Rubber Tracks for Skid Steers & Compact Track Loaders
Replacement tracks for Bobcat, CAT, Kubota, Takeuchi, Case, and John Deere machines — with fitment verified against your serial number, not just the model badge. Every track ships free and carries a 2-year warranty.
Free shipping
No freight surcharge at checkout
2-year warranty
vs 12–18 months industry typical
Serial-verified fitment
Matched to your serial prefix
Ships fast
In-stock tracks ship right away
Find tracks for your machine
Pick your brand and model — every result is vendor-verified fitment.
Shop rubber tracks by machine
Bobcat rubber tracks
Find your Bobcat serial plate →Bobcat T550
Bobcat T590
Bobcat T66
Case rubber tracks
Find your Case serial plate →Case TR310
Caterpillar rubber tracks
Find your Caterpillar serial plate →Caterpillar 259D / 259D3
Caterpillar 279D
Caterpillar 289D
JCB rubber tracks
Find your JCB serial plate →JCB 150T
JCB 190T ECO
JCB 190T
JCB 1CXT / 1CXT HF / 1CXT EC / 1CXT HF EC
John Deere rubber tracks
Find your John Deere serial plate →John Deere 317G
John Deere 333G
Kubota rubber tracks
Find your Kubota serial plate →Kubota SVL75 / SVL75-2
Kubota SVL95-2S / SVL95-2SC
Takeuchi rubber tracks
Find your Takeuchi serial plate →Takeuchi TL8R2
Takeuchi TL8
Rubber track buying guide
How to read a track size
Every track size follows the same format: width × pitch × link count, all in millimeters. A 450x86x52 track is 450mm (17.7") wide, has 86mm between drive lugs, and runs 52 links around the loop.
- Width — measure straight across the track face. Many machines offer narrow and wide options; they are not interchangeable without matching undercarriage parts.
- Pitch — the center-to-center distance between two drive lugs. An 86mm track will not run on an 84mm sprocket.
- Links — count the metal links embedded in the track. A 52-link track is physically longer than a 49-link track and will not fit the same frame.
Why your serial number matters
Manufacturers change track specs in the middle of a model run. A Bobcat T190 built under serial prefix 5277 takes a different track than one built under prefix A3LN — same model badge, different undercarriage. Our listings publish the exact serial prefixes each track fits, verified against the manufacturer fitment catalog.
Find your plate with our free lookup tools: Bobcat, Kubota, CAT, Case, and Takeuchi.
Tread patterns explained
C pattern
The all-around choice. C-shaped lugs balance traction, ride quality, and wear life in dirt, gravel, and mixed conditions. If you are unsure, this is the pattern your machine most likely came with.
Block
Staggered rectangular blocks put more rubber on the ground. Runs smoother and wears slower on pavement and concrete — the pick for roadwork and hardscape crews.
Zig-zag
Continuous angled bars that self-clean in mud. Aggressive multi-directional grip for soft ground, slopes, and wet-site work.
Straight bar / multibar
Bars perpendicular to travel maximize forward traction for pushing, grading, and loading. Common as the OEM pattern on CAT and newer Bobcat machines.
When to replace your tracks
Replace when lug height wears below roughly half of new, when you see cracking between lugs or exposed steel cords, or when the track starts jumping sprocket teeth under load (a stretched track that tensioning no longer fixes). Running tracks past these points risks a thrown track on a slope and accelerates sprocket and roller wear — undercarriage repairs cost far more than a set of tracks. Replace in pairs: a new track opposite a worn one loads the machine unevenly and shortens the life of both.
Rubber track questions, answered
How do I know what size rubber track I need?+
Track size reads width × pitch × link count in millimeters — for example, 450x86x52 is 450mm wide with an 86mm pitch and 52 links. The size is usually molded into the inside of your current track. If it is worn off, measure the width across the track, the center-to-center distance between two drive lugs (pitch), and count the links. Every listing on this site shows the full spec table, and most listings also verify fitment by your machine serial-number prefix.
Do I need to replace both tracks at the same time?+
We recommend it. Running a new track opposite a worn one causes uneven loading that accelerates wear on both tracks and the undercarriage. That is why our quantity selector defaults to 2. You can order a single track after a puncture-type failure if the other side still has healthy tread depth.
Is shipping really free?+
Yes — every rubber track ships free with no freight surcharge at checkout. Most sellers add $100–300 in LTL freight per order at checkout, so compare landed price, not list price.
What warranty do the tracks carry?+
Every track includes a 2-year warranty against manufacturing defects — longer than the 12–18 months typical for aftermarket tracks.
How do I verify fitment with my serial number?+
Manufacturers change track specs mid-model-run, keyed to serial-number breaks. Our listings show the exact serial prefixes each track fits. Find your serial plate with our free serial-number lookup tools for Bobcat, Kubota, CAT, Case, and Takeuchi, then match the first four characters against the listing.
Are these OEM or aftermarket tracks?+
These are premium aftermarket tracks built to OEM specifications, and select listings carry direct OEM cross-reference part numbers (for example Bobcat 7394912). Aftermarket tracks deliver comparable wear life at a significantly lower price than dealer OEM.
Running a fleet?
Re-tracking three or more machines? Send us your model list and serial numbers — we'll quote the full set with fleet pricing.
Get a fleet quote