Decathlon Kiprun KS900 LD — India price, specs & where to buy

The Decathlon Kiprun KS900 LD costs ₹8,999. Read that number twice. A long-run and tempo trainer with a 36 mm heel, a 28 mm forefoot, an 8 mm drop, a 245-gram weight in US 9, and a K-Ring plus VFOAM midsole, for less than nine thousand rupees. No carbon plate. No plate at all. Just foam, geometry, and a price that most running brands cannot touch. This is the shoe that quietly makes the rest of the market explain itself.

I came to running through yoga and dance, so I notice how a shoe lets the foot move, not just what the spec sheet claims. The KS900 LD is interesting precisely because it does a lot without a plate. That matters more than the marketing suggests.

What you are actually getting

Let us be exact. The KS900 LD is a long-run and tempo trainer. The stack is 36 mm at the heel, 28 mm at the forefoot. The drop is 8 mm. It weighs 245 grams. The midsole pairs VFOAM with K-Ring, Decathlon’s reinforcement structure. There is no plate.

That last fact is the one to hold onto. The category gets loosely called plated. The shoe is not. K-Ring is a structural element, not a propulsion plate, and the honest way to read this shoe is as a plateless tempo trainer that uses its foam and geometry to carry pace. Anyone who tells you it rides like a carbon racer is selling you a story. It does not. It does something more useful for most runners.

The weight is the headline

245 grams. For a tempo and long-run trainer, that is light. Light enough to turn over at a brisk pace without fighting you. Light enough that a 25-kilometre long run does not feel like dragging bricks by the end. The 36/28 mm stack gives you cushion for the distance. The 8 mm drop sits in the comfortable middle that most Indian road runners already train in. Nothing here is exotic. Everything here works.

VFOAM is Decathlon’s performance midsole compound. It is not PEBA. It will not rebound like the most expensive race foams on the market. But at this price, the comparison is not PEBA. The comparison is every other shoe under ₹10,000, and against that field the KS900 LD is a genuinely capable tool.

Who this shoe is for

Three runners should look hard at the KS900 LD. The new marathoner who needs one shoe to carry long runs and tempo work without spending ₹15,000. The budget-conscious runner who has been told they need a plate and does not. And the second-shoe buyer who wants a faster-feeling trainer to sit alongside a soft daily cushion, without paying race-shoe money.

If you run steady aerobic mileage, lift the pace once or twice a week, and want one affordable shoe that handles both, this is built for you. It does the unglamorous work. Long runs. Progression runs. Tempo efforts on a Tuesday before the city wakes up. That is the brief, and it delivers. The Running Lab shoe index has the wider field if your needs sit elsewhere.

Who should skip it

Skip it if you want a true carbon race shoe for a goal marathon. The KS900 LD is plateless. It is not your race-day weapon for a personal best, and pretending otherwise sets you up for disappointment. The 2026 super-shoe comparison is where that conversation lives.

Skip it, too, if you only run slow recovery jogs. A tempo trainer is wasted at crawl pace. Buy a softer cushioned shoe and save this one for the days you actually move. And skip it if you are a heavier runner needing maximal protection over very long mileage; the cushion is good for the price, not bottomless.

Indian conditions, told straight

Heat softens foam. All foam. VFOAM is no exception, so a 40-degree afternoon on Delhi tarmac is not the same as a cool December dawn. Run early in peak summer. Your shoe lasts longer and your legs thank you.

Monsoon is the real test for any budget shoe. Wet uppers, grit, puddles that never fully dry. The KS900 LD will get soaked like everything else. The discipline is yours. Dry it fully between runs, never near direct heat. Rotate a second pair if you can, so each one breathes. A wet shoe stored wet dies young, whatever you paid for it.

