The New Balance FuelCell Rebel v5 is a 215-gram, 6 mm drop daily trainer that has crept into the conversation for tempo and uptempo work in India. With a 30/24 mm stack on a FuelCell PEBA blend, no plate, and a ₹13,495 price, it occupies a thin-but-defensible niche between a true racer and a max-cushion daily. The evidence — both published research and category trends — supports it as a serious tool for runners who want plate-free responsiveness.
The data on lightweight daily trainers
Start with what is verifiable. The FuelCell Rebel v5 weighs 215 g in a US 9 men's, drops 6 mm, stacks 30 mm at the heel and 24 mm at the forefoot, uses a FuelCell PEBA-blend foam, and carries no plate. New Balance positions it for lightweight daily and tempo use. List price in India is ₹13,495.
A 2020 study by Hoogkamer and colleagues in Sports Medicine reviewed shoe weight and running economy and confirmed the long-standing finding from earlier biomechanics work: every 100 g added to a running shoe increases the metabolic cost of running by roughly 1%. That maps to roughly half a percent for every 50 g. Against a 230 g shoe like a Saucony Kinvara, the Rebel v5 is 15 g lighter — a marginal but measurable economy advantage. Against a 280 g daily trainer, the advantage compounds.
What PEBA foam means in practice
PEBA-based foams emerged in the 2017 Nike Vaporfly 4% (Hoogkamer et al., 2018, Sports Medicine reported a 4% running economy improvement vs. the Adidas Adios Boost) and have since proliferated. The Rebel v5 uses a FuelCell PEBA blend rather than full PEBA. The published research on plate-free PEBA shoes is thinner than on plated PEBA racers. A 2023 study in the European Journal of Applied Physiology (Joubert and Jones) tested several non-plated lightweight shoes and found smaller-magnitude economy gains than plated equivalents, but still measurable. The honest read: the Rebel v5 will not match a Vaporfly 3 or Adios Pro 3 on economy. It will likely outperform an EVA-based daily trainer of the same weight.
How the Rebel v5 fits Indian training routines
Indian recreational running mileage typically clusters in the 30 to 60 km/week band. At those volumes, a single daily trainer can carry a runner. At 70+ km/week, a rotation becomes useful. The Rebel v5 sits in the rotation as the uptempo-and-tempo shoe rather than the slow long-run shoe.
A defensible weekly use pattern: easy days in a more cushioned daily, two or three sessions per week (tempo, intervals, progression long run) in the Rebel v5. The shoe's 30/24 mm stack is enough to absorb the impact of a 20 km tempo session in Bangalore's Cubbon Park or a 15 km progression run on the Mumbai Marine Drive promenade. Below 30 km/week, the marginal value of a rotation is smaller — most runners are better served by a single, more versatile shoe at that mileage.
Comparison with the Asics Hyperspeed 4 and Saucony Kinvara 15
The lightweight-daily category in India is increasingly crowded. Direct alternatives at this price point: the Saucony Kinvara 15 (₹12,499, 210 g, 4 mm drop, PWRRUN foam) and the Asics Hyperspeed 4 (₹9,999, 186 g, 5 mm drop, FF Blast Plus Eco). The Hyperspeed is significantly lighter. The Kinvara is closer in stack and weight. Where the Rebel v5 differs is the PEBA-blend foam, which gives a more responsive feel than the Kinvara's PWRRUN or the Hyperspeed's FF Blast Plus Eco. Whether that responsiveness translates to a meaningful economy edge over comparable lightweight dailies is not settled in the literature. For a like-for-like spec view, the shoe comparison tool filters by drop and stack.
Fit, durability, and the humidity question
New Balance's lasts vary widely across the catalogue. The Rebel v5 uses a slightly tapered last with a moderately roomy forefoot — friendlier to mid-volume feet than the narrow Kinvara, less roomy than a Brooks Hyperion Max. Most Indian runners will find their usual size correct. The engineered mesh upper is light and breathable. In humid Mumbai or Chennai conditions, the upper drains and dries faster than the heavier denser uppers found on max-cushion daily trainers.
Durability is a fair concern with PEBA-based foams. PEBA compresses faster than EVA under repeated loading. A 2024 review in the International Journal of Sports Science and Coaching noted that PEBA-based midsoles show measurable energy-return decay after roughly 500 to 600 km in some lab tests, with significant variance across models. New Balance does not publish a specific lifespan for the Rebel v5. The honest planning number: treat the shoe as a 500 to 700 km tempo/uptempo tool, not a 1,000 km workhorse. Rotate it with a more durable daily.
Price and value
At ₹13,495, the Rebel v5 sits in the premium-lightweight bracket. It is more expensive than the Hyperspeed 4 by ₹3,500. It is roughly ₹1,000 more than the Kinvara 15. The premium reflects the PEBA-blend foam. Whether that premium is worth it depends on your training intensity. If two or more weekly sessions are tempo-or-faster, the Rebel v5's responsiveness is defensible. If your training is mostly easy mileage, the cheaper alternatives are sensible. Our running shoe library covers the comparable models, and the New Balance hub covers the rest of the lineup.
Who should buy the Rebel v5 — and who should not
Buy if you run two or more weekly quality sessions, target a sub-4-hour marathon or sub-1:50 half, and have an existing daily trainer for easy mileage. Skip if you are below 30 km/week, if you are a heavier runner who needs more underfoot stability, or if your training is mostly easy aerobic running.
The Rebel v5 is not a super-shoe replacement. For comparison with the carbon-plated race shoe category, our super-shoe comparison is the cleaner reference.
For a training plan that uses lightweight dailies for the right workouts, the STRIDD plan generator outputs goal-specific weekly structures with intensity distribution matched to your target race.