What is fartlek training and how do I do it?

Fartlek, Swedish for speed play, is one of the older endurance training methods and one of the more frequently misunderstood. The published literature on fartlek training is thinner than its century of practical use would suggest, but the supporting evidence on variable-pace running and the broader interval-training framework is robust. The honest definition: fartlek is unstructured or semi-structured surge-and-recover running, integrated into an otherwise continuous run, where the runner — not a stopwatch — decides the duration and intensity of the surges.

The original Holmer fartlek, developed in 1930s Sweden by coach Gosta Holmer for the country's distance runners, was a deliberate break from rigid track-interval training. Holmer's runners surged from one landmark to the next on forest trails, recovered when they felt ready, and let terrain dictate the workout. The principle remains. The execution has been formalised in some camps and corrupted in others.

What fartlek actually is in evidence terms

A 2014 review in Sports Medicine on interval training in distance runners summarised the published mechanisms by which variable-pace work produces aerobic and lactate-threshold adaptations. The mechanism is well established. Repeated bouts above lactate threshold, interspersed with active recovery below threshold, produce measurable improvements in VO2max, lactate clearance, and running economy over training blocks of six to twelve weeks. Fartlek fits inside this mechanistic framework. The difference is structure — fartlek's intervals are unmeasured, while traditional interval training prescribes specific times or distances.

A 2013 study in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research compared structured intervals to unstructured fartlek-style sessions in trained runners and found broadly equivalent physiological adaptations, with the fartlek group reporting lower perceived workout demand and higher session enjoyment. The implication is practical. Fartlek delivers most of the interval benefit at lower psychological cost. See our Daniels VDOT guide and the types of run library for adjacent reading.

The original Holmer fartlek structure

The 1930s Holmer prescription, documented in subsequent coaching literature, included three components — sustained running below threshold for warm-up, surges of varying duration on uphills or marked stretches between landmarks, and shorter recovery jogs. The total session length was forty-five to sixty minutes. The surges varied from twenty seconds to five minutes. The recoveries were as long as the runner needed. The session structure was prescriptive in shape, free in execution. This is the canonical fartlek.

Indian terrain and the landmark-fartlek method

Indian recreational running offers a useful natural environment for landmark-based fartlek. Lalbagh in Bengaluru, KBR Park in Hyderabad, Lodhi Gardens in Delhi, Aarey forest in Mumbai — each has marked sections, gates, monuments, or terrain features that can serve as surge boundaries. Roads with regular street-light spacing provide repeatable landmark cues. The principle is to use the environment, not the watch. The runner who fartleks lamp-post-to-lamp-post on a Pune residential road and recovers for two lamp-posts is doing what Holmer prescribed. The watch can be left in the pocket.

The practical fartlek session menu

The published literature supports several fartlek variants. The choice depends on the training block, the runner's fitness, and the goal for the session.

The classic Holmer fartlek

A forty-five to sixty minute session. Warm up for ten minutes at easy pace. Begin surging on undulating terrain, varying the surge duration from thirty seconds to three minutes, recovering between surges with easy jogging of one to two minutes. Aim for fifteen to twenty minutes of cumulative surging in the body of the session. Cool down for ten minutes at easy pace. This is a moderately demanding workout, sitting in the lactate-threshold to VO2max range depending on surge intensity.

The marathon-specific fartlek

For marathon training, longer surges at marathon-to-half-marathon pace are more relevant than short sprints. A typical session might include eight to ten surges of three to five minutes at marathon pace, with one to two minute easy jog recoveries, embedded in a sixty to seventy-five minute run. The cumulative surge time is twenty-five to forty minutes — closer to a tempo session in physiological demand but with the variable-pace recovery that lets the runner sustain the cumulative effort. See our marathon plans for structured progression context.

The 5K and 10K fartlek

For shorter-distance training, shorter and faster surges are appropriate. A typical session for 5K and 10K runners includes twelve to fifteen surges of forty-five seconds to two minutes at 5K to 10K pace, with equal-length easy recoveries. The session sits firmly in VO2max territory. The 2014 Sports Medicine review on interval training documented adaptation responses that align with this kind of structure. Use this variant once a week during a six to eight week build-up to a 5K or 10K race.

The mixed fartlek

The classic Indian running club fartlek often mixes durations within a single session — for example, sets of one minute on, one minute off; then two minutes on, two minutes off; then three minutes on, three minutes off; then back down through two and one. This pyramid structure produces a wider range of physiological stimuli within a single workout. It is the most versatile session for runners who are training for a range of distances or in a non-specific build-up phase.

What fartlek does that structured intervals do not

The published evidence and accumulated coaching experience point to three distinctive benefits of fartlek over rigidly structured intervals.

