I Tried Strava's New 'Instant Workouts' Feature, and It Isn't Great

I Tried Strava's New 'Instant Workouts' Feature, and It Isn't Great

2026-01-24health
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Taylor
Good evening Project, I am Taylor, and this is Goose Pod for you. Today is Saturday, January 24th, right at eleven PM. I am joined by the ever-graceful Holly. We are diving into something that hits home for all of us trying to stay active: Strava’s new Instant Workouts.
Holly
It is so wonderful to be here with you tonight. I have been looking forward to our little chat about how we move our bodies and the tools we use to help us along. Strava is such a staple, but it seems there is a bit of a hiccup.
Taylor
Exactly. So, Meredith Dietz, a marathon runner and senior writer at Lifehacker, recently took Strava’s new Instant Workouts for a spin. This feature is exclusive to subscribers and was supposed to be this huge leap forward after Strava acquired the training app Runna. It sounds brilliant on paper, right?
Holly
Oh, it sounds absolutely lovely to have personalized guidance! The idea of the app learning from your history to suggest a workout tailored just for you is so thoughtful. It offers four different intents like Maintain, Build, Explore, or Recover. It feels like having a little coach in your pocket.
Taylor
It really does. It uses your activity history to generate these plans, and it even creates automatic routes using billions of historical activities from Strava’s massive database. If you are in New York City, the routes are great because the data is dense. But there is a massive, strategic failure here.
Holly
A failure? That is so disappointing to hear. I was imagining a beautiful sunset run along a perfectly mapped path. What went wrong with the execution? It seems like they have all the ingredients for something truly special, yet Meredith says it is not great. How can that be?
Taylor
Here is the kicker. Once you start the workout in the app, you cannot actually see the workout details! Strava generates these complex, multi-interval sessions, but there is no way to reference them on your watch while you are moving. You literally have to screenshot the workout or print it.
Holly
Wait, you have to print out a digital workout? How incredibly quaint, but also quite impractical for a runner! I can just imagine someone trying to hold a piece of paper while sprinting through the park. It takes away from the simple joy of movement when it is that complicated.
Taylor
It is a total narrative disconnect. For athletes who rely on their Garmin or Apple Watch to guide their pace and recovery intervals, this makes the feature almost useless. Strava says device integration is coming soon, but the timeline is vague, and their relationship with Garmin has grown quite frosty.
Holly
That is such a shame because the workouts themselves actually show promise. Meredith noted that the intervals and pacing made sense for her fitness level. It is like having a beautiful meal prepared but being told you have to eat it without any silverware. The substance is there, but not the delivery.
Taylor
And you know, this reminds me of how these fitness apps can sometimes backfire. We have talked before about how constant notifications and unrealistic goals can cause anxiety or shame. When a feature is this clunky, it just adds more stress to the workout instead of helping us find our flow.
Holly
I agree. When technology demands too much of our attention, we lose that precious connection to our own intuition. If I am worrying about a screenshot on my phone, I am not listening to my breath or feeling the ground beneath my feet. It becomes a chore rather than a delight.
Taylor
Strategically, it feels like they rushed this out. They wanted to show off the Runna acquisition benefits before their big IPO. But by launching a half-baked feature, they are risking their reputation with serious athletes. It is a classic case of prioritizing the corporate narrative over the actual user experience.
Holly
It is a bit like a stage play where the costumes are magnificent, but the actors have not quite learned their lines yet. The audience can see the potential, but the performance feels unfinished. I wonder if they realized how much frustration this would cause for people who just want to run.
Taylor
The terminology is another issue. Some users say the workout descriptions use non-standard language that does not match traditional training plans. It is confusing. If you are told to do a specific interval but the app uses weird phrasing, you are just left scratching your head in the middle of a run.
Holly
Language is so important for clarity and grace. If we are not speaking the same fitness language, the connection is lost. It sounds like Strava tried to reinvent the wheel when we all just needed a better way to turn it. How absolutely strange to ignore standard coaching terms like that.
Taylor
Exactly. They have this massive database of billions of activities, yet they could not get the basic user interface right for the people who actually pay for the subscription. It is a fascinating look at how a tech giant can trip over its own shoelaces while trying to sprint toward a valuation.
Holly
It really is a curious situation. I hope they can find a way to smooth things over, because the heart of the idea is quite lovely. Personalized guidance could help so many people feel more confident in their fitness journey if it were just a little more elegant and easy to use.
