The state of Training in 2026
A field report on training: where things stand, and what trail runners and ultrarunning hopefuls should do next.
Training is consolidating around a few repeatable workflows. Pick one, master it, and ignore the churn.
What happened
Over the last year the conversation around training shifted from novelty to fundamentals. The communities where trail runners and ultrarunning hopefuls gather have converged on a shorter list of tools and techniques that actually hold up, while the long tail of hype has quietly thinned out.
Why it matters
For trail runners and ultrarunning hopefuls, the noise-to-signal ratio has never mattered more. Time invested in the wrong setup compounds badly, and the difference between a stalled hobby and a durable habit usually comes down to choosing boring, proven fundamentals early.
How to think about it
Treat every new trend in training as optional until it survives three months of scrutiny. Start with the smallest workable setup, measure your results weekly, and only upgrade when a specific bottleneck tells you to.
- Clearer best practices for training
- Cheaper entry points than a year ago
- Stronger communities to learn from
- Hype cycles still bury good information
- Gear churn tempts constant upgrades
- Advice rarely accounts for small budgets
Beware of roundups that rank training options without disclosing how they tested. If there is no methodology, it is marketing.
FAQ
Is training worth getting into now?
Yes — the fundamentals are more accessible than ever, and the learning curve is well documented by communities of trail runners and ultrarunning hopefuls.
How much should a beginner spend?
As little as possible at first. Prove the habit before you fund the hobby.
Where do experienced people hang out?
Community forums and subreddits remain the highest-signal places to compare notes.