361° Spire 5 — India price, specs & where to buy

I am the worst-qualified person to review a running shoe and the best-qualified to tell you whether a beginner should buy one. The 361° Spire 5 is a max-cushion daily trainer — 285 grams, an 8 mm drop, a 36 mm heel and 28 mm forefoot, all riding on a foam 361 calls QU!KFOAM. No plate. No gimmick. In India it sells for ₹10,000 to ₹12,000, which is real money when you are not yet sure you will still be running in three months. So let me answer the only question that matters to someone like me: is this a shoe you can learn to run in?

Short answer: yes. Longer answer below, because you deserve more than a thumbs-up.

What 361° even is, for those of us who didn't know

I didn't know either. 361° is a Chinese sportswear brand, big at home, and for years it has quietly made running shoes that punch above their sticker price. It is not the name your gym friend drops. That is exactly why it interests me. The Spire line has built a reputation as the cushioned trainer you recommend to a friend who is just starting out. That reputation is the whole story here. The Spire 5 is not trying to win you a race. It is trying to get you out the door tomorrow, and the day after, without your knees filing a complaint.

The specs, read by someone who had to look up what a drop is

So I looked it up, and now I will save you the search. The drop is the height gap between the heel and the front of the shoe. The Spire 5 is 8 mm — 36 at the back, 28 at the front. Eight millimetres is the boring middle of the road, and for a beginner boring is the goal. A very low drop makes your calves do work they are not ready for. Eight sits in the safe zone where most new runners can just run without thinking about their feet.

The weight is 285 grams in a US 9. That is not light. A racing shoe can be a hundred grams lighter. But here is the thing nobody told me in week one: light shoes are firm, and firm punishes a beginner's untrained legs. The Spire 5 spends its grams on cushioning, and that is what lets you run three days in a row without limping into the office on the fourth.

QU!KFOAM, the bit with the exclamation mark

The midsole foam is QU!KFOAM. The punctuation is 361's idea, not mine. What it does is simple: it sits soft under your foot and soaks up the landing. There is no carbon plate underneath it, and for a daily trainer at this price that is the correct decision, not a missing feature. Plates exist to make fast shoes faster. A beginner does not need a plate. A beginner needs forgiveness, and 36 mm of foam is forgiveness you can feel on the very first run. If you want to understand why plated super-shoes are a different tool for a different job, our 2026 super-shoe comparison lays it out without the marketing fog.

What it actually feels like to run in

I will be straight about what I can and cannot claim. The numbers here are 361's verified specs, and a max-cushion daily on a moderate 8 mm drop behaves in a known way: soft underfoot, stable, unhurried. This is the category that asks nothing clever of your stride. You land, the foam gives, you roll forward, you repeat. For couch-to-5K work — the only running I am qualified to talk about from the inside — that predictability is worth more than any energy-return number on a box.

The flip side of cushioning is that it is not snappy. Try a fast finish and the Spire 5 feels a little muffled, like running with the bass up and the treble down. That is fine. You are not doing strides yet. When you are, you will own a second pair for that, and this one will still be your everyday workhorse.

Who should buy the 361° Spire 5

Buy it if you are starting out and want one shoe that covers nearly everything you will do for your first six months: walk-run intervals, your first continuous 5K, easy base miles, the long slow weekend plod. Buy it if you are a heavier runner who needs the impact protection a 36 mm stack provides. Buy it if your last pair was a flat lifestyle sneaker and your shins have started to protest — this is the upgrade that quiets them. It is also a strong pick if you simply do not want to spend ₹16,000-plus to find out whether you like running.

Who should skip it

Skip it if you already run fast and want one do-it-all shoe with some pop — you will find the Spire 5 too placid. Skip it if your weekly diet is tempo runs and intervals, because a max-cushion trainer is the wrong tool for sharp work. And skip it if you cannot try it on first, because 361's fit is not as widely sampled in India as the big brands, and shoe fit is personal. More on that below. To see how it lines up against the rest of the daily-trainer field, the Running Lab shoe index is the place to browse, and the shoe comparison tool lets you put two pairs side by side before you spend.

