What Heart Rate Zone Should You Train In?

Sven Ahrens
heart ratetraining zoneszone 2polarized trainingLTHR

Most of your endurance training should be easy. The short answer: spend the large majority of your time in Zone 1 to Zone 2 (comfortable, conversational), keep a smaller controlled dose at threshold (Zone 3 to Zone 4), and reserve only a little for genuinely hard work in Zone 5. As a rule of thumb, roughly 80 percent of your sessions should feel easy and about 20 percent should be hard. That single distribution, not any one magic zone, is what drives long-term improvement. Now let us explain why, and how to find the zones that are actually yours.

What are the 5 heart-rate zones?

Heart-rate training divides your effort into bands, each tied to a percentage of your maximum heart rate or your threshold heart rate, and each training a different physiological system. A common five-zone model looks like this.

  • Zone 1, recovery (roughly 50 to 60 percent of max HR): Very light. Promotes blood flow and recovery without adding fatigue. This is your easy spin or walk.
  • Zone 2, aerobic base (roughly 60 to 70 percent): The workhorse of endurance. It builds capillaries, mitochondria, and fat-burning efficiency. You can hold a conversation comfortably. This is where most of your hours should live.
  • Zone 3, tempo (roughly 70 to 80 percent): Moderately hard. Talking gets harder. Useful, but easy to overuse, which is why coaches warn about the "grey zone" that is too hard to recover from and too easy to drive top-end gains.
  • Zone 4, threshold (roughly 80 to 90 percent): Right around the effort you can hold for about an hour. Trains your ability to clear lactate and sustain a strong pace. This is hard but controlled.
  • Zone 5, VO2max (roughly 90 to 100 percent): Maximal intervals. Develops your top aerobic capacity. Short, painful, and used sparingly.

If you want to compare different systems, see the different heart-rate zone models, since not everyone uses the same five bands.

Why should most of your training be easy?

It feels backwards, but going easy most of the time is what lets you go hard when it counts. Easy Zone 2 work builds the aerobic engine that every other effort draws on, and it does so with low fatigue, so you can accumulate a lot of it week after week. The boundary that matters here is the aerobic threshold: below it, you can train for hours and recover quickly. Push everything into the middle and you arrive at every workout slightly tired, never fresh enough to do real quality and never easy enough to truly recover.

What is 80/20 or polarized training?

Polarized training is the observation, studied closely in endurance athletes, that the best performers tend to spend most of their training time well below threshold and a meaningful slice well above it, with relatively little in the middle. The popular shorthand is 80/20: about 80 percent easy, about 20 percent hard. The point is not the exact number but the shape: lots of easy, a little very hard, and not much grey-zone tempo. You can read a fuller breakdown on polarized training if you want the nuance behind the ratio.

How do you find your heart-rate zones?

There are three common ways, from roughest to most personal.

From maximum heart rate. The simplest method takes percentages of your max HR. You can estimate max HR with a formula, but estimates carry real error, so a tested figure is far better. See max heart rate for how to estimate or test yours.

From lactate-threshold heart rate (LTHR). More personal than max HR. Your lactate threshold is the intensity above which lactate accumulates faster than you clear it. Anchoring zones to your tested LTHR, rather than to a guessed maximum, tends to place your threshold and tempo bands far more accurately. See LTHR zones for the method.

Karvonen, the heart-rate-reserve method. This one accounts for your resting heart rate, not just your max. It works from your heart-rate reserve (max HR minus resting HR) and adds back a percentage of that reserve, which adapts the zones to your individual fitness. The Karvonen method explains the formula in detail.

Use the calculator below to generate your own zones from any of these inputs.

Lukusi

Etkö tiedä sitä? Käytä ensin Maksimisyke-laskuria.

Kaikki lasketaan välittömästi selaimessasi. Mitään ei tallenneta tai lähetetä minnekään.

