
Zone 2 Heart Rate, Explained
Zone 2 is easy, conversational aerobic effort: roughly 60 to 70 percent of your maximum heart rate, or, more precisely, just below your first lactate threshold (LT1). It is the intensity that builds your aerobic base, and it should feel almost too easy. If you can hold a full conversation in complete sentences while you train, you are probably in the right place. Everything below explains what is actually happening at that effort, how to pin down your own number, and how much of it you should do.
What is Zone 2, physiologically?
At low intensity your body is happy to burn fat for fuel. As you go harder, you shift toward burning carbohydrate, and at some point you start producing lactate faster than you can clear it. The intensity right before that shift starts is your aerobic threshold, also called LT1. Zone 2 sits just under it.
Training there develops the slow, structural adaptations that make up aerobic endurance:
- Fat oxidation. You teach your muscles to rely on fat, which is a near-limitless fuel source, sparing your limited carbohydrate stores for when you actually need them.
- Mitochondrial density. Mitochondria are the cellular engines that turn fuel and oxygen into energy. Easy aerobic volume increases both their number and their quality, especially in slow-twitch muscle fibres.
- Capillarisation. Your body grows more tiny blood vessels around the working muscles, delivering more oxygen and clearing waste faster.
None of these adaptations are flashy, and none of them happen in a single session. They accumulate over weeks and months of consistent, mostly easy work. That is the aerobic base: the foundation that every harder effort is built on top of.
Why does Zone 2 matter, and why do pros do so much of it?
Watch how elite endurance athletes actually train and a clear pattern shows up: the large majority of their hours are easy, with only a small slice spent truly hard. This is the idea behind polarized training, and it is not an accident. A bigger aerobic engine raises the ceiling for everything else. The fitter your base, the faster you can go before lactate accumulates, the quicker you recover between hard sessions, and the more total training you can absorb without breaking down.
Easy work is also sustainable. You can do a lot of it, week after week, without the deep fatigue that high intensity brings. Volume at low intensity is what drives long-term progress, while a little well-placed intensity sharpens it.
How do I find my Zone 2 heart rate?
There is no single perfect method, so use more than one and let them agree.
1. Percentage of max heart rate (a starting point). Roughly 60 to 70 percent of your maximum is the classic Zone 2 band. It is a reasonable place to begin, but treat it as an estimate, not gospel. Most people do not actually know their true max, and the standard age-based formulas can be off by ten beats or more for any individual. See the different heart-rate zone models for how these bands are defined.
2. The talk test. This is free and surprisingly reliable. In Zone 2 you can speak in full sentences comfortably. The moment you find yourself breaking sentences to breathe, you have drifted too high.
3. Below your first lactate threshold. The most accurate anchor is your aerobic threshold (LT1), ideally confirmed with a lab lactate test or a field test. Keeping your effort just under the point where lactate threshold markers begin to rise is the physiological definition of Zone 2. If you train more with pace or power than heart rate, our LTHR zones guide shows how to anchor zones to a threshold rather than a guessed maximum.
4. The MAF 180 approach. Phil Maffetone's method estimates your aerobic ceiling as 180 minus your age, adjusted up or down for fitness and health history. It is a conservative, easy-to-apply cap that keeps beginners honest. Our MAF 180 method page walks through the adjustments.
Start with the percentage to get a ballpark, then use the talk test on every run to keep yourself honest, and confirm with threshold data if you can.