Taylor
To really understand why this feels so rushed, we have to look at the backstory. Back in April 2025, Strava made a huge move by acquiring Runna. Runna is this UK-based tech company that specializes in personalized coaching. It was a finalist for Apple’s App of the Year in 2024.
Holly
Oh, Runna sounds like such a charming success story! Founded in 2021 and launching just a year later, they managed to help millions of runners. It makes perfect sense why Strava would want to bring that expertise into their own community. It is like inviting a master gardener into your park.
Taylor
Right, but the strategic goal was to reduce friction. CEO Michael Martin wanted a loop where you plan a route in Strava, train with Runna’s logic, and then share it back to Strava. The acquisition was estimated at over forty million dollars. They are trying to build an all-in-one training ecosystem.
Holly
Forty million dollars! That is a significant investment in the future of running. It shows just how much they believe in this mission. With nearly a billion runs recorded on Strava in 2024 alone, the scale of this community is truly breathtaking. There is so much potential for connection there.
Taylor
It is massive. Strava has over one hundred fifty million registered users across almost every country. But here is the business side: they have also confidentially filed for an IPO. They are looking at a valuation of over two point two billion dollars. This puts immense pressure on them to show growth.
Holly
An IPO sounds so grand and serious. I suppose when you have investors watching your every move, you feel the need to unveil new things constantly. But it is a delicate balance, isn't it? You want to grow, but you must not lose the trust of the people who already love you.
Taylor
Exactly. They even acquired another app called The Breakaway for cycling training. They are using AI to create these personalized plans in-house. They want to keep users inside their own walls so they can monetize that data. Ninety percent of their revenue comes from those premium subscriptions, which are not cheap.
Holly
I see. So, if the subscribers are the ones providing almost all the support, they really do deserve a seamless experience. It is a bit like a private club where you pay your dues and expect the facilities to be top-notch. When things are half-baked, it feels a bit like a letdown.
Taylor
It really does. And the timing of this Instant Workouts launch, right before the anticipated IPO in spring 2026, feels like they were checking a box for Wall Street. They want to say, look, we have AI-driven personalized workouts now! But the athletes on the ground are saying, wait, I cannot even see it.
Holly
It is such a contrast between the high-level business strategy and the simple reality of a morning jog. I wonder if the leaders at the top sometimes forget what it is like to be out there, just trying to follow a plan without fumbling with a phone. It is quite a distance.
Taylor
That is the narrative trap. They are focusing on the valuation and the underwriters like Goldman Sachs, but they are neglecting the core utility. Strava has been around since 2009, and they have been profitable since 2020. They have built this incredible social network where people actually engage with each other.
Holly
The engagement is wonderful. I read that users interact with posts on Strava way more than on other social media platforms. It is a place where people actually cheer each other on with kudos. It feels much more sincere than many other corners of the internet, which is so refreshing.
Taylor
It is! But that community is also very vocal. They have been asking for basic things for years, like chronological feeds or better shoe tracking. Instead, they get these fancy new features that do not quite work yet. It creates this tension between the company’s ambitions and the users’ everyday needs.
Holly
It is like wanting a sturdy pair of walking shoes but being given a pair of high-tech wings that are still in testing. The wings are exciting, but sometimes you just need to walk comfortably. I hope they listen to their community, because that is where their real value lies, don't you think?
Taylor
I do. Their value is the moat they have built around their data and social connections. But a moat only works if people want to stay inside the castle. If you make it too difficult or annoying to be a subscriber, people will start looking for other options, especially with Garmin and Apple evolving.
Holly
That is a very clever way to put it. We all want to feel like the tools we use are on our side. If Strava feels more like a business trying to impress investors than a partner in our health, that warmth starts to fade. It becomes a bit cold and clinical.
Taylor
It is definitely a shift from their early days. Michael Horvath and Mark Gainey started this to turn solitary workouts into shared experiences. Now, it is a global health-tech giant. They have more than seven billion activities uploaded. That is an astronomical amount of human effort and data stored on their servers.
Holly
Seven billion! How absolutely incredible to think of all those heartbeats and miles. Each one is a story of someone trying their best. It is a sacred trust, in a way, to hold all that data. I hope they treat it with the grace and respect that all that effort deserves.
Taylor
They are certainly trying to leverage it. By using all those billion-run data points for route generation, they are trying to offer something no one else can. But as we saw with Meredith’s experience, data is only as good as the interface that lets you actually use it during your workout.
Holly
So true. It is the difference between having a library full of books and actually being able to read one. If the lights are off, the books do not do you much good. They need to turn the lights on by making the watch integration work as it should. It is essential.
