Aerobic Capacity
Aerobic capacity describes the upper range of oxygen use during hard efforts, commonly represented by VO2 Max and interpreted alongside thresholds, economy, and training load.
Aerobic Capacity
In most endurance-training contexts, aerobic capacity is essentially VO2 Max: how much oxygen you can use at maximal effort, typically expressed relative to body weight (ml/kg/min). It describes the upper range of your aerobic system.
A higher aerobic capacity gives you more room to support higher intensities, but it is not the only thing that decides performance.
Key characteristics
- It’s an upper limit: once you’re near max, you can’t “will” the oxygen system much higher.
- Track trend, not single readings: watch/platform VO2 Max is usually an estimate and can swing with heat, hills, fatigue, and sensor noise.
- Not a performance switch: two athletes with similar VO2 Max can race very differently due to threshold ability, economy, and durability.
Estimation
Lab test (direct VO2 Max measurement)
A graded test to exhaustion with gas analysis.
Field estimate (more practical for training)
If you care about training decisions and progress, a repeatable field estimate is often more useful than a one-off lab value.
Aerobic capacity vs. aerobic threshold
- Aerobic capacity (VO2 Max) describes your upper aerobic range.
- Aerobic threshold (AeT) describes the upper edge of easy aerobic work.
Effective endurance training can improve VO2 Max, but it also raises AeT and AnT as a percentage of VO2 Max, so you can work closer to your limits for longer.
How Trainingload.ai uses aerobic capacity
- Aerobic ceiling context: VO2 Max helps explain high-aerobic potential, especially for interval work.
- Trend tracking: estimated VO2 Max is treated as a trend metric and cross-checked with recent load, fatigue, and performance.
- Not alone: Trainingload.ai interprets aerobic capacity with threshold ability, efficiency, durability, and recovery.
Related docs
References
Training Monotony
Training monotony describes how similar daily training load is across a week and helps identify overly uniform training structure.
Aerobic Threshold (AeT)
Aerobic threshold (AeT) marks the upper range of easy aerobic work, useful for Zone 2 training, base building, and long-session pacing.