Buying it in India, honestly

This is where I have to be careful, because the Spire 5 is not on every shelf in the country. 361's official India presence runs through its own channel — start at 361's official site rather than a marketplace listing, so you know the pair is genuine and the size is the one you ordered. Avoid grey-market sellers offering a price that looks too good; a fake midsole is the one thing you cannot return your way out of. If you can find a physical pair to try, do it, even if you buy online afterwards. Half a size matters more in a cushioned shoe than in a firm one.

For the Spire 5 specifically and the brand's wider lineup, our 361° shoe hub tracks what is actually available here rather than what exists in theory abroad.

Will it survive an Indian monsoon and summer?

Cushioned trainers and rain have a complicated relationship. The Spire 5's foam will soak up water if you puddle-stomp through a Mumbai July, and a waterlogged shoe is heavy, slow to dry and quicker to break down. Rotate two pairs in monsoon season if you can, or at minimum stuff them with newspaper and dry them away from direct heat. In peak summer the thick stack traps warmth, so an early-morning or post-sunset run is kinder to your feet than a midday one. None of this is unique to the Spire 5 — it is the tax every max-cushion shoe pays in Indian weather.

The honest verdict

The 361° Spire 5 is a genuinely good beginner's daily trainer wearing an unfamiliar badge. Soft, stable, forgiving, fairly priced at ₹10,000 to ₹12,000, and built for the slow, repeatable, unglamorous running that turns a non-runner into a runner. It will not make you fast. It is not supposed to. It keeps you healthy enough to keep going, and on that brief it delivers.

If you are at the start line like I am, this is a shoe you can trust with your first few hundred kilometres. Get it fitted, get it genuine, then go use it. When you are ready to put structure around those kilometres, our free plan generator will build you a beginner-friendly running blueprint.

Frequently asked questions

Is the 361° Spire 5 worth ₹10,000 to ₹12,000 for a beginner?

For most new runners, yes. You get a max-cushion daily trainer with a 36/28 mm stack and QU!KFOAM that protects untrained legs across walk-run intervals, first 5Ks and easy base miles. It sits below the premium daily trainers in price while delivering most of what a beginner actually needs, which is forgiveness rather than speed. If you are not yet sure you will stick with running, it is a sensible amount to spend to find out.

Where can I buy the 361° Spire 5 in India?

Start with 361's official India channel at 361sport.com so you know the pair is genuine and correctly sized. The brand is not on every shelf the way Nike or Adidas is, so be wary of grey-market listings with prices that look too good — a fake cushioned midsole is not something you can fix. If you can find a physical pair to try on first, do that even if you order online afterwards, because fit in a soft shoe is personal.

Who is the 361° Spire 5 for, and who should skip it?

It is for beginners who want one forgiving shoe for their first six months, heavier runners who need impact protection, and anyone upgrading from flat lifestyle sneakers whose shins have started complaining. Skip it if you already run fast and want pop underfoot, if your training is mostly tempo and intervals, or if you cannot try it on first. A max-cushion daily is the wrong tool for sharp speed work.

How should the 361° Spire 5 fit, and what size should I order?

Aim for a thumbnail of space ahead of your longest toe, with the midfoot held without pinching. Half a size matters more in a cushioned shoe than a firm one because your foot sinks slightly into the foam, so if you are between sizes most runners size up. Because 361 is less widely sampled in India than the big brands, trying a physical pair before committing is the safest route to the right size.

361° Spire 5 vs a Nike or Adidas cushioned trainer — which is better for a new runner?

For pure beginner duty they are closer than the price gap suggests. The Spire 5's 36 mm stack and 8 mm drop give the same soft, stable, plate-free ride you want for early mileage, often at a lower price than the marquee brands. The big names win on retail availability, easy in-store fitting and resale familiarity. If genuineness and trying-before-buying are sorted, the Spire 5 is the value pick; use the STRIDD shoe comparison tool to weigh specific pairs side by side.

How does the 361° Spire 5 hold up in Indian monsoon and summer?

Like most max-cushion trainers, the foam soaks up water, so running through monsoon puddles leaves the shoe heavy and slow to dry, which shortens its life. Rotate a second pair in the rains if you can, and dry wet shoes with newspaper away from direct heat. In peak summer the thick stack traps warmth, so early-morning or post-sunset runs are kinder. None of this is a Spire 5 flaw specifically — it is the trade-off every cushioned shoe makes in Indian conditions.