Frequenza cardiaca massima
185bpm
| Zona | Intervallo | Cosa allena |
|---|---|---|
| Z1 | Recupero 93–111 bpm | Recupero attivo e riscaldamento; favorisce il flusso sanguigno senza aggiungere fatica. Molto facile, RPE 1–2. Conversazione completa, respirazione appena accelerata. |
| Z2 | Resistenza 111–130 bpm | Base aerobica, ossidazione dei grassi e densità capillare: la zona fondamentale, pane quotidiano dell'allenamento. Comodo, RPE 3–4. Puoi reggere frasi intere. |
| Z3 | Tempo 130–148 bpm | Capacità aerobica e resistenza muscolare; lavoro costante 'moderatamente duro'. Impegnativo, RPE 5–6. Solo frasi brevi. |
| Z4 | Soglia 148–167 bpm | Soglia del lattato, il tetto sostenibile del tuo ritmo gara. Duro, RPE 7–8. Poche parole alla volta. |
| Z5 | VO₂max 167–185 bpm | Potenza aerobica massimale e VO₂max tramite intervalli brevi e intensi. Da molto duro a massimale, RPE 9–10. Non si parla. |
Z1 · Recupero. Recupero attivo e riscaldamento; favorisce il flusso sanguigno senza aggiungere fatica. Molto facile, RPE 1–2. Conversazione completa, respirazione appena accelerata.
Z2 · Resistenza. Base aerobica, ossidazione dei grassi e densità capillare: la zona fondamentale, pane quotidiano dell'allenamento. Comodo, RPE 3–4. Puoi reggere frasi intere.
Z3 · Tempo. Capacità aerobica e resistenza muscolare; lavoro costante 'moderatamente duro'. Impegnativo, RPE 5–6. Solo frasi brevi.
Z4 · Soglia. Soglia del lattato, il tetto sostenibile del tuo ritmo gara. Duro, RPE 7–8. Poche parole alla volta.
Z5 · VO₂max. Potenza aerobica massimale e VO₂max tramite intervalli brevi e intensi. Da molto duro a massimale, RPE 9–10. Non si parla.
- Le zone sono semplici percentuali della frequenza cardiaca massima (Z1 50–60% fino a Z5 90–100%). Sono facili da impostare ma presuppongono che la tua HRmax sia accurata.
- La frequenza cardiaca ha un ritardo di 1–3 minuti rispetto allo sforzo e deriva verso l'alto con il caldo o la disidratazione ('deriva cardiaca'), quindi gestisci gli sforzi brevi e intensi a sensazione.
Un PDF con i tuoi risultati personalizzati, più un codice QR per riaprirli in qualsiasi momento.
The most common Zone 2 mistake
Almost everyone runs their easy days too hard. Zone 2 feels slow, sometimes embarrassingly so, and the temptation to push into Zone 3 is constant. The problem is that Zone 3, often called the "grey zone," is hard enough to cost you real recovery but not hard enough to drive top-end adaptations. You end up tired without the upside.
Two honest caveats matter here:
- Your threshold is individual. The 60 to 70 percent band is a starting point, not your number. Two people the same age can have aerobic thresholds many beats apart. Anchor to your own threshold or talk test, not the textbook percentage.
- Heart rate drifts. On long or hot sessions your heart rate creeps upward at the same effort, a phenomenon called cardiac drift, caused mostly by rising core temperature and fluid loss. If your heart rate climbs late in a long run while your pace and breathing stay easy, do not panic and slow to a crawl. Trust the talk test and your perceived effort over the number on the watch.
How much Zone 2 should I do?
If you are following a polarized or pyramidal structure, roughly 75 to 85 percent of your weekly training time should sit at this easy aerobic intensity, with the remainder spent at threshold and high intensity. For most recreational athletes that means the majority of your sessions are easy, with one or two harder workouts per week.
Beginners can spend even more time here. Several months of almost entirely easy aerobic work builds the base that makes later intensity productive and safe. There is no shortcut: the engine is built slowly, and the athletes who respect that are the ones still improving years later.
Sources
- Phil Maffetone, on the MAF 180 formula and aerobic training, from his published work on the Maffetone Method.
- Stephen Seiler, on polarized intensity distribution and the training patterns of elite endurance athletes.
- Iñigo San Millán, on Zone 2 training, fat oxidation, and mitochondrial function.
