Adidas Ultraboost 5 — India price, specs & where to buy

Most reviews of the Adidas Ultraboost 5 will tell you it is a versatile running shoe for the everyday runner. The honest answer is different. The Ultraboost 5, at ₹16,999 in India, with a 36 mm heel, 26 mm forefoot, 10 mm drop, 310 g unit weight, Boost midsole and no plate, is a lifestyle shoe with a performance pedigree it no longer fully delivers on. Buy it for what it is and you will be happy. Buy it because the marketing tells you it is a serious training shoe and you will be disappointed. This is the contrarian, evidence-led review.

The fight worth picking

The Ultraboost line has been on the market for over a decade. In that decade, the running-shoe category has been transformed by PEBA-based superfoams, carbon plates and aggressive rocker geometries. Boost foam, the headline material in the Ultraboost 5, is a TPU-bead construction that revolutionised cushioning in 2013 and has been quietly outpaced by 2026 superfoams on every meaningful performance metric. That is not opinion. That is what running-shoe testing in the last five years consistently shows.

What the spec sheet actually says

310 g. That is the headline number. At 310 g per shoe, the Ultraboost 5 is heavier than almost every dedicated daily trainer and considerably heavier than any tempo or race shoe in 2026. The 36 mm heel stack is moderate, the 10 mm drop is traditional, and the unplated geometry is conservative. None of these are bad things; they are honest things. The shoe is built for comfortable everyday wear, not for tempo workouts or race-day economy.

The category mismatch

Adidas positions the Ultraboost 5 in the max-cushion daily category. The category label is generous. At 310 g, the Ultraboost 5 is a max-cushion lifestyle shoe with running capability, not a max-cushion running shoe with lifestyle appeal. The distinction matters for how you should think about the purchase.

Who should buy the Ultraboost 5

The honest buyer profile is narrower than the marketing suggests.

The crossover wearer

If you work in an office, walk 8 to 12 kilometres a day in the city, and want a single pair of shoes that lets you do a 5 to 8 kilometre easy jog three or four times a week in the same shoes, the Ultraboost 5 is excellent. Boost is enduringly comfortable for walking. The upper is built for all-day wear. The styling reads as athleisure, not as gym gear. This is the buyer who wins with this shoe.

The brand-loyal Adidas runner

If you have run in Ultraboost generations 3, 4 and back and your training is dominated by easy aerobic mileage at a relaxed pace, the Ultraboost 5 will not surprise you. You know what you are buying. Keep buying it.

The recovery-day specialist

If you already have a rotation of 2026 daily trainers and race shoes and you want a recovery-pace third shoe that doubles as a lifestyle pair, the Ultraboost 5 is a defensible add-on. The 10 mm drop is forgiving on tired legs. The Boost cushioning is consistent.

Who should not buy the Ultraboost 5

Let us name the buyer profiles for whom this shoe is the wrong tool.

The serious daily trainer shopper

If you are looking for a single daily training shoe for 40 to 60 kilometre weeks and you do not have a separate lifestyle pair, do not buy the Ultraboost 5. At 310 g, it adds mechanical cost to every training kilometre relative to a contemporary daily trainer that weighs 240 to 270 g. Spend the ₹16,999 on a category-appropriate daily trainer; browse our gear shoes hub for options.

The tempo and interval runner

If your week contains structured fast running, the Ultraboost 5 is irrelevant to that workout. There is no plate, no rocker engineered for fast cadence, and the weight works against you. Use a tempo-oriented shoe; the 2026 super-shoe comparison covers the modern tempo options.

The race-day buyer

Do not race a marathon in the Ultraboost 5. This is not an opinion. The mechanical cost of 310 g of shoe over 42.2 kilometres, relative to a modern carbon-race shoe, is substantial. If race-day performance matters, buy the right tool. Adidas's own carbon-race line is the appropriate Adidas option for that purpose.

The Indian-buyer context

India-specific factors push the decision one way or the other.