Lower psychological demand

The 2013 JSCR study referenced above found measurably lower perceived workout demand in fartlek groups versus structured-interval groups despite similar physiological loads. For Indian recreational runners who are squeezing training into work-day mornings, the lower psychological cost matters. A session that produces the same adaptation at lower perceived difficulty is more sustainable across a long training block.

Improved pacing intuition

Running without a watch in the surge sections builds the internal pace sense that pays dividends in races. The runner who has fartleked for a year knows what 10K pace feels like without checking. This is not a small skill. Race pacing without internal pace sense leads to first-five-kilometre overcooking and final-five-kilometre collapse. Fartlek builds the sense that prevents it.

Terrain integration

Fartlek incorporates hills, undulating ground, and surface variation naturally. The runner who surges up a Lalbagh hill, recovers down the other side, and surges again into a flat section is doing strength work and aerobic work in the same session. The 2017 review in the British Journal of Sports Medicine on hill running noted measurable improvements in running economy from regular hill work. Fartlek delivers this incidentally rather than as a separate session. Anchor your weekly structure using the calculators.

How to fit fartlek into a weekly plan

The published guidance on hard-session frequency is consistent across major coaching frameworks. Two quality sessions per week for most recreational runners, with three to four easy aerobic runs and one long run. Fartlek occupies the role of one of the two quality sessions, typically replacing intervals or tempo runs in the week.

Where in the week

Tuesday or Wednesday is the conventional placement for a midweek fartlek, leaving Friday or Saturday for the second quality session (often a tempo or progression run) and Sunday for the long run. The principle is forty-eight to seventy-two hours of easy or rest between hard sessions. The 2013 review in the European Journal of Applied Physiology on recovery between high-intensity sessions supports this spacing.

How often through the year

Fartlek can sit in the schedule year-round, with the structure shifting through training phases. Base-building phases favour longer, lower-intensity surges. Peak training phases favour shorter, faster surges. Race weeks taper fartlek volume and intensity. The published periodisation literature supports this kind of phasic variation.

The clear next step

Fartlek is one of the most accessible quality sessions in distance running. The barrier to entry is low. The watch is optional. The terrain is the workout. Indian recreational runners with access to a park, a forest loop, or a quiet residential road have the environment fartlek was designed for. Build the weekly fartlek slot using the STRIDD plan generator, calibrate session intensity against your VDOT-derived training paces, and return to the Running Lab for the next chapter on quality session design. Holmer's runners did not have watches. Most of them ran national records. The lesson scales.

Frequently asked questions

How is fartlek different from interval training?

Interval training prescribes specific times, distances, and recoveries — for example, six by 800 metres at 5K pace with two-minute recoveries. Fartlek is unstructured or semi-structured, with surge duration and recovery dictated by terrain, landmarks, or feel rather than a stopwatch. The 2013 JSCR study comparing the two found broadly equivalent physiological adaptations, with fartlek producing lower perceived workout demand. Both fit the same week. Most runners benefit from rotating between them across training blocks.

How often should I do fartlek?

Once a week is the conventional placement for most recreational distance runners, occupying one of two weekly quality sessions. The 2013 EJAP review on recovery between high-intensity sessions supports forty-eight to seventy-two hours of easy or rest between hard sessions. Twice a week is feasible during peak training blocks for trained runners, but adds injury risk for absolute beginners and runners coming back from layoffs. Once a week sustains across a long training block.

What pace should I run the surges at?

The pace depends on the surge duration and the training phase. Short surges of thirty seconds to two minutes are appropriate at 5K to 10K race pace. Longer surges of three to five minutes sit at half-marathon to marathon pace for marathon training. The principle is that the surge should feel meaningfully harder than the recovery while still being completable for the planned number of repetitions. Practice and self-knowledge calibrate this faster than published prescriptions.

Can beginners do fartlek?

Yes, with modifications. Absolute beginners who have completed the first six to eight weeks of a structured walk-run progression can introduce short surges — thirty to sixty seconds at a comfortable hard effort — once a week within their longest easy run. The principle is the same as for experienced runners: variable-pace running drives aerobic and threshold adaptation. The dose is just smaller. Three to five surges per session is a reasonable starting point for new runners.

Do I need a watch for fartlek?

No. The original Holmer fartlek was designed without watches. Landmark-based fartlek — lamp-post-to-lamp-post, gate-to-gate, monument-to-monument — is widely used and well supported by the historical coaching literature. Some runners prefer light watch use for cumulative surge-time tracking; others use the watch for total run time only. The choice is personal. The training adaptation does not require the data.

Is fartlek good preparation for a marathon?

Yes — particularly the longer-surge marathon-specific fartlek. Sessions of eight to ten surges of three to five minutes at marathon pace, with one to two minute easy recoveries, embedded in a sixty to seventy-five minute run, build the marathon-pace fluency that pays dividends on race day. This kind of fartlek replaces or complements the conventional tempo run in marathon-training programmes. The variable-pace structure makes the cumulative volume more tolerable than continuous tempo work.