Runners Need 90% Max Effort to Boost VO₂ Max, With 30-Second Intervals Aiding Gains
Updated
Updated · Runner's World · Jun 10
Runners Need 90% Max Effort to Boost VO₂ Max, With 30-Second Intervals Aiding Gains
3 articles · Updated · Runner's World · Jun 10
Summary
VO₂ max workouts should push runners into heart rate zone 5—about 90% of maximum—or roughly 8 to 9 out of 10 effort, hard enough that talking is no longer possible.
That intensity is used to extend time near maximal oxygen uptake, improving speed and efficiency; even when VO₂ max itself plateaus, the sessions can still drive aerobic adaptations such as greater mitochondrial density.
30/30 intervals offer a practical format: run hard for 30 seconds, jog 30 seconds, repeat five times per six-minute set, rest five to six minutes, then complete three sets.
Once or twice a week is the suggested frequency, but only for five to six weeks before at least a two-week pullback, because the sessions are highly taxing and require tissue adaptation.
People with heart or cortisol issues are advised to seek professional guidance, and newer runners should build gradually—starting with one set or lower-impact machines—before full running intervals.