Training & Plans

Tempo vs Threshold: What the Difference Actually Means

Tempo and threshold get used interchangeably, but they train different systems; here is what each pace feels like and when to use them in a plan.

Runner on a fast road effort
Photograph via Unsplash

If you have spent any time reading training plans, you have seen "tempo" and "threshold" used as if they were the same word wearing two different jackets. They are not. They live close together on the effort spectrum, which is exactly why they get blurred, and that blurring is why so many runners spend months doing neither one well. Once you can feel the seam between them, your hard days finally start pointing in the direction you want.

Why the confusion exists in the first place#

The honest answer is that coaches and physiologists have never fully agreed on the vocabulary. One plan calls a steady 20-minute effort a "tempo run." Another labels the same session "threshold." A third splits hairs between "lactate threshold," "anaerobic threshold," and "functional threshold," and by then most runners have quietly closed the tab.

Here is the mental model I use with the people I coach, stripped of the jargon fights:

  • Tempo is a sustained, comfortably hard effort. You are working, but you could hold a short sentence and you are not counting down the minutes in a panic.
  • Threshold is the ceiling of that sustainable zone — the fastest pace you can hold for a prolonged period before fatigue starts to snowball. Go a hair faster and the effort stops being controllable.

Tempo lives just under that ceiling. Threshold work deliberately presses right up against it. The two are neighbors, not twins.

What each one actually feels like#

Pace numbers are useful but they lie to you on hot days, on hills, on tired legs, and at altitude. Effort and breathing are far more honest. This is where first-hand experience beats any calculator.

Tempo: the "comfortably hard" conversation test#

On a true tempo run, your breathing is rhythmic and deep but controlled. If a friend jumped in beside you, you could answer a question in a clipped phrase — "yeah, feeling good, three to go" — but you would not want to hold a rambling conversation. Your form stays relaxed. Crucially, at the end of a solid tempo you should feel like you could have gone a little longer or a little harder. That leftover is the whole point.

I describe it to newer runners as the pace you would choose if someone told you to run "strong but sustainable" for half an hour with no watch. Most people, left to feel, naturally settle into tempo. It is a remarkably intuitive gear.

Threshold: the edge of control#

Threshold is where the conversation dies. You can still say a word or two, but full sentences are gone. Your breathing shifts from "deep and steady" to "deep and insistent." There is a specific sensation I watch for in myself: a faint sense that the effort wants to run away from me, that if I relaxed my discipline for thirty seconds the pace would either surge or collapse. That teetering feeling is the signature of threshold. You are managing the effort, not cruising in it.

The practical tell: at the end of a threshold interval you are genuinely relieved to stop. Not wrecked, not seeing stars, but relieved. If you finish wanting more, you were doing tempo.

The physiology, in plain terms#

You do not need a lab to train well, but a rough map helps you understand why these paces do different jobs.

When you run easy, your body clears the metabolic byproducts of hard work about as fast as it makes them. As you speed up, you eventually reach an intensity where production starts to outpace clearance. That tipping point is, loosely, your threshold. Below it you can hold on for a long time. Above it, the clock starts ticking toward the moment your legs and lungs force you to slow.

  • Tempo work trains you to run efficiently and stay relaxed at a strong effort. It builds the aerobic base underneath the ceiling and teaches sustained concentration.
  • Threshold work does something more specific and more valuable for racing: it raises the ceiling itself. Over weeks, the pace at which fatigue starts to snowball drifts faster. That means you can hold a quicker pace before the wheels come off — which is precisely what you want in a 10K, half, or marathon.

That distinction is the whole reason to care. Tempo makes you comfortable. Threshold makes you faster at the edge.

How to structure each session#

The formats differ, and the difference is not an accident.

Tempo sessions#

Because tempo sits below the ceiling, you can hold it continuously.

