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Climbing Training

Improve your climbing through targeted workouts. Threshold intervals, hill repeats, and weight-to-power optimization.

TrainingBikeAtlas(Editorial team)17 March 20261 min read

Key takeaways

  • Build threshold power with hill repeats of 3 to 5 minutes at FTP.
  • Add tempo climbs of 20 to 40 minutes at 85 to 90 percent of FTP.
  • Include one low-cadence session per week at 50 to 60 RPM.
  • Start race climbs conservatively and finish stronger in the second half.
  • Focus on training before weight, and work with a nutritionist if needed.

Climbing performance comes down to one ratio: watts per kilogram. Training for climbs means increasing your sustainable power output while managing your body weight through smart nutrition rather than restriction.

Key climbing workouts

  • Hill repeats: 4 to 8 efforts of 3 to 5 minutes at threshold on a 6 to 8 percent gradient.
  • Tempo climbs: 20 to 40 minutes at 85 to 90 percent of FTP on a steady climb.
  • Over-under intervals: alternating 2 minutes at 105% FTP with 2 minutes at 90% FTP.
  • Seated climbing drills: stay seated on steep grades to build hip and glute strength.

Building climbing-specific fitness

Climbing demands sustained threshold power. This is trained through repeated efforts at 90 to 105 percent of FTP lasting 8 to 20 minutes. Two to three sessions per week with adequate recovery between them.

Low-cadence work (50 to 60 RPM) on moderate gradients builds muscular endurance specific to climbing. Include one low-cadence session per week, starting with 4x5 minutes and progressing to 3x10 minutes.

Race-day climbing strategy

On event day, start climbs conservatively. The riders who fade are those who attacked the base. Set a sustainable pace in the first half, then increase effort if you feel strong in the second half. Eat and drink in the valley before each major climb.

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