Zone 2 training has become one of the most discussed concepts in endurance and longevity fitness—and for good reason. It involves maintaining a specific zone 2 heart rate—usually 60–70% of your maximum—where you can still hold a conversation but are working steadily. It’s the foundation of how elite athletes build their aerobic base and a powerful tool for metabolic health and fat burning.
Zone 2 heart rate is the upper limit of aerobic exercise at which you can hold a conversation – typically 60-70% of your maximum heart rate. At this intensity, your body primarily burns fat for fuel and maximises mitochondrial efficiency without accumulating lactate.
How to Calculate Your Zone 2 Heart Rate
Step 1: Estimate your maximum heart rate (MHR)
The simplest formula: 220 minus your age
| Age | Estimated MHR | Zone 2 Range (60-70%) |
|---|---|---|
| 25 | 195 bpm | 117-137 bpm |
| 30 | 190 bpm | 114-133 bpm |
| 35 | 185 bpm | 111-130 bpm |
| 40 | 180 bpm | 108-126 bpm |
| 45 | 175 bpm | 105-123 bpm |
| 50 | 170 bpm | 102-119 bpm |
| 55 | 165 bpm | 99-116 bpm |
Note: The 220-age formula is an estimate. Individual MHR varies considerably. A graded exercise test gives the most accurate MHR.
The Talk Test – The Simplest Gauge:
Zone 2 is the intensity at which you can speak in full sentences but wouldn’t want to sing. You’re breathing noticeably harder than rest, but not gasping or struggling. If you can’t complete a sentence, you’ve exceeded Zone 2.
What’s Actually Happening in Your Body at Zone 2

Zone 2 is the intensity at which slow-twitch muscle fibres are maximally recruited and mitochondria (the energy-producing structures in cells) are working at capacity.
Metabolically:
- Fat is the primary fuel – at Zone 2, the body preferentially oxidises fatty acids
- Lactate is produced and cleared at the same rate – no accumulation
- Mitochondrial biogenesis – regular Zone 2 training stimulates the creation of new mitochondria, increasing metabolic capacity
Above Zone 2, fast-twitch fibres recruit, lactate begins to accumulate, and the fuel mix shifts toward glucose.
Why Zone 2 Training Is So Valuable
| Benefit | Mechanism |
|---|---|
| Improved fat burning | Increases fat oxidation capacity at all intensities |
| Cardiovascular health | Lowers resting heart rate; improves cardiac efficiency |
| Metabolic health | Improves insulin sensitivity; supports glucose regulation |
| Endurance base | Builds aerobic capacity without excessive recovery demand |
| Longevity | Associated with reduced all-cause mortality in epidemiological studies |
| Stress on the body | Low – can be done frequently without overtraining |
How Much Zone 2 Is Recommended?
Research from experts like Dr. Iñigo San Millán and Dr. Peter Attia suggests:
- Minimum: 150 minutes per week for general health
- Optimal for endurance athletes: 80% of total training time in Zone 2
- Frequency: 3-5 sessions per week of 30-60 minutes each
Zone 2 should constitute the majority of cardiovascular exercise – not just a warm-up.
Best Activities for Zone 2 Training
- Cycling (outdoor or stationary) – easiest to maintain consistent Zone 2 intensity
- Running / jogging – may need to be very slow for many people (this surprises people used to running fast)
- Brisk walking or incline walking – often Zone 2 for beginners or older adults
- Rowing machine – excellent Zone 2 tool, low-impact
- Swimming – good option, though heart rate monitoring in water is less convenient
Common Mistakes in Zone 2 Training
- Going too hard – the most universal mistake. Most people default to Zone 3 or 4 thinking they need to “feel the burn.” Zone 2 should feel almost too easy.
- Ignoring it in favour of high-intensity work – high intensity has benefits but builds on a Zone 2 foundation
- Inconsistency – Zone 2 benefits are cumulative and require regular, sustained practice
Bottom Line
Zone 2 heart rate training is the aerobic foundation that most people skip in favour of harder, faster workouts. At 60-70% of maximum heart rate – a conversational, sustainable pace – you develop mitochondrial density, fat-burning efficiency, and cardiovascular resilience that harder training simply cannot replicate. Start with 3 sessions per week of 30-45 minutes at a pace where you can comfortably talk, and build from there. It feels almost too easy – which is exactly the point.






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