Rider-matched picks
Size-matched bottle cages picks for women cyclists, with fit and feature priorities curated for how women cyclists actually ride.
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Arundel
Ultralight carbon. Standard 73mm OD bottles.

Blackburn
Standard cage for 73mm bottles.

Topeak
Standard 73mm bottle opening. Fits most road/gravel bikes.
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Women often benefit from shorter top tubes and reaches relative to seat tube length, reflecting the typically shorter torso-to-leg ratio. Narrower handlebars (38-42cm vs 42-46cm for men) improve control and reduce shoulder strain, while shorter-reach brake levers (or levers with adjustable reach) are essential for smaller hands to brake confidently. Women-specific saddles are designed for wider sit bone spacing (typically 130-155mm vs 120-140mm for men) and reduced soft tissue pressure. WSD bikes from brands like Liv, Specialized, and Trek address these proportional differences with purpose-built geometry rather than simply offering smaller versions of men's frames. However, some women fit standard 'unisex' frames perfectly well — body proportions vary more within genders than between them. The key is measuring your actual torso length, arm reach, and sit bone width rather than assuming you need a gendered design. If buying a unisex frame, prioritize a shorter stem (70-90mm) and compact handlebars to achieve proper reach.
Standard cycling bottles are 73 mm outside diameter at the gripped section, and almost every cage is built around that spec. The variable is your frame's main triangle: short-reach road frames in 49–52 cm and most full-suspension MTBs leave very little room between the down tube and seat tube, which is where side-entry cages (left- or right-load) earn their keep — they let a 750 ml or 1 L bottle drop in sideways instead of straight up. Confirm your frame has 2 bottle-boss mounts (M5 × 0.8 thread, 64 mm spacing) before buying; some compact frames ship with only one, and a few aero road frames use proprietary hardware. Cargo cages (Salsa Anything Cage, Blackburn Outpost) follow a wider 3-bolt pattern, usually pre-drilled on adventure forks.