Home > Clothing-Gear-Tools

VeloToze stretch off-road with MTB-ready latex shoe covers

16 Comments
Support us! Bikerumor may earn a small commission from affiliate links in this article. Learn More

Riding year round in all manners of weather, we often struggle with ways to keep our feet dry & warm. For years veloToze has offered a specially-designed, reinforced latex cover to stretch over road shoes, but no option for off-road. Now those shoe condoms are available for mountain bikers, with two different versions to seal your foot inside, and foul weather out where it belongs.

veloToze Tall MTB reinforced latex shoe covers

VeloToze shoe covers are a pretty simply product – a specially reinforced latex sock that stretches over your shoe to seal out the weather. This isn’t something that breathes at all,  but serves to more important job of keeping all wind & water out. Until now the road versions have been too tight to fit over a lugged mountain bike shoe, didn’t have cutouts for MTB tread and cleats, and were too fragile to survive any off-road walking. Since we do almost all of our winter road & gravel riding with mountain bike shoes for the inevitable times when you have to walk, MTB versions are a welcome veloToze addition.

The new MTB-specific versions get a thicker reinforced bottom so they should last, even when you will need to get off to put a foot down or the unavoidable short hike-a-bike in wet & slippery weather. The $20 Tall version extends high up the calf to cover your sock as well, but takes a bit more effort to stretch into place. You actually put these on before your shoe, stretching the cover back down over the shoe to keep dry.

veloToze Short MTB reinforced latex shoe covers

The $17 Short version is more of something you can take along on a ride in a pocket, saddle bag, or hydration pack. When it starts to rain or end up at a bunch of creek crossings, pop them out and pull into place directly over your shoes.

Both natural latex rubber covers (in black only for now) are going to keep all wind & water out, as well trapping enough heat inside to keep feet warm in mildly cool temps. They are pretty thin, so don’t expect them to survive years of abuse. But at twenty bucks or less, they are cheaper than most any regular shoe cover, super compact, and with a proper mountain bike option now should offer another way to stay warm & dry through the colder & wetter months.

veloToze.com

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

16 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
BMX
BMX
6 years ago

These are disturbing on many levels

EN
EN
6 years ago

Velotoze are garbage, unless you want to shell out for a new pair every ride. Both these and the road version are great in theory but crap in execution. Recently ran a pair of these (on MTB) and they didn’t last an hour. A small rock flicked up on a descent and cut the latex. When there is a cut they are impossible to remove without completely destroying them. Trash. Don’t wast your money.

Crash Bandicoot
Crash Bandicoot
6 years ago

These are cool but honestly velotoze are such a pain to put on and breathe terribly so while your feet My be covered they’ll be sweaty as hell. I also wonder if how well these will work considering most brands use the cleat mount and center of the shoe to put air channels in (I don’t understand why I live in hot as hell Texas and I’ve never been like ohh my feet need air). I’ll stick with my tried and true thick socks with tinfoil wrapped around the front of my feet.

Heffe
Heffe
6 years ago

It’s great to see them expand into this area. The road versions work great for their intended application. These days I mostly use off-road pedals for almost everything, however.

Vann
Vann
6 years ago

Kinky!

Volsung
Volsung
6 years ago
Reply to  Vann

They’ll go great with my aero zipper mask

blah blah blah
blah blah blah
6 years ago
Reply to  Volsung

was that you i saw on the tower of power the other night ?

MIrwin
MIrwin
6 years ago

While they seal to your bare leg to keep the water out, unlike traditional booties, it’s a gamble on how long they will last; a few hours or a few rides. Fortunately it’s reflected in the price. I didn’t buy them again because I wanted something more reliable.

dontcoast
dontcoast
6 years ago

RDO!

Velotoze are a nice product…for a very specific application.

Going to race for 6 hours in cold rain? Willing to drop an extra $20 on race day costs? Well worth it.

Going for a ride for fun? Don’t like disposable plastic crap? Do not buy, there are many better options for you.

Rod Diaz
Rod Diaz
6 years ago
Reply to  dontcoast

Agreed. I use them for TTs, especially early morning/wet conditions. They last about a season (about 10-12 races).

edge
edge
4 years ago
Reply to  Rod Diaz

you must be super careful. I only use them for key races and I usually break at least one side per race.

Flatbiller
Flatbiller
6 years ago

Showers Pass Crosspoint waterproof socks. Done.

Tom
Tom
6 years ago

Velotoze and hairy legs is like a form of torture when putting them on!

donald
donald
6 years ago

I agree I took mine on a gravel bike for a gravel ride they lasted just over a hour on fire roads.

Travis
Travis
6 years ago

I am allergic to latex but still think I may give them a try. I don’t know if i will get a reaction or not. I hope not.

Rod Diaz
Rod Diaz
6 years ago
Reply to  Travis

I’d stay away. My wife is seriously allergic to latex (how allergic? Latex gloves give her blisters – all the way under the fingernails). Not worth it.

I like this product and use it, but take care of yourself – hard to get on the bike if your feet are covered in boils!

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.