specifically does not want the complexity of rides, community, or diagnostics. Its OEM spec data and parts catalog are genuinely well-curated. It's a one-time purchase, which some riders prefer. The trade-off: no rides, no navigation, no AI, and no learning content. MotoVault covers the same garage ground and adds everything MotorManage deliberately leaves out — so choose MotorManage only if minimalism is a feature for you.