How BMC road sizing works
BMC builds its road bikes around six numbered sizes, 47 through 61, and publishes rider height ranges that deliberately overlap. That is a feature, not a flaw: the brand expects a lot of riders to sit between two sizes and wants you to choose by body proportion rather than a single number. The three current road platforms share those sizes but place you very differently, from the low, forward Teammachine to the tall, easy Roadmachine. This guide shows the geometry side by side and explains how to land on the right one.
Prefer to look around first? Start with the full BMC range at Bikeroom.
Read this first. Because BMC's height bands overlap on purpose, the sizes below are a considered recommendation rather than a rule. Your torso and leg split, flexibility and riding goals all shift the answer, and a professional fit settles it for good.
Quick reference
Find your height, confirm with your inseam, and read across. The Teammachine SLR and Teammachine R share almost identical numbers, so they get one column; the Roadmachine sits taller and shorter.
| Rider height | Leg length (inseam) | Teammachine SLR & R | Roadmachine |
|---|---|---|---|
| under 160 cm | under 72 cm | 47 | 47 |
| 160 to 166 cm | 72 to 76 cm | 47 | 47 to 51 |
| 166 to 174 cm | 76 to 81 cm | 51 | 51 |
| 172 to 180 cm | 80 to 85 cm | 54 | 54 |
| 178 to 186 cm | 84 to 89 cm | 56 | 56 |
| 184 to 192 cm | 88 to 93 cm | 58 | 58 |
| over 190 cm | over 92 cm | 61 | 61 |
Notice how the bands run into each other. If your height puts you in two rows at once, that is expected. The tie breaker is proportion and how aggressive you want to sit.
Taking your measurements
Stand tall against a wall in socks and mark the top of your head for height. For your inseam, press a book up between your legs as if you were sitting on it, then measure from the floor to the spine. A handy sanity check: inseam in centimetres multiplied by 0.66 gives an approximate frame size to compare against the table.
The three road platforms
Teammachine SLR (lightweight race)
The Teammachine SLR is the climbing and all round race bike: long and low, but not brutally so, with a forward saddle position over the bottom bracket. It is the WorldTour bike for riders who want to go fast uphill and everywhere else. Sizes: 47, 51, 54, 56, 58 and 61.
| Frame size | 47 | 51 | 54 | 56 | 58 | 61 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stack (mm) | 506 | 530 | 550 | 565 | 584 | 608 |
| Reach (mm) | 367 | 377 | 386 | 392 | 401 | 409 |
| Rider height | under 166 | 166 to 174 | 172 to 180 | 178 to 186 | 184 to 192 | over 190 |
BMC specs longer stems on the small sizes, so the cockpit can feel longer than the number implies. Factor that in if you are petite.
Teammachine R (aero race)
The Teammachine R is the fastest bike BMC makes, an aero racer whose geometry sits within a millimetre or two of the SLR but with a slightly lower, more committed front. Long wheelbase and generous trail keep it planted rather than nervous. Sizes: 47, 51, 54, 56, 58 and 61.
| Frame size | 47 | 51 | 54 | 56 | 58 | 61 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stack (mm) | 504 | 528 | 548 | 563 | 582 | 608 |
| Reach (mm) | 368 | 378 | 387 | 393 | 402 | 409 |
| Rider height | under 166 | 166 to 174 | 172 to 180 | 178 to 186 | 184 to 192 | over 190 |
If you already know your Teammachine SLR size, the R is the same. Choose between them on ride character, not fit.
Roadmachine (endurance)
The Roadmachine is BMC's race bike with the edges filed off: roughly 20 to 35 mm more stack and about 15 mm less reach than the Teammachine at a given size, for an upright, stable, all day position that still handles sharply. Sizes: 47, 51, 54, 56, 58 and 61.
| Frame size | 47 | 51 | 54 | 56 | 58 | 61 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stack (mm) | 525 | 550 | 570 | 595 | 620 | 645 |
| Reach (mm) | 370 | 379 | 383 | 388 | 393 | 398 |
| Rider height | under 160 | 158 to 174 | 172 to 180 | 178 to 186 | 184 to 192 | over 190 |
This is the one to pick if the Teammachine feels too low at the front. It rides firm rather than plush, but the position is far easier on the back and neck.
Fit notes from BMC owners
The theme that comes up again and again is those overlapping size bands: plenty of riders genuinely fit two sizes, so pick by proportion, not height alone. When it is close, most go smaller, because adding height with spacers and stem is easier than removing it, especially on the Roadmachine. The exception is long legs with a short torso, where sizing up avoids a mast of exposed seatpost. Small Teammachine frames come with longer stems, so the front can feel roomier than expected, and both Teammachines carry a long wheelbase that trades a little flickability for real stability at speed.
On the fence between two sizes?
Smaller means sharper and lower, larger means calmer and taller. Let your proportions break the tie: long legs push you up, a long torso pulls you down onto a longer stem. Still unsure? Tell us your numbers and we will help you commit.
Buy your BMC
- BMC Teammachine for the SLR and the aero R
- BMC Roadmachine for endurance comfort
- All BMC bikes to see everything in stock
Want a second opinion? Our concierge is here
BMC's overlapping sizes make the between sizes call a common one. Share your height, inseam and how you like to ride, and our concierge team will help you choose with confidence. Message our concierge.
These recommendations are offered as general guidance and do not guarantee a perfect fit for every rider. Geometry reflects current BMC data and may change across model years and versions, so always check the specific bike you intend to buy and, where you can, book a professional fit.
