The Skechers GoRun Maxroad 6 is a max-cushion daily trainer with a carbon-infused plate: 270 grams in a US 9, a 6 mm drop, a 40 mm heel and 34 mm forefoot stack, and Hyperburst Pro supercritical foam. It costs ₹13,999 in India through Skechers. Treat this review as a checklist, not a sales pitch. Work the four steps in order, and by the end you will know whether the Maxroad 6 is the everyday shoe you want, or the wrong one for how you actually run.
Step 1: understand what the Maxroad 6 is built to do
The Maxroad is Skechers' big, soft daily trainer. The shoe for the bulk of your week. Easy runs, recovery runs, the long Sunday effort where the kilometres stack up and your legs need protecting. The sixth version keeps that brief and adds a plate, which changes the conversation in a way worth slowing down for.
Step 1a: the verified numbers
Here is the ground truth and only the ground truth. Weight: 270 grams in a US 9. Drop: 6 mm. Stack: 40 mm at the heel, 34 mm at the forefoot. Foam: Hyperburst Pro. Plate: carbon-infused. India price: ₹13,999 through Skechers. Anything past that list, such as exact outsole rubber or lab energy-return figures, is not verified here, so this review does not invent it.
Step 1b: why those numbers matter for daily miles
A max-cushion daily trainer has one core job: absorb the cumulative pounding of high weekly volume so your legs survive the training block. The 40/34 mm stack is genuinely tall, and that is the point. On easy and long runs, where total impact load matters more than snap, a deep, soft platform protects you. The Hyperburst Pro foam is Skechers' supercritical midsole, soft underfoot but resilient enough to last. At 270 grams the Maxroad 6 is honestly heavy, which is normal for the category, and on easy days that mass barely registers. The carbon-infused plate is the interesting addition. In a daily trainer a plate is not there to make you fast; it adds structure and a smoother roll-through so a tall, soft shoe does not feel vague underfoot. Read it as stability, not propulsion.
Step 2: match the Maxroad 6 to how you actually train
Run this checklist before you spend ₹13,999.
Step 2a: consider the Maxroad 6 if
You log real weekly volume and want one cushioned shoe to carry most of it. You are building toward a first half or full marathon and your easy and long runs are getting longer. You are a heavier runner who feels the road on a firmer trainer and wants more foam underfoot. You already own a fast tempo shoe and need its opposite: a soft, protective daily trainer for everything that is not a hard session. Any of those, and the Maxroad 6 is aimed squarely at you.
Step 2b: look elsewhere if
You want a race-day shoe; the plate here is for stability, not speed, and a dedicated racer will serve a PB attempt far better. You prefer a low, connected ride, in which case 40 mm of stack will feel like a wall between you and the road. You only run short and occasionally, where a 270 gram max-cushion trainer is more shoe than the job needs. You want one pair to do everything on a tight budget, because at ₹13,999 this is a considered purchase that does the daily-cushion job well and the racing job not at all. In those cases, browse the Running Lab gear shoes index for a better-matched stack height.
Step 3: compare the Maxroad 6 against the obvious alternatives
A direct comparison settles the decision faster than any single-shoe review.
Step 3a: versus the Skechers Razor 5
The Razor 5 is the fast end of the same family: lighter at 220 grams, lower at 34/28 mm, built for tempo and shorter races. The Maxroad 6 is its opposite, taller and softer at 40/34 mm and built for easy volume. Both carry a carbon plate, but the jobs are different. Most runners who train with structure end up wanting both: the Maxroad for the bulk of the week, the Razor for the two or three sessions where pace matters. If you can only buy one and you mostly run easy, the Maxroad is the safer first pick.
Step 3b: versus a plated marathon racer
Top-tier carbon marathon shoes also run tall, but their plate and foam are tuned to return energy at race pace, and they are not built to absorb daily easy mileage week after week. The Maxroad 6 is the training-block workhorse that keeps your legs fresh for the days you do reach for a racer. If a marathon PB is the goal, you will still want a dedicated race shoe, and the 2026 super-shoe comparison is where to start. The Maxroad earns its place underneath that racer, not instead of it.
Step 4: apply the Maxroad 6 to Indian conditions
India asks a daily trainer to survive heat, soak up monsoon, and stay comfortable over long, slow kilometres. The Maxroad 6 is built for exactly that load.
Step 4a: heat, monsoon and the road
The engineered upper breathes reasonably for warm-weather running, which in most of India is most of the year. It will feel warm on a peak-summer long run, as every cushioned shoe does, but it drains and dries between sessions, which is what matters across a monsoon block. The tall, soft stack is comfortable on long efforts but sits high off the ground, so on slick markings and tiles after rain, shorten your stride and ease the pace. This is a road shoe with road grip; keep it off mud and trail.
Step 4b: lifespan and cost-per-use
A max-cushion daily trainer is the highest-mileage shoe in most rotations, and the Maxroad 6 is built to take it. A reasonable expectation is 600 to 900 kilometres before the Hyperburst Pro foam noticeably softens, with the upper and outsole usually outlasting the cushioning feel. Read the ₹13,999 price as cost-per-use across hundreds of easy kilometres rather than a one-race outlay, and it makes sense. Dry it fully between wet runs, because repeated damp use, more than heat, is what shortens the life of any supercritical foam.
Step 4c: fit, transition and where to buy
Most runners take their usual running size, leaving a thumb's width at the toe for feet that swell on long runs. Coming from a lower shoe, a 40 mm stack feels like a lot underfoot at first, so give it a few easy runs to settle. One accessibility-minded caveat from someone who has rebuilt her own running more than once: a tall, soft platform can feel slightly less stable if you have weak ankles or are returning from injury, so introduce it on easy ground before trusting it on tired legs. Buy from Skechers' official India site at ₹13,999 for a genuine pair and a real return path, and browse the rest of Skechers' shoe lineup to see where the Maxroad sits against the faster Razor.
The decision
It reduces to one question: do you log real weekly volume and want one soft, protective shoe to carry most of it? If yes, the Maxroad 6 is built precisely for that: 40/34 mm of Hyperburst Pro, a carbon-infused plate for stability, ₹13,999 for a daily trainer that protects your legs across a full block. If no, meaning you want a racer, prefer a low ride, run only short and occasionally, or need one do-everything pair on a budget, a different shoe serves you better. Run the head-to-head on the shoe comparison tool, then build a free training plan that puts this shoe under the easy and long miles it was made for.