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Heart Rate Zones for Runners and Lifters: A Practical Guide

Heart Rate Zones for Runners and Lifters: A Practical Guide

2026-05-16 · ~8 min read · By the FitLife coaching team

Heart rate training has gone mainstream — every fitness watch now displays "zones" during workouts. What most users don't know is what those zones mean, why they matter, and how a runner's relationship to them differs from a lifter's.

The 5-zone system

Modern heart rate training divides effort into five zones. The percentages are of Heart Rate Reserve (HRR), not max HR — HRR accounts for resting fitness:

This is the Karvonen formula. It's significantly more accurate than the old "% of max HR" method, especially for fit individuals with low resting heart rates.

The zones

Zone% HRREffortPrimary adaptation
150-60%Very easy — can singActive recovery, fat oxidation
260-70%Easy — can converseAerobic base, fat burning, mitochondrial density
370-80%Moderate — short sentences onlyAerobic capacity, lactate clearance
480-90%Hard — can't talkLactate threshold, anaerobic capacity
590-100%Maximum — can't sustainVO2 max, neuromuscular power

Worked example

35-year-old, max HR ~185, resting HR 60.

The runner's HR distribution

For runners (or cyclists, swimmers), the gold-standard polarized training distribution is:

This 80/20 polarization is supported by 30+ years of endurance research. Most amateur runners do the opposite — too much Zone 3, not enough true Zone 2 or Zone 5. The result: chronic moderate fatigue without strong aerobic base development.

Zone 2 — the most underrated training

Zone 2 is the boring zone. You're moving slow enough to hold a conversation, your heart rate hovers around 60-70% HRR, you don't feel like you're training. It's the zone everyone wants to skip.

It's also the zone that builds:

If you can only do one type of cardio per week, do 40-60 minutes of pure Zone 2. The compound effect over months is dramatic.

The lifter's relationship to HR

Strength training doesn't fit cleanly into HR zones. During a heavy squat set, your HR can spike to 170+ bpm, then drop into Zone 2 during the rest period. A 60-minute lifting session might average Zone 2-3 — but the average hides the actual training stimulus, which is muscular and neural, not cardiovascular.

For lifters, HR is most useful for:

The "fat burning zone" myth

The label "fat burning zone" applied to Zone 2 isn't wrong — but the implication is misleading. Yes, the highest percentage of calories burned in Zone 2 comes from fat. But the total calories burned per minute is lower than higher zones. Net fat burned per workout is often higher in Zone 4 than Zone 2.

Zone 2 is valuable for cardiovascular adaptation and building aerobic base — not because it's a magic fat-burning intensity.

How to actually train zones (without obsessing)

For a fit adult who wants both strength and cardiovascular health:

That's it. Zones don't need to be precise. Listen to your body — Zone 2 is "I could do this all day" pace.

Use FitLife's Heart Rate Zones calculator (Tools tab) to get your zones using your actual resting HR. Then aim for one Zone 2 walking session this week. Don't go faster, even if you feel like you can. The boredom is the point.

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