Health & Nutrition

Strength Training for Runners: Five Moves That Matter Most

Strength training makes runners more durable and economical; here are five key moves, from single-leg work to core, and how to fit them into a week.

Runner doing a strength exercise
Photograph via Unsplash

For years I treated the weight room as optional, the thing I'd get to once my mileage was where I wanted it. Then a nagging hip and a stress reaction in my shin forced a reckoning, and the physical therapist who patched me up said something that stuck: running is a strength sport that happens to cover distance. Once I started training that way, the injuries thinned out and my late-race form held together. Here is what I wish someone had told me a decade earlier.

Why runners need to lift at all#

Running is not a gentle, symmetrical activity. Every stride is a controlled single-leg landing that asks one leg to absorb roughly two to three times your body weight, then spring you forward, then hand off to the other side and repeat a few thousand times per mile. Do that for an hour and small weaknesses become big compensations.

Strength training helps in two ways that matter to real runners:

  • Durability. Stronger muscles, tendons, and connective tissue tolerate repetitive loading better. Most running injuries are not freak accidents; they are the slow accumulation of a tissue being asked to do more than it's prepared for.
  • Economy. A stiffer, more powerful musculotendinous system returns energy more efficiently. In plain terms, you spend less effort holding the same pace, which is exactly what you want in the back half of a race.

What lifting will not do is turn you into a bodybuilder. Runners who train two short sessions a week and keep running are in no danger of accidentally bulking up. That fear kept me out of the gym for far too long, and it was never real.

The mistake most runners make#

The most common error I see is treating strength work like more cardio: light dumbbells, twenty-plus reps, a burning sensation mistaken for progress. That builds a little muscular endurance, but you already get endurance from running. What running does not provide is heavy, low-rep loading that recruits high-threshold muscle fibers and stiffens tendons.

The goal is to get strong, not tired. For the main lifts, that usually means something in the range of 4 to 8 reps with a weight that feels genuinely challenging by the last rep, resting a couple of minutes between sets. If you finish a set feeling like you could do fifteen more, the weight is too light to change anything.

The other mistake is trying to do too much. You do not need a bodybuilder's split. You need a handful of movements that address how running actually loads the body, done consistently.

The five moves that matter most#

These are the exercises I keep coming back to, both in my own training and when helping friends stay healthy. They cover the patterns running demands: single-leg strength, hip hinging, calf and foot resilience, posterior chain power, and trunk stability.

1. Single-leg squats or split squats#

If you do only one thing, make it single-leg work. Running never loads both legs at once, so training both legs together lets your dominant side hide the weaknesses of the other.

  • Rear-foot-elevated split squats (back foot on a bench) are my go-to. They load one leg heavily while the elevated foot keeps you balanced enough to actually push hard.
  • Start with body weight to groove the pattern, then hold dumbbells. Aim for the working thigh to reach roughly parallel, knee tracking over the foot.
  • Watch for asymmetry. If one side is noticeably weaker or wobblier, that's information. Give the weaker side an extra set.

The first time I did these honestly, my left leg was embarrassingly weaker than my right, and that gap lined up exactly with the hip that kept flaring up. Closing it took months, but the pain went with it.

2. Deadlifts or hip hinges#

Running is powered from behind: glutes and hamstrings drive you forward. The hip hinge trains that posterior chain directly.

  • A conventional or trap-bar deadlift is ideal if you have access to a barbell and can learn the pattern safely. The trap bar is more forgiving on the lower back and easier to start with.
  • No barbell? Romanian deadlifts with dumbbells or a single-leg Romanian deadlift work beautifully. The single-leg version doubles as balance and hip-stability training.
  • Keep the spine long, push your hips back rather than bending at the waist, and feel the load in your hamstrings and glutes, not your lower back.

3. Calf raises#

The calf complex and Achilles are among the most-loaded tissues in running, and among the most commonly injured. They respond well to being trained deliberately.

