Western bit accessories including curb chain, bit guards, leather keepers, and small tack hardware on a bench with a paint horse

Bit Accessories

Shop bit accessories at Texan Saddles for western riding, training, showing, gaited horse setups, and everyday bridle use. This collection helps shoppers compare available options by mouthpiece, cheek style, shank length, port, material, ring type, curb action, and intended use before choosing the right fit for their horse, barn, or western tack setup.

Bit Accessories for Horses

Bit Accessories can vary quite a bit from one product to the next. Product details, photos, measurements, and available variants are important because two items in the same category may fit, feel, or function differently once they are in regular use.

  • Western, snaffle, curb, training, show, or specialty bit styles when available
  • Possible stainless steel, chrome, sweet iron, copper, jointed, ported, or roller details
  • Useful for comparing mouthpiece feel and cheek style
  • Fit, training level, rider hands, and horse comfort should guide selection

Choosing the Right Option

Start with the job the product needs to do. A piece used every day in the barn may need different features than one chosen for show presentation, travel, training, or occasional use. Then compare construction, fit, adjustability, hardware, material, and care needs.

Availability can change as sizes, colors, and styles sell through. Review each product listing for current options, included pieces, measurements, and any product-specific notes before ordering.

Related Horse Bits Collections

For the broader category, start with Horse Bits. Use the related collections below to compare close options by style, size, material, or use.

Frequently Asked Questions

Bit Accessories are used as part of a bridle setup to communicate cues, with action depending on the mouthpiece and cheek design.

The category name alone does not determine severity. Mouthpiece, leverage, fit, curb action, and rider hands all matter.

Compare mouthpiece shape, cheek style, material, size, intended discipline, and what the horse already understands.

Check bit fit, dental comfort, training, rider timing, and whether the new design suits the horse's experience level.