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TalariaTreadTracker needs HealthKit permission to read your workouts. When you first open the app, tap "Allow" on the HealthKit authorization prompt. If you previously denied access, go to Settings → Health → Data Access & Devices → TalariaTreadTracker and enable workout data.
The app calculates an estimated wear percentage based on multiple factors: distance, terrain (trail vs. road), pace, elevation gain, workout duration, temperature, and running biomechanics. These are combined into an "effective mileage" that's compared to your shoe's mileage limit.
All wear values are estimates marked with (est.) and should be used as a guide, not a precise measurement.
Open a shoe's detail view, then tap "Manage Workouts." You'll see a list of your recent running, walking, and hiking workouts. Toggle them on to assign them to that shoe. The app also supports auto-assignment for new workouts based on your active shoes.
Yes! TalariaTreadTracker supports running, walking, and hiking workouts. When adding a shoe, you can select which activity types it's used for.
Yes. If you're signed into iCloud, your shoes and workout assignments sync automatically via CloudKit. Note that HealthKit workout data itself stays on each device — the app reads it locally from each device's Health database.
You can delete individual shoes by swiping left in the shoe list. To remove all data, uninstall the app. For iCloud data, delete the app from all your devices while signed into the same iCloud account. See our Privacy Policy for full details.
Retiring a shoe moves it to the "Retired" section and stops it from being auto-assigned new workouts. You can unretire a shoe at any time if you want to put it back into rotation.