  1. Classic continuous tempo: 20 to 40 minutes at comfortably hard effort, sandwiched between a proper warm-up and cool-down.
  2. Progression tempo: start at the easy end of tempo and drift toward the harder end over the run. Great for learning restraint.
  3. Long-run tempo finish: the last portion of a long run lifted to tempo effort. This is one of my favorite marathon-specific sessions because it teaches strong running on tired legs.

Threshold sessions#

Because threshold sits at the ceiling, holding it continuously for long is brutal and often counterproductive. So we break it into intervals with short recoveries — this lets you accumulate more total time at that potent intensity than you ever could in one unbroken effort.

  1. Cruise intervals: repeats of roughly 5 to 12 minutes at threshold with 60 to 90 seconds of easy jogging between. For example, three to four reps of 8 minutes.
  2. Shorter, denser reps: 3-minute pieces with 45 seconds of recovery, repeated 6 to 8 times, keep the effort honest while feeling more manageable.

The short recoveries are the trick. They are not full rest — they exist only to let clearance catch up just enough that you can hit the next rep at the same controlled edge. If your recoveries balloon into two-minute walks, you are drifting into a different kind of workout.

The most common mistakes I see#

Having watched a lot of runners try to nail these, the same handful of errors come up again and again.

  • Turning tempo into threshold by accident. The comfortably-hard effort creeps up week to week until every "tempo" is actually a grind. You feel productive, but you accumulate fatigue faster than fitness.
  • Turning threshold into a race. Threshold is controlled. If you finish an interval session gasping and staggering, you overcooked it — that is a VO2 max or interval workout wearing a threshold label, and it will compromise your next few days.
  • Chasing a pace on a bad day. Heat, wind, poor sleep, or the back end of a heavy week all shift your effort-to-pace relationship. On those days, hold the effort and let the pace be whatever it is. This is where runners who slave to a GPS number dig themselves into holes.
  • Doing both in the same week with no easy days between. These are your two most demanding aerobic sessions. Stack them carelessly and you blunt both.

Which one should you actually be doing#

Neither is "better." They serve different masters, and the right mix depends on where you are in your season.

Reach for tempo when:

  • You are building general aerobic strength in a base phase.
  • You want to practice sustained, relaxed effort without much recovery cost.
  • You are newer to structured work and want an intuitive, forgiving hard day.

Reach for threshold when:

  • You are in a race-specific block for anything from the 5K to the marathon.
  • Your goal is explicitly to hold a faster pace for longer.
  • You can recover well enough to do it justice — threshold rewards freshness.

For most runners across a full season, the pattern that works is tempo-flavored efforts early to build the platform, then a gradual shift toward interval-based threshold work as goal races approach. One quality session of this type per week is plenty for most; two only if the rest of your week is genuinely easy and your recovery is solid.

A simple way to tell them apart on the run#

Next time you head out, skip the calculator and use this quick self-check:

  • Can you speak a short sentence? You are at tempo.
  • Can you only manage a word or two, and do you feel a slight urge to either surge or ease off? You are at threshold.
  • Are you counting seconds and losing form? You have gone past both — back off.

Learn those three states by feel and you will never again be at the mercy of a plan's vocabulary.

The bottom line#

Tempo is comfortably hard and builds your capacity to run strong for a long time. Threshold sits just above it, pressing on the ceiling so that ceiling rises — and with it, the pace you can hold on race day before fatigue takes over. Both deserve a place in your training, but they answer different questions, so treat them as distinct tools rather than two names for one workout. Anchor them to effort and breathing rather than a rigid number, keep tempo comfortable and threshold controlled, and give yourself easy days around both. Do that, and the fuzzy overlap that trips up so many runners becomes a clear, deliberate choice you make every week.

Grace Okonkwo
Written by
Grace Okonkwo

Grace has run everything from muddy 5Ks to big-city marathons and coached club runners toward their own personal bests. She writes training advice grounded in consistency over heroics, and believes most runners improve fastest by running easy more often.

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