Durability and the value maths

At ₹8,999, the value calculation is different from a premium shoe. You are not amortising a huge spend across one race. You are buying a workhorse that should carry a meaningful chunk of a training block. Treat the cushion as good-for-the-money rather than infinite, rotate it, dry it, and it earns its keep across the unglamorous mileage that actually builds a marathon. Cost per kilometre, this is one of the easiest shoes on the Indian market to defend.

Where to buy it, and the verdict

This part is simple, which is part of the appeal. Buy the KS900 LD from Decathlon India, in store or online. Decathlon is the brand and the retailer, so there is no grey-market maze, no counterfeit anxiety, no import-duty surprise. You walk in, you try it on, you buy it. Try both the size you think you are and a half-size up, because feet swell on long summer runs and a tempo shoe should lock the midfoot without crushing the toes.

The verdict is short, because the shoe is honest. The Decathlon Kiprun KS900 LD is the most shoe you can buy for ₹8,999 if your job is long runs and tempo work. It is plateless, light at 245 grams, well-cushioned for the price, and backed by the easiest buying experience in Indian running. It is not a carbon racer and does not pretend to be. For the runner who wants one affordable, capable trainer to do the daily and the quick work, it is close to unbeatable. Use the shoe comparison tool to weigh it against pricier rivals, browse the wider Kiprun lineup for the rest of the range, and build the block that gives it a job with the STRIDD plan generator. The shoe is ready. Do the work.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Decathlon Kiprun KS900 LD worth ₹8,999?

For long-run and tempo work, it is one of the easiest shoes on the Indian market to defend. At ₹8,999 you get a 245-gram trainer with a 36/28 mm stack, an 8 mm drop, and a VFOAM plus K-Ring midsole. Against every other shoe under ₹10,000, it is a genuinely capable tool. Cost per kilometre across a training block, the value is excellent, as long as your job for it is steady mileage and tempo rather than carbon-shoe racing.

Where can I buy the Kiprun KS900 LD in India?

Buy it from Decathlon India, in store or online at decathlon.in. Decathlon is both the brand and the retailer, so there is no grey-market maze, no counterfeit risk, and no import-duty surprise. You can try it on in store before buying, which is part of the appeal. Try both your usual size and a half-size up, since feet swell on long summer runs.

Does the Kiprun KS900 LD have a carbon plate?

No. The KS900 LD has no plate. The category is loosely called plated, but the shoe is not, and the honest way to read it is as a plateless tempo trainer. K-Ring is a structural reinforcement element, not a propulsion plate, so the shoe carries pace through its VFOAM midsole and geometry rather than a carbon spring. If you want a true plated race shoe for a goal marathon, this is not it.

Who is the Kiprun KS900 LD for, and who should skip it?

It is for the new marathoner who needs one affordable shoe for long runs and tempo, the budget-conscious runner who has been told they need a plate and does not, and the second-shoe buyer who wants a faster-feeling trainer beside a soft daily cushion. Skip it if you want a carbon race shoe for a personal-best marathon, if you only run slow recovery jogs, or if you are a heavier runner needing maximal protection over very long mileage.

How does the KS900 LD compare to carbon super-shoes?

It does not try to compete with them, and that is the point. Carbon racers use stiff plates and premium PEBA foams to deliver propulsion at race pace, and they cost far more. The KS900 LD is a plateless VFOAM tempo trainer at ₹8,999, built for the long runs and tempo efforts that fill a training block, not for race day. The right comparison is other sub-₹10,000 trainers, where it stands out. The STRIDD shoe comparison tool shows where it sits.

How does the KS900 LD hold up in Indian heat and monsoon?

Like any foam shoe, its VFOAM midsole softens in high heat, so a 40-degree Delhi afternoon is harder on it than a cool December dawn; run early in peak summer to protect both the shoe and your legs. Monsoon is the real test for any budget shoe, and the KS900 LD will get soaked like everything else. Dry it fully between runs, never near direct heat, and rotate a second pair if you can so each breathes. A wet shoe stored wet dies young regardless of price.