Most Frog bike frame numbers are found underneath the frame, near the bottom bracket, where the pedal cranks pass through the frame. Frog makes lightweight children’s bikes that hold their value strongly, so they are bought and sold used constantly and are a common theft target, which makes a frame-number check well worth it. Turn the bike carefully upside down and look between the pedals for a stamped code or a barcode sticker.
That number matters. It helps you register the bike, check if it has been reported stolen, prove ownership, value it and sell it with more buyer confidence. Here is where to find it, how to read it, and how to check it before you buy.
Check a Frog frame number
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The frame number on a Frog bike is usually underneath the bottom bracket, between the pedals. Look for a stamped code or a barcode sticker with a unique mix of letters and numbers, and copy the full serial exactly before you check or register the bike.
Start under the bottom bracket.
This is the most common place to find a Frog frame number. It is the part of the frame between the pedals, on the underside.
- Put the bike somewhere safe and well lit.
- Turn it upside down carefully, or place it in a workstand.
- Look underneath the frame where the cranks meet the bike.
- Wipe away mud, grease or road dirt.
- Use a phone torch if the number is hard to read.
- Take a clear photo before typing the number into a checker.
Make sure you copy the full number. A single missing or misread character can give the wrong result.
Can’t find it underneath the bike?
If the number is not under the bottom bracket, check these places next:
- Near the rear dropouts, where the back wheel fits into the frame.
- Around the seat tube.
- On the underside of the down tube.
- Near the head tube at the front of the bike.
- On the original sales receipt.
- In your Frog registration email or paperwork.
- With the Frog dealer that sold the bike.
On older bikes, repainted frames and heavily used bikes, the number can be harder to read. If it has been scratched off, covered, filed down or looks tampered with, treat that as a serious warning sign.
What does a Frog frame number look like?
A Frog frame number is normally a string of letters and numbers, either stamped into the underside of the bottom bracket area or printed on a barcode sticker. You need the full unique code, not the model number that tells you the wheel size.
Do not use the model name, tyre size, barcode on a shop label, or any number printed on a component. The frame number belongs to the bike frame itself. For example, these are not usually the frame number:
- Frog 44
- Frog 53
- Frog 62
- Frog Road
- Frog Track
- 16 inch
- 20 inch
- Wheel size markings
- Shop stock labels
The number you want is the unique frame code that belongs to the frame itself.
The detail that protects you.
A frame number is one of the most useful details on a used bike. It connects a Frog to its owner, its registration record and any stolen-bike reports.
You may need it to:
- Check if a Frog bike has been reported stolen.
- Register your bike.
- Sell your bike with confidence.
- Get an accurate bike valuation.
- Make an insurance claim.
- Report a stolen bike to the police.
- Prove the bike is yours.
If you own a Frog, take a photo of the frame number and keep it with your receipt. If the bike is ever stolen, that detail can make a real difference.
Buying a used Frog? Check the frame number first.
A clean-looking bike is not always a safe buy. Before you pay, ask the seller for a clear photo of the frame number and check it against stolen-bike records. You should also ask for:
- The original receipt or proof of purchase.
- The seller’s name matching the receipt where possible.
- Clear photos of the bike from both sides.
- A photo of the frame number.
- Any service history.
- Details of upgrades or replacement parts.
Red flag. Be careful if the seller refuses to show the frame number, says they cannot find it, gives only a partial code, or pressures you to pay quickly. A genuine seller should understand why you are checking.
Check a Frog frame number on Cyclesite
Found the number? Run a free stolen-bike check before you buy. Enter the Frog frame number into the checker and look for any matching reports. It only takes a moment, and it can help you avoid buying a bike with a bad history. If the bike looks clear, you can also value it and compare similar Frog bikes for sale.
What to do if your Frog has been stolen.
Report it as soon as possible. You will usually need the frame number, photos, make, model, colour, size, location and any unique marks or upgrades.
- Report the theft to the police.
- Get a crime reference number.
- Add the bike to stolen-bike databases.
- Update any existing bike registration record.
- Contact your insurer if you have cover.
- Watch used bike listings for matching bikes.
- Keep photos, receipts and messages in one place.
Include anything distinctive, such as upgraded wheels, unusual tyres, scratches, stickers, lights, mudguards, racks or replacement parts. The more detail you provide, the easier it is to identify the bike if it appears for sale.
Frog frame number FAQs
Is a Frog frame number the same as a serial number?
Yes. Most people use frame number and serial number to mean the same thing. It is the unique identifying code attached to the bike frame.
Do all Frog bikes have a frame number?
Most Frog bikes have a frame number or serial number. Check the locations described above first; on older frames the marking can be shallow or worn, so clean the area and check in good light before concluding it is missing.
Is the Frog model number the same as the frame number?
No. The number in a Frog model name, like Frog 44 or Frog 53, refers to the wheel or inseam size, not the unique frame number. The frame number is the individual serial stamped or stickered on the frame, usually near the bottom bracket.
Where is the frame number on a Frog Road?
On most Frog Road bikes, check underneath the bottom bracket first, the area between the pedals on the underside of the frame.
What if the Frog frame number has been removed?
Do not buy the bike. A removed or damaged frame number is a major red flag. It may make the bike harder to register, insure, resell or prove as yours.
Can I check if a Frog bike is stolen by the frame number?
Yes. Use the frame number to run a stolen-bike check before buying. You should also ask the seller for proof of ownership and check that the details match the bike.
Looking for another brand? See the full bike frame number guide.
Bottom line
The quickest place to find a Frog frame number is underneath the bike, near the pedals. Look for a stamped code or barcode sticker, copy the full number, then check it before you buy, sell or register the bike. A used Frog can be a brilliant buy, but the frame number is the detail that protects you.
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Last reviewed by the Cyclesite editorial team. Published by Cyclesite, Companies House No. 13238473.