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Pace Zones

Running pace zones based on Functional Threshold Pace (FTPa), used to plan and review easy, tempo, threshold, VO2max, and anaerobic running intensity.

Pace Zones

Pace zones are a direct way to plan and review running intensity. Compared with heart rate, pace responds immediately to speed changes, but it still needs context: terrain, wind, surface, heat, fatigue, and elevation can all change how hard a pace feels.

Trainingload.ai uses a classic zone model based on Functional Threshold Pace (FTPa / Threshold Pace) (similar in spirit to common definitions from Joe Friel or Jack Daniels).

Key concept: FTPa

All pace zones anchor to your FTPa (Functional Threshold Pace): an estimate of the fastest pace you can sustain for roughly an all-out 1-hour effort.

  • For elite runners, this is often around half-marathon to 15K race pace.
  • For recreational runners, it’s often slightly slower than 10K pace, or close to 10K pace.

Zone definitions

The table below shows the Trainingload.ai standard pace zones, their FTPa percentages, and training intent.

ZoneNameIntensity% FTPaTypical feel (RPE)Training goal
Z1RecoveryVery easy> 129%< 2Promote circulation, speed recovery, build volume.
Z2AerobicEasy114% - 129%2 - 3Build aerobic base, improve fat oxidation, increase mitochondrial and capillary density.
Z3TempoModerate / comfortably hard106% - 113%3 - 4Raise aerobic durability, practice race-like steady pacing (HM / marathon).
Z4ThresholdHard100% - 105%5 - 7Improve lactate clearance and raise FTPa; learn to work near the threshold boundary.
Z5aVO2maxVery hard90% - 99%8 - 9Improve VO2 max; typically done as 3–5 minute intervals.
Z5bAnaerobicAll-out< 90%10Improve anaerobic capacity, sprint speed, and neuromuscular recruitment.

Note: pace percentages are time-based (min/km). A larger number means a slower pace. Example: if FTPa is 5:00 (300 s), the Z2 upper bound 129% is 300 × 1.29 = 387 s (6:27/km).

Typical applications

1. Base phase

Focus on mostly easy running. Z1/Z2 is commonly used to build aerobic volume while keeping fatigue manageable.

2. Build / race-specific phase

Add zones based on your target event:

  • Marathon: lots of Z3 tempo.
  • 5K/10K: emphasize Z4 threshold and Z5a VO2 max intervals.

3. Recovery

Use Z1 for recovery days after hard sessions. If the run drifts into Z2 or Z3, it may no longer serve the recovery purpose and can add fatigue without much targeted benefit.

How Trainingload.ai uses pace zones

  • Plan vs. actual: pace zones show whether a run matched the intended intensity.
  • Use with heart rate: pace is external load, heart rate is internal load.
    • On flat terrain in good conditions, prioritize pace.
    • In heat/humidity, headwinds, or fatigue, prioritize heart rate and adjust pace down to maintain similar physiological intensity.
  • Use grade-adjusted metrics when needed: on hilly routes, Grade Adjusted Pace and Normalized Graded Pace can make zone analysis more realistic.
  • Re-test periodically: FTPa changes with training. Re-test every 4–6 weeks, or after a meaningful fitness change, to keep zones calibrated.

References