Topo Athletic Cyclone 2 — India price, specs & where to buy

Here is the thing nobody tells you when you come back to running after a long gap: the shoe wall is a lie. Two hundred models, all shouting about plates and energy return you do not need yet. I came back heavier, slower, and with feet that had spread half a size in the years I spent not running. The Topo Athletic Cyclone 2 was the first shoe in a while that did not try to sell me a fantasy. It sold me room. At ₹13,999, 235 grams, a 5 mm drop and a 28/23 mm ZipFoam midsole with no plate, it is a lightweight daily trainer built around a wide foot and an honest stride. For the runner I actually am right now, that mattered more than any carbon gimmick.

What the Cyclone 2 actually is

Strip away the marketing and the Cyclone 2 is a lightweight wide-fit daily. That short description is doing a lot of work, so let me unpack it the way I wish someone had unpacked it for me.

Lightweight first. 235 grams in a US 9 is genuinely light for a daily trainer. When I started running again my old shoes felt like bricks by kilometre four. The Cyclone 2 disappears on the foot in a way that flatters a comeback stride, where the last thing tired legs need is extra mass to swing forward. Wide-fit is the headline, and the reason Topo exists as a brand: the toebox is anatomically shaped, wider at the front than almost anything on a mainstream shoe wall in India. Your toes splay instead of being squeezed to a point. If you have spent years in narrow shoes and your feet have quietly widened, that is the difference between finishing a run and limping home. Daily, finally, means exactly that — not a racer, not a recovery slipper, but the shoe you reach for on most runs of the week.

The specs, and only the specs

Here are the verified numbers, so we argue from facts and not vibes. Stack: 28 mm heel, 23 mm forefoot. Drop: 5 mm. Weight: 235 grams in US 9. Midsole: ZipFoam. Plate: none. India price: ₹13,999 through Topo's official channels. That is the whole spec sheet. Anything past it — exact outsole rubber, lab rebound figures — I will not invent for you, because that made-up confidence is what got me into the wrong shoes the first time.

The 5 mm drop is the part you have to respect

This is where a returning runner can get hurt, so I will be blunt. A 5 mm drop is lower than the 8-10 mm most Indian runners grew up on, and that shifts a little more load onto your calves and Achilles. It is not a flaw — many people find a lower drop encourages a cleaner midfoot landing — but it is a transition.

Moving into the Cyclone 2 from a higher-drop trainer, my calves were sore for the first two weeks. Not injured, just talking to me. The fix was patience: shorter, slower runs, my old shoes kept in rotation, the tissue allowed to adapt. If you are coming off an injury or a long break, do not make this your only shoe in week one. Phase it in. The STRIDD plan generator can build a comeback block that ramps volume sensibly, which is exactly what a lower-drop transition needs.

ZipFoam and the no-plate decision

ZipFoam is Topo's midsole compound, and on the Cyclone 2 it is tuned for daily running rather than peak energy return. It is responsive enough to feel lively under a quicker stride, soft enough to absorb the pounding of a comeback runner who has not yet rebuilt their durability. There is no plate, and I want to defend that choice because the shoe wall will try to make you feel like a plate is mandatory.

You do not need a plate for daily mileage. Plates exist to return energy at race pace and to enforce a specific roll-through. For easy runs and the slow base-building a comeback is made of, a plate is dead weight and an unforgiving ride. Leaving it out is a feature, not a compromise. If you later want to understand where plated shoes earn their keep, the 2026 super-shoe comparison lays out the trade-offs honestly. For now, a plateless daily is the right tool.

Who the Cyclone 2 is for, and who should walk past it

This shoe is for three runners. Anyone with a wide or splayed foot who has been suffering in narrow trainers — that is the obvious win, and the Topo toebox alone can justify the purchase. The comeback runner rebuilding base mileage who wants something light and forgiving without paying super-shoe money; that was me. And the efficient daily-mileage runner who likes a low-drop, natural feel and does not want a tall, mushy stack getting in the way of ground feel.

Now the honest part — who should skip it. If you need a stability shoe for heavy overpronation, this is a neutral trainer and will not give you that structured support. If you love a plush, max-cushion ride, the 28 mm stack will feel low and firm; you will be happier in a taller shoe. And if you have narrow feet, the wide toebox everyone else celebrates will feel sloppy and unlocked. Browse the Running Lab gear shoes index for neutral and stability options across the price range.