The lifestyle case in Indian cities

India's urban context, with high commuting walks, mixed surfaces and humidity, rewards a durable, comfortable, do-everything pair. The Ultraboost 5 is genuinely good at this role. In Mumbai humidity, in Bangalore tech-park walks, in Gurgaon mall floors, the Ultraboost 5 is a pleasant shoe. That is a real benefit to acknowledge.

The price-honesty case

₹16,999 is significant money. A dedicated 2026 daily trainer can be acquired in India for less. A category-leading carbon-race shoe is a multiple of this price. The Ultraboost 5's price is reasonable for a premium lifestyle-running crossover, but is not a bargain at the dedicated-trainer level.

Heat and humidity

Boost foam handles temperature relatively well compared with some current-generation superfoams. That is the upside of the older material. The downside is that Boost simply does not return as much energy as PEBA-based foams at any temperature. Comfortable, yes; fast, no.

The verdict, unhedged

The Ultraboost 5 is an honest lifestyle-running crossover shoe. It does not pretend to be the fastest, but the marketing sometimes pretends it is more performance-oriented than it is. Buy it for everyday wear with light running on the side. Do not buy it as your primary daily trainer if you take training seriously. Do not race in it. If your real need is a do-everything shoe for an active urban life with three easy runs a week, the Ultraboost 5 is one of the better options at this price. If your real need is a serious training shoe, walk past it and use our shoe comparison tool to find a category-appropriate daily trainer. Build the training plan first at our plan generator, and the right shoe choice becomes obvious.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Adidas Ultraboost 5 price in India?

Adidas lists the Ultraboost 5 at ₹16,999 in India. That places it in the premium lifestyle-running crossover category. For comparison, dedicated 2026 daily training shoes can typically be acquired below this price, while category-leading carbon-race shoes are usually a multiple of it. The Ultraboost 5's price is reasonable for the crossover use case but is not a bargain at the dedicated-trainer level.

Is the Ultraboost 5 a good running shoe?

It is a competent easy-pace running shoe and an excellent everyday lifestyle shoe. At 310 g per pair, it is heavier than dedicated daily trainers, which makes it a poor choice for tempo or race use. If your weekly running is three to four easy jogs of 5 to 8 kilometres and the same shoe doubles as your work and city pair, the Ultraboost 5 fits. For serious training, choose a lighter, category-specific shoe.

Can I race a marathon in the Ultraboost 5?

No. At 310 g per shoe, the Ultraboost 5 imposes substantial mechanical cost over 42.2 kilometres relative to dedicated carbon-race shoes. The unplated geometry and traditional 10 mm drop are not engineered for race-day economy at marathon pace. Use a category-appropriate race shoe for goal races; Adidas's own carbon-race line is the appropriate Adidas option for that purpose.

Ultraboost 5 versus modern daily trainers — which should I buy?

If you run 30 plus kilometres a week as your primary activity, buy a dedicated 2026 daily trainer rather than the Ultraboost 5. At 310 g, the Ultraboost 5 is materially heavier than most current daily trainers, which translates into measurable additional energy cost across weekly mileage. If your training is light and the same shoe must work for office and city, the Ultraboost 5 wins on versatility.

Is Boost foam still good in 2026?

Boost is still comfortable and durable. It is no longer the highest-energy-return midsole on the market. The dominant 2026 race and tempo shoes use PEBA-based foams that consistently outperform Boost on running-economy metrics. For lifestyle, easy running and recovery, Boost remains a defensible choice. For competitive training and racing, contemporary superfoams offer more measurable performance.

Who should buy the Ultraboost 5?

The buyer who wants one premium shoe for urban life, daily walking, mall and office use, plus three to four easy 5 to 8 kilometre jogs a week. The Ultraboost 5 is among the better options in the lifestyle-running crossover category at this price. It is the wrong shoe for the serious training buyer, the race-day buyer and the tempo specialist; spend the money on a category-appropriate alternative instead.