Put your stats on the Strava visual — not below it

On Strava, people don't read. They scroll. The only thing that stops a thumb is the image — the map on a run, the photo on a ride. If your sport's numbers live in the description box, they may as well not exist. The fix is simple: put the stats on the image itself, where the eye is already looking.

The feed is a scroll, not a read

Watch anyone use Strava for 30 seconds. They flick the feed and stop on visuals — a route map, a podium photo, a sunset on a ride. Titles get half a glance. Descriptions get none. If your sport has no auto-generated map and you don't add a visual, your post is invisible by the time the next one loads.

Why running and cycling already win

Strava bakes the route map into every run and ride. That map is the visual. It signals 'this was a real session' before anyone reads a word. Padel, skydive, diving, climbing, HYROX, lifting, ice hockey — none of those get that automatic image. So the whole post lands flat in the feed.

Stats belong on the image

When your score, depth, altitude, freefall time, WOD result or splits sit on the photo, the feed reads them in the same glance it reads the visual. No tap, no expand, no scroll-back. UPPOST overlays the stats you actually care about — sport by sport — onto any picture you upload.

Easy, clean, quick, consistent

Pick your sport, drop a photo, type the few details that matter, and UPPOST builds a feed-ready image plus a matching title and caption. Same clean look every time, so your posts read as a series instead of one-off screenshots.

What this looks like in practice

Padel: score and partner on the court photo. Skydive: altitude and freefall on the DZ shot. Diving: depth and site on the underwater pic. HYROX: time and station splits on the venue photo. Strength: top lifts on the gym mirror selfie. The visual carries the story — exactly where Strava's audience is looking.

FAQ

Why not just write the stats in the description?

Because almost nobody opens it. The Strava feed is built for skimming — the title and image do the work. Stats on the visual get seen; stats in the description get scrolled past.

Does this work with my own photos?

Yes. Upload any picture — court, gym, DZ, summit, pool, locker room — and UPPOST lays the overlay on top. No photo? Use the built-in sport background.

Will it look the same every time I post?

That's the point. UPPOST keeps the overlay style consistent across sessions and across sports, so your posts read as a recognisable series in the feed.

Make a post with stats on the visual

Make a post with stats on the visual

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