For the serious equestrian

Your horse deserves better than generic.

Premium PDF planners designed for riders who take their craft seriously. Discipline-specific. Beautifully crafted. Instant download.

Etsy + Gumroad

Why we exist

"Every rider has a story worth tracking. Every horse deserves a plan that matches their ambition."

The equestrian world is full of talented riders — Pony Club kids, eventers, dressage competitors, first-time owners — who deserve tools as refined as the sport itself. Most printables are afterthoughts: generic templates, bland layouts, nothing that reflects the pride of being a horse person. Bridle & Byte exists to fix that.

Our line

Printables built for
the way you ride

Stable Manager

Feed schedules, farrier records, vet visits, worming logs. Everything your barn needs in one place.

Barn Management

Horse Show Planner

Packing checklists, competition schedules, results tracker, and ride prep pages.

Competition Eventers

Health & Wellness Log

Vaccinations, injuries, treatments, weight monitoring, supplements. Your horse's complete health story.

Health Tracking

Pony Club Workbook

Goal setting, achievement tracking, training plans, and milestone certificates. Built for kids who mean business.

Pony Club Youth

Art & Decor

Horse wallpapers, printable artwork, stable signs, milestone certificates. Digital art for horse people.

Digital Art Gift

What makes us different

Not a template.
A system.

01

Niche-first design

We don't make one planner and call it done. We design for eventers, dressage riders, Pony Club members, and first horse owners separately — because their needs are different.

02

Tested in real barns

Every page is designed to be used — not just admired. Print-friendly layouts that work with binders, tablets, or saddlebags.

03

Instant access

Download the PDF the moment you buy. No waiting, no email confirmations. Just open and start filling in.

The horse world deserves
tools as beautiful as the sport.

Every product we make starts with one question: what would a serious equestrian actually use?