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2026-05-24 · 4 min read


Strength training for trail running — what, when, no gym needed


If you run trail and don't lift, you'll break. That's not opinion, it's statistics: 60-75% of runners get injured at least once a year, and the variable most correlated with that rate is poor lower-body and core strength.


And yet it's the first thing people skip. "Climbs are enough strength," "no time," "I feel tired the days I combine." All three are excuses. Let's tear them down.


Why strength is non-negotiable in trail


Three reasons, in order of impact:


1. Running economy: runners with stronger legs use less energy at the same pace. 4-8% economy improvements after 8-12 weeks of heavy strength training (Mikkola, Beattie, Berryman, multiple studies). In a 6-hour race, that's 20-30 minutes.


2. Ability to absorb impact on descents: muscle damage on long descents is what leaves your legs trashed halfway through an ultra. Eccentric quad strength is the only thing that prevents it. Without training it, descents destroy you.


3. Joint stability on technical terrain: ankle, knee, hip. Specific strength reduces sprain risk and chronic issues. Especially critical on technical trail (roots, rocks, loose descents).


What you should NOT do


  • Endurance lifting (CrossFit metcon style): leaves you wrecked without building max strength. If you want WODs because you enjoy them, do them in off-season, not in a trail block.
  • Treadmill cardio to "warm up": you already do cardio the rest of the day. The strength session is for strength.
  • 30 minutes of crunches: core matters, but not this way. 10 min of functional core (planks, pallof, dead bug) beats 30 min of crunches.
  • Starting the season with the hardest routine: progressive, same as with running.

  • The 5 exercises that move the needle


    ### 1. Deep squat

    King of the lower body. Heavy load (5 reps at 80-85% 1RM) builds max quad and glute strength. No barbell? Heavy Bulgarian split squat with a weighted backpack.


    ### 2. Deadlift

    Activates the entire posterior chain: hamstring, glute, lower back. It's what protects your back on long climbs with poles. No barbell? Unilateral Romanian deadlift with a heavy dumbbell.


    ### 3. High step-up

    Bench or plyo box at knee height. Step up with one leg without pushing off with the other. Replicates exactly the gesture of climbing a trail. Loaded with backpack or dumbbells.


    ### 4. Nordic curl (eccentric hamstring)

    Controlled lowering to the floor from kneeling. Weak-hamstring eliminator. Most underrated running exercise. Reduces hamstring injury incidence by 51% (Petersen 2011).


    ### 5. Heavy calf raise on a step

    Eccentric also. Strong calf = less plantar fasciitis, less Achilles, better push-off on steep climbs. 3x12 with at least bodyweight.


    The no-gym minimum routine (25 min, at home)


    Works if you don't have gym access. You need: backpack with weight (books, water), sturdy bench or box, floor space.


    Warm-up (4 min): 30 sec each x 4 rounds: jumping jacks, leg swings, air squat, plank.


    Main block (16 min): 4 rounds of:

  • 8 reps Bulgarian split squat per leg (weighted backpack).
  • 8 reps unilateral Romanian deadlift per leg (weighted backpack).
  • 6 reps Nordic curl (band-assisted or partner if just starting).
  • 12 reps high step-up per leg (weighted backpack).

  • 90 sec rest between rounds.


    Core (4 min): 1 minute each: front plank, pallof press right, pallof press left, dead bug.


    Finish: very light stretching, NO intense yoga.


    How many times a week


  • Off-season / base building: 2 strength sessions per week. One heavy (5x5), one lighter (3x8-10).
  • Build block: 2 sessions, but no longer chasing max strength gains — maintaining.
  • Pre-race (3-4 weeks out): 1 lighter weekly session, away from long runs.
  • Taper / race week: 0 heavy sessions the last week. ONE strides day instead of strength.
  • Post-race recovery: no heavy strength for 5-7 days.

  • How to combine with running


    The key question. Two schools, both work.


    ### Same day, hard run + strength

    Pro: stacks the hard stimulus, other days stay cleaner.

    Con: the run session feels worse.

    Setup: hard run in the morning (intervals, tempo), heavy strength 6-8 hours later.


    ### Separate days

    Pro: each session is higher quality.

    Con: fewer "clean" days in the week.

    Setup: Mon Z2, Tue intervals, Wed strength, Thu short Z2, Fri off or easy, Sat long, Sun off.


    The best option depends on your recovery. If you sleep well and eat well, "same day" usually wins. If you have job stress or irregular sleep, separate days.


    The experienced runner's mistake


    Thinking that after 40 "they no longer need heavy strength because they could get injured." It's the opposite. After 40 you lose muscle mass faster (sarcopenia), and heavy strength is the ONLY stimulus that preserves it. Light high-rep work doesn't compensate.


    Kilian Jornet still squats 1.5x bodyweight at 38. Eliud Kipchoge does strength circuits twice a week his whole career. Not a coincidence.


    In Vetta


    Your profile has an equipment field where you mark "I have gym" or not. If you mark it, the engine includes strength sessions specific to your main sport. If you don't, it suggests the no-equipment routine. Gym days are locked as "low quality" — the engine doesn't schedule intervals or long runs on the same day.


    [Try Vetta free →](/signup) — the engine combines strength and running respecting your available days.