  • Do both straight-knee (targets the gastrocnemius) and bent-knee calf raises (targets the soleus, the workhorse of endurance running).
  • Train through a full range of motion, dropping the heel below the step and rising all the way up. Slow, controlled tempo beats bouncing.
  • Progress to single-leg raises with added weight. Runners routinely need far more calf strength than they assume.

If you've ever dealt with Achilles grumbles or shin pain, patient calf loading is often the boring answer that actually works.

4. Hip thrusts or glute bridges#

Weak, sleepy glutes are behind a surprising share of runner complaints, from knee pain to that hip I mentioned. The hip thrust isolates the glutes better than almost anything.

  • Shoulders on a bench, barbell or dumbbell across the hips, drive up until your body forms a straight line from knees to shoulders, then squeeze.
  • If a loaded barbell is intimidating, start with body-weight glute bridges on the floor and add load as you improve.
  • Don't overarch your lower back to fake extra range. The movement should come from the hips.

5. Core work that resists motion#

Forget endless crunches. The core's job in running is to resist unwanted movement so the force from your legs transfers cleanly instead of leaking out through a wobbling torso. Under fatigue, that stability is often the first thing to go, and your form falls apart.

  • Planks and side planks build anti-extension and anti-lateral-flexion strength. Add front-loaded carries once basic holds feel easy.
  • Dead bugs and bird dogs teach you to keep the trunk still while the limbs move, which is exactly the running pattern.
  • Suitcase carries (holding a heavy weight in one hand and walking tall) are underrated and directly train the anti-tip stability that keeps your pelvis level mid-stride.

Fitting it into a running week#

This is where most plans fall apart, so keep it realistic. Two sessions a week, 30 to 45 minutes each, is plenty for most runners and enough to see meaningful benefit. One session, done consistently, still beats the ambitious four-day plan you abandon after two weeks.

A few principles that have kept my own schedule sane:

  1. Lift on hard-running days, not easy ones. Counterintuitive, I know. But stacking your hard efforts (a workout in the morning, lifting later that day, or right after) leaves your easy days genuinely easy for recovery. Sprinkling strength onto rest days erodes the recovery you actually need.
  2. Prioritize the legs when you're fresh. If a session follows a quality run, that's fine, but don't do heavy single-leg work with completely trashed legs the day before a race or key workout.
  3. Back off near goal races. In the final week or two before a marathon, reduce the load and volume. Maintain the movement patterns, but this is not the time to chase new personal bests in the gym.

A simple starter template#

  • Session A: Split squats, Romanian deadlifts, calf raises, side planks.
  • Session B: Hip thrusts, single-leg Romanian deadlifts, calf raises, dead bugs and suitcase carries.

Two or three sets of each, heavy enough that the last couple of reps are hard. That's the whole thing. It looks almost too simple, and that's the point.

Realistic caveats#

A few honest cautions before you dive in. If you're brand new to lifting, spend the first few weeks learning the movements with light loads before chasing heavy weights, ideally with a coach or physical therapist to check your form on deadlifts and squats. Expect some muscle soreness at first, especially in the calves and glutes, and give yourself a couple of weeks for your runs to feel normal again as your body adapts.

Strength training also isn't a cure for training errors. If you're ramping mileage too fast or ignoring pain, no amount of squatting will save you. And if you have a current injury, get it assessed rather than self-prescribing; the right exercise for a healthy runner can aggravate a specific problem.

The bottom line#

You don't need a complicated program or hours in the gym. You need to load one leg at a time, hinge at the hips, strengthen your calves, wake up your glutes, and teach your core to stay quiet under fatigue, all with weights heavy enough to actually make you stronger. Two focused sessions a week, kept up over months, will make you a more durable and more economical runner. The version of me who skipped all this to protect my mileage was, in the end, the one who lost the most mileage to injury. Lift a little, run a lot, and let the two make each other better.

Tara Feldman
Written by
Tara Feldman

Tara came back from the kind of running injuries that end a lot of people's running, and learned recovery and prevention the patient way. She writes about staying healthy with a physio's caution and a runner's understanding of why we ignore the warning signs.

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