Mon, February 16, 2026The Strava problem
Description
Severin Müller
Foto: iStock.com/Prostock-Studio

A faster average pace, a few extra kilometres, a good feeling when uploading the session: Strava motivates – and that is precisely where the problem lies. What was intended as a training aid quickly becomes the benchmark against which every session is measured.

When training is for show

Digital training platforms such as Strava have changed endurance sports. Many will be familiar with the saying: “If it’s not on Strava, it didn’t happen.” Hardly any session now ends without being uploaded, analysed and compared. For many athletes, Strava has become a fixed part of their daily training routine. What originally started as a digital training diary for comparing individual segments has long since become a social stage,

which is exactly where the so-called ‘Strava problem’ begins.

Training sessions are often no longer completed purely for personal development and fitness, but – consciously or unconsciously – also for the platform. As a result, the real purpose of training frequently fades into the background. After all, what will my rivals think if I go out for a slow run?

Comparison without context

On Strava, we mainly see numbers – but often without context. What remains invisible are factors such as current training status, total weekly workload, the purpose of a given session or the long-term training objective.

In the end, all that remains is a comparison of figures. This encourages athletes to align their training with external expectations rather than with what would best support their individual development. And how do you achieve ’good’ numbers? By training as flat, as fast and with as little variation as possible.

Why variety matters

From a sports science perspective, one thing is clear: sustainable performance development depends on carefully managing the training intensity. A large proportion of training should take place at low intensity. These sessions build the aerobic base, improve fat metabolism and allow recovery between harder efforts.

Those who regularly run these sessions too fast

  • miss out on important physiological adaptations
  • create unnecessary fatigue
  • increase the risk of overuse injuries
  • stagnate despite a high training volume

The training may feel “hard-working”, but it is often neither truly easy nor purposefully intense – instead hovering somewhere in between.

Strava as a training partner

Strava itself is not the enemy of good training. Quite the opposite: when used properly, the platform can motivate, structure and inspire. What matters is how consciously it is used.

A few simple strategies to counter the Strava problem:

  • Put training goals before visibility: first consider the purpose of the run – not how it will look online.
  • Prioritise feeling over pace: especially during easy sessions, run by breathing and body tension, not by average pace.
  • Don’t share everything: recovery runs don’t need an audience.
  • Use Strava consciously: as a diary – not as a jury.

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