Living with it in Indian conditions

A shoe review written for India that ignores heat and monsoon is half a review, so here is the real-world bit. The engineered-mesh upper breathes well, which matters far more here than in a temperate climate. Through a Mumbai or Chennai summer, where you sweat from the first kilometre, a breathable upper is the difference between a tolerable run and a blister farm. Through monsoon the open mesh drains quickly but also lets water straight in — this is not a waterproof shoe, and no daily trainer at this price is. Expect wet feet on a rainy run, and dry the shoe fully between sessions: stuff it with newspaper, keep it out of direct sun, never bury a damp pair in a cupboard. Foam that stays wet breaks down faster, and at ₹13,999 you want every kilometre you paid for.

Where to buy it in India honestly

Topo Athletic is not a mass-market brand here the way Nike or Adidas are, so you will not find a wall of Cyclone 2s at every mall. The cleanest route is Topo Athletic's official site and its authorised channels, where the ₹13,999 price holds and where you sidestep the fake-and-grey-import problem that plagues popular models. Topo is still relatively niche and somewhat import-dependent in India, so stock can be patchy and sizes sell through. If you find your size at the official price, that is the moment to buy. Explore the wider range on the Topo Athletic shoe page, and weigh it against rivals on the shoe comparison tool.

The verdict from someone still rebuilding

The Cyclone 2 is not the shoe with the biggest numbers, and it is not trying to be. It is a 235-gram, 5 mm drop, ZipFoam daily trainer with the best wide toebox in its price band and no plate to get in the way. For a comeback runner, a wide-footer, or anyone who wants a light and natural daily ride at ₹13,999, it is one of the easier recommendations I can make. For overpronators, max-cushion lovers and narrow feet, it is the wrong shoe, and I would rather you knew that now than after the money is spent. Match the shoe to the runner you are today, not the one you were before the break. When the pair is sorted, build the comeback around it with the STRIDD plan generator.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Topo Athletic Cyclone 2 worth ₹13,999 in India?

For the right runner, yes. At ₹13,999 you are paying for a 235-gram lightweight daily trainer with a genuinely wide, anatomical toebox and a responsive ZipFoam midsole. If you have wide feet or are rebuilding base mileage on a comeback, the fit and the low weight justify the price. If you want a tall max-cushion ride or stability support, you would be paying for a shoe that does not match your needs, and a different trainer is better value.

Where can I buy the Topo Cyclone 2 in India without getting a fake?

Buy through Topo Athletic's official site and authorised channels, where the ₹13,999 price holds. Topo is a relatively niche, import-dependent brand in India, so it is not on every shoe wall, and stock can be patchy. Going through official channels is the cleanest way to avoid grey imports and fakes, and to be sure you are getting the correct current model and your true size.

Who is the Topo Cyclone 2 best for?

Three runners: anyone with wide or splayed feet who struggles in narrow trainers, comeback runners rebuilding mileage who want a light and forgiving daily without super-shoe money, and efficient runners who prefer a low-drop, natural ride with ground feel. It is a neutral daily trainer, so it suits people who do not need motion-control support.

How does the Cyclone 2 fit, and should I size up?

The defining feature is the wide, anatomically shaped toebox, so your toes splay rather than being squeezed. If you are coming from narrow shoes, the forefoot will feel roomy in the best way. Length-wise it generally runs true, so most runners take their usual size and let the width do the work. If you have narrow feet, the roomy toebox may feel loose and unlocked, which is a sign this is not your shoe.

Topo Cyclone 2 vs a mainstream lightweight daily — which should I pick?

The Cyclone 2's edge is its wide toebox and its low 5 mm drop and natural feel; mainstream lightweight dailies usually run narrower with a higher 8-10 mm drop. If your feet are wide or you want a lower-drop, ground-feel ride, the Topo wins. If you have average-to-narrow feet and are used to a higher drop, a mainstream trainer may feel more familiar. Use the shoe comparison tool to line up the specs before deciding.

How does the Cyclone 2 hold up in Indian heat and monsoon?

The engineered mesh upper breathes well, which is a real advantage in Indian summer heat where you sweat from the start. In the monsoon the open mesh drains quickly but also lets water in — it is not waterproof, so expect wet feet on rainy runs. Dry the shoe fully between sessions, stuff it with newspaper and keep it out of direct sun, because foam that stays damp breaks down faster and shortens the life of the shoe.