Bike Pumps
Pumps for home and on the road.
5 products
A good bike pump is one of the most underrated investments a cyclist can make: it keeps your tyres at the right pressure, which determines not only comfort and rolling resistance but drastically reduces puncture risk. Two main categories exist: track (floor) pumps with large gauges and high pressure, and small mini-pumps for on the road.
In the Netherlands you will encounter three valve types: Sclaverand/Presta (slim, on road bikes and MTBs), Schrader (thick, like car valves, found on cheap kids bikes and many e-bikes) and the uniquely Dutch Dunlop/Blitz valve still found on many older city bikes. A good floor pump has a dual-head that handles both Presta and Schrader; the Schrader side usually works on Dunlop too. Top brands include SKS Germany (the Rennkompressor has been an icon for decades), Lezyne, Topeak and Silca (premium).
Floor pumps start around 25 euros and reach 150+ for wooden Silca models, mini-pumps range from 15 to 60 euros. Check the maximum pressure (road bikes need 8-9 bar, city bikes 3-5 bar) and look for a large, readable gauge.
Filter by brand
SKS Rennkompressor
SKS · Vloerpomp · 16 bar / 230 psi
€55
Topeak JoeBlow Sport III
Topeak · Vloerpomp · 11 bar / 160 psi
€40
Lezyne Micro Floor Drive HPG
Lezyne · Mini-pomp · 13,8 bar / 200 psi
€35
Topeak RaceRocket HP
Topeak · Mini-pomp · 11 bar / 160 psi
€25
SKS Airboy 8.0
SKS · Mini-pomp · 8 bar / 115 psi
€12
Buying tips
- Choose a floor pump with a dual head (Presta + Schrader), it fits literally every tyre in the house and the Schrader side usually works on Dunlop too.
- For road bikes you need a pump that reaches at least 10 bar, for city bikes 6-7 bar is plenty.
- A large gauge (at least 6 cm diameter) is much easier to read than a tiny dial, especially for precise MTB pressure.
- A wooden handle and sturdy steel base feel luxurious but mainly stop the pump from skating around under pressure.
- Carry a small mini-pump or CO2 inflator on longer rides, a flat in the middle of a bike path without a pump is no fun.
What does the ART certification mean and which level do you need for your bike or e-bike? Compare ART-1 through ART-5 and the requirements of Univé, ENRA, Centraal Beheer and Unigarant.