How zone 2 changes your muscles
Published on August 30, 2025
Zone 2 training gets a lot of attention, but not everyone knows exactly how it leads to improved endurance. In any long-distance sport—whether a 10K, a half marathon, a long bike ride, or a swim—you’re using your muscles for a long time. Your muscles need enough energy, called ATP, to keep working.
For these longer, lower-intensity efforts, muscles rely on converting carbohydrates and fats into ATP. Fats can only be used with oxygen, inside the mitochondria in your muscle cells. At very high intensities—like a 1K race—muscles rely primarily on carbohydrates, which are broken down without oxygen in the cytoplasm.
For your aerobic system to work efficiently, muscles need several things: a strong heart to pump blood and oxygen, enough capillaries to deliver that oxygen into the cells, and more, bigger, and better mitochondria to turn fuel and oxygen into ATP. Zone 2 training drives all of these adaptations. Over time, these changes allow muscles to sustain longer efforts and maintain faster speeds over the same distance.
Inside the muscles, Zone 2 creates stress signals. Energy shifts activate AMPK, repeated contractions trigger CaMK, and mitochondria produce reactive oxygen species (ROS). You don’t need to remember all of these terms. The main point is that these signals tell the cell to build more mitochondria, enzymes, and capillaries.
The primary messenger for these stress signals is a protein called PGC-1α. It activates specific genes in the DNA that guide these adaptations, telling the cell to increase the number and efficiency of mitochondria and capillaries. The workout itself doesn’t create new mitochondria—it provides instructions that are followed during recovery and sleep.
Longer Zone 2 sessions amplify this process in two ways. The stress signals become stronger the longer you maintain effort, and they stay active for longer, sending more instructions to PGC-1α. Think of it like a faucet: a short session opens it a little, sending a modest flow of instructions. A longer session opens it wider and keeps it on longer, sending more instructions and producing a bigger adaptation. After about two hours, returns start to diminish—the faucet is still on, but each extra minute adds less than the earlier ones.
Repeated sessions over weeks gradually lead to denser mitochondria, more capillaries, a stronger heart, and more efficient energy production. This explains why steady, aerobic effort over time quietly builds the engine for endurance, even if the workout itself feels easy.