Taylor
And that brings us to the real drama. The reason that watch integration is not there yet is not just a technical bug. It is part of a much larger, much messier conflict with the very companies that make the hardware we wear on our wrists. It is a real corporate standoff.
Holly
Oh, a standoff! That sounds quite intense for the world of fitness. I suppose when there is so much money and data involved, things can get a bit complicated between friends. I am curious to hear how this frosty relationship between Strava and Garmin actually started. It sounds quite dramatic.
Taylor
It is a classic saga of partners becoming rivals. They have worked together for over a decade, but as Strava tries to become more of a platform and Garmin tries to keep its users in its own ecosystem, the friction was inevitable. It is all about who owns the user’s attention.
Holly
It is a bit like two old friends realizing they are both competing for the same prize. There is still a bond there, but the air has turned a bit chilly. I hope they can find a way to cooperate again, for the sake of all the people who use both.
Taylor
The conflict really heated up when Strava actually sued Garmin. They claimed Garmin was infringing on patents related to their segments and heatmaps. These are the features that made Strava famous. Strava even asked the court to stop Garmin from selling most of its watches! Can you imagine the audacity?
Holly
Stop selling the watches? How absolutely bold! Garmin is such a giant in the hardware world. To think that Strava would try to halt their sales is quite a move. It feels like a very high-stakes game of chess where everyone is risking their most important pieces. That is so stressful.
Taylor
It really backfired in the court of public opinion. Athletes were not taking Strava’s side. They were worried they would lose the ability to sync their data. One user even said Strava would be ending its own existence by demanding Garmin stop selling watches. Garmin provides a massive share of Strava’s data.
Holly
It is a symbiotic relationship, isn't it? They need each other to thrive. Without the watches, there is no data for the app. And without the app, the watch loses its social magic. It seems so counterproductive to fight when you are both part of the same beautiful ecosystem of movement.
Taylor
Garmin fought back too. They started demanding their logo be on every single Strava post and sharing card. They wanted blatant advertising on every graph. Strava called it a degradation of the user experience. It is a battle over branding and who gets the credit for the workout. It is quite messy.
Holly
Branding can be so intrusive when it is not done with grace. I can see why Strava would be upset, but I also understand Garmin wanting recognition for the device that did the hard work of tracking. It is a shame that the users are the ones caught in the middle of this.
Taylor
Exactly. And while they are fighting, the app is suffering from what some call enshitification. Users are complaining about more ads, constant subscription nags, and basic features being moved behind a paywall. People feel like Strava is prioritizing profits over the people who built the community in the first place.
Holly
That word you used is quite strong, but I understand the sentiment. It is that feeling when something you love starts to feel like it is constantly asking you for money instead of just being helpful. It loses its charm and starts to feel like a burden. We all just want to run.
Taylor
There are even bugs that have been around for years, like people getting King of the Mountain records on bikes in running segments. Strava hasn't fixed these basic issues, but they found the time to launch this new Instant Workouts feature that isn't fully functional. It is a major narrative fail.
Holly
It really is. If the foundation is a bit shaky, adding a fancy new balcony doesn't really help. You have to take care of the basics first. I wonder if they realize how much frustration these little things cause for people who take their training quite seriously. It matters to them.
Taylor
And now, with the IPO looming, the pressure is even higher. They need to show they have a moat, which is why they are suing over patents. They want to prove to investors that they own the technology. But if they alienate their users and their partners, that moat might just dry up.
Holly
A dry moat is not much of a defense, is it? It is such a risky strategy. I hope they can find a way to settle their differences with Garmin. It would be so much lovelier if they could work together to make the athlete's experience better instead of fighting over logos.
Taylor
The latest update is that Strava voluntarily dropped the lawsuit, which suggests they realized how much they were hurting their own brand. But the damage to the relationship might already be done. Garmin has little incentive to prioritize features that only help Strava’s subscription revenue while their own interests are threatened.
Holly
That is a very good point. Cooperation requires trust, and trust is so easily broken but so hard to rebuild. It explains why that watch integration for the new workouts is taking so long. It is not just about code; it is about corporate diplomacy and hurt feelings, I suppose.
Taylor
It really is. It is a strategic stalemate. Strava needs the integration to make their new feature valuable, but Garmin is not exactly rushing to help their rival. Meanwhile, Apple is sitting there quietly dominating. Apple Watch is now the most-used device on Strava, surpassing Garmin. That is a huge shift.