Maksimisyke

185bpm

AlueVaihteluväliMitä se kehittää
Z1

Palautuminen

93–111 bpm

Z2

Peruskestävyys

111–130 bpm

Z3

Vauhtikestävyys

130–148 bpm

Z4

Kynnys

148–167 bpm

Z5

VO₂max

167–185 bpm

Z1 · Palautuminen. Aktiivinen palautuminen ja lämmittely; edistää verenkiertoa lisäämättä väsymystä. Hyvin kevyt, RPE 1–2. Puhuminen sujuu täysin, hengitys tuskin kiihtyy.

Z2 · Peruskestävyys. Aerobinen perusta, rasvanpoltto ja hiussuonitiheys – arjen leipälaji. Mukava, RPE 3–4. Pystyt puhumaan kokonaisia lauseita.

Z3 · Vauhtikestävyys. Aerobinen kapasiteetti ja lihaskestävyys; kohtalaisen kova tasainen työ. Töitä tehdään, RPE 5–6. Vain lyhyitä lauseita.

Z4 · Kynnys. Laktaattikynnys, ylläpidettävän kilpailuvauhtisi katto. Kova, RPE 7–8. Muutama sana kerrallaan.

Z5 · VO₂max. Maksimaalinen aerobinen teho ja VO₂max lyhyillä, kovilla intervalleilla. Hyvin kova tai maksimaalinen, RPE 9–10. Ei puhetta.

  • Alueet ovat yksinkertaisia prosenttiosuuksia maksimisykkeestä (Z1 50–60 % aina Z5:n 90–100 %:iin asti). Ne on helppo asettaa, mutta ne olettavat HRmaxisi olevan tarkka.
  • Syke laahaa rasitusta 1–3 minuuttia jäljessä ja nousee kuumuudessa tai nestehukassa ('sykkeen ryömintä'), joten arvioi lyhyet, kovat vedot tuntemuksen mukaan.

PDF henkilökohtaisilla tuloksillasi, sekä QR-koodi niiden avaamiseen uudelleen milloin tahansa.

Which zone should I train in for my goal?

Match the zone to the job of the day, not to how motivated you feel.

  • Building a base or recovering: Stay in Zone 1 to Zone 2. These are your easy days, and they should be the bulk of your week. If you are new to structured training, almost all of your time belongs here for the first several weeks.
  • Quality days: This is where Zone 4 and Zone 5 live. One to two hard sessions per week is plenty for most people, whether that is threshold intervals (Zone 4) or short VO2max repeats (Zone 5).
  • Race-specific or tempo work: Zone 3 has its place, especially for events held at that intensity, but treat it as a deliberate ingredient, not a default. Many athletes drift into Zone 3 on easy days by accident and pay for it later.

The simplest weekly template for most endurance athletes: keep easy days genuinely easy so that hard days can be genuinely hard.

How accurate are heart-rate zones, really?

Be honest with yourself about the limits. Zones are estimates, not laws of physics. A few things to keep in mind.

  • Formulas vary by person. Any equation for max HR or zone boundaries is a population average. Your true values can sit well above or below the number a formula gives you, which is why testing beats estimating.
  • Heart rate lags. On short, hard intervals, your HR takes time to climb. By the time the monitor reads Zone 5, the interval may be half over. For very short or very intense work, perceived effort or power and pace are often better guides.
  • Daily noise is real. Heat, dehydration, caffeine, stress, sleep, and cardiac drift over a long session all shift your heart rate for the same effort. Treat zones as a guide, not a verdict, and let how you feel inform the day.

None of this means heart rate is useless. It is one of the best low-cost windows into your effort. It just works best as a guide you sanity-check against your own perception, especially on easy days where the whole point is to stay easy.

The bottom line

If you remember one thing: most of your training should be easy, in Zone 1 to Zone 2, with a smaller, deliberate dose of threshold and high-intensity work. Find your zones from a tested max HR, your LTHR, or the heart-rate-reserve method, then protect the easy days so the hard days can do their job. Consistency in that distribution, held over months, is what actually makes you faster.

Sources

The polarized, roughly 80/20 intensity distribution draws on the training-intensity research of Stephen Seiler. The heart-rate-reserve approach to setting zones comes from the work of Martti Karvonen and colleagues. The lactate-threshold heart-rate (LTHR) zone framework follows the approach popularized by coach Joe Friel.

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