Holly
How fascinating! So while the two old friends were arguing, a new player has taken the lead. Apple has such a focus on a seamless user experience. It makes sense that people would gravitate toward something that just works without all the drama and the printing of screenshots.
Taylor
The impact of this whole situation is really creating a two-tier experience for athletes. If you live in a big city like London or New York, the route generation is fantastic because there is so much data. But if you are in a rural area, the suggested routes can be nonsensical or even dangerous.
Holly
That is such a shame for those who live in the quiet beauty of the countryside. They deserve great workouts too! It feels a bit unfair that the quality of your experience depends so much on where you live. Everyone should have access to those lovely, smart recommendations, no matter their location.
Taylor
It really highlights the digital divide in fitness. And for those serious athletes who rely on intervals, being locked out of the full utility of the feature because of the watch issue is a huge blow. It turns a premium feature into a source of frustration. It is not what you expect for eighty dollars a year.
Holly
Eighty dollars is a significant amount to spend on an app. When you pay that much, you expect things to be polished and elegant. It reminds me of that sculptural stretching device we heard about, the one that rewards you for posture. It turns health into a bit of a transaction, doesn't it?
Taylor
It really does. We are seeing this trend where movement is becoming gamified and transactional. We talked about how some apps can foster unhealthy obsessions. If Strava’s new feature makes you feel like you are failing because you cannot follow a complex interval plan on your watch, it is doing more harm than good.
Holly
I agree completely. We should be moving for the joy of it, not because an algorithm told us to. When the technology gets in the way of that joy, it has lost its purpose. I worry that we are becoming too dependent on these digital coaches and losing our own inner voice.
Taylor
And there is the broader societal implication of all this data. Strava is securing its moat against giants like Apple, but at what cost to privacy? As they grow toward their IPO, the questions about how they use our health data are only going to get louder. It is a lot of personal information.
Holly
It is a very intimate kind of data, isn't it? Our heart rates, our locations, our daily habits. It is so important that it is handled with the utmost care. I hope that as they move toward being a public company, they keep their users’ privacy as a top priority. It is so essential.
Taylor
The struggle between Strava and Garmin also shows how fragile these ecosystems are. Millions of athletes rely on them working together. If that partnership truly breaks, it is a loss for the entire fitness community. We are all interconnected now, and when the platforms fight, the users are the ones who suffer.
Holly
It is a lesson in how much we rely on these connections. We think of our workouts as personal, but they are tied into this massive web of technology and corporate interests. It is a bit overwhelming when you stop to think about it, isn't it? Just a simple run involves so much.
Taylor
It really does. Strava built the community that gives those workouts meaning, but they do not make the devices that record the effort. They are at a crossroads. They have to decide if they want to be a supportive social network or a controlling data platform. That choice will define their future.
Holly
I hope they choose to be a supportive community. There is so much beauty in people encouraging each other and sharing their progress. That is what made Strava special in the first place. If they can get back to that heart, I think they will find their way again. It is all about the people.
Taylor
Looking ahead, the 2026 IPO is going to be a major turning point. With a two point two billion dollar valuation, Strava will have to answer to shareholders every quarter. This could mean more innovation, but it could also mean even more pressure to monetize every single mile we run. It is a double-edged sword.
Holly
I hope it means they will have the resources to finally fix those little bugs and make the watch integration absolutely seamless! That would be a lovely outcome. If they can use that investment to really serve the athletes, it could be a wonderful new chapter for everyone involved. I am staying optimistic.
Taylor
They are promising that Garmin and Apple Watch integration is coming soon. If they can pull that off, Instant Workouts could actually become the feature it was meant to be. It could truly bridge the gap between having a coach and just going for a run. But they have to execute it perfectly. No more screenshots.
Holly
No more screenshots, please! Let us get back to the simplicity of just looking at our wrists and knowing exactly what to do. It would be so much more graceful. I also hope we see more inclusive features that work just as well for someone in a small village as they do for someone in London.
Taylor
That would be the dream. We are also going to see more AI integration, like what they are doing with The Breakaway. Personalized training is the future, but it has to be done ethically. We need to make sure that these algorithms are helping us stay healthy, not just driving us to exhaustion for the sake of data.
Holly
Health is such a precious gift, and we should use technology to protect it, not exploit it. I hope the future of Strava is one where we feel empowered and inspired, rather than tracked and analyzed. It is a delicate balance, but I believe it is possible if they keep their hearts in the right place.
Taylor
Ultimately, the narrative for Strava in 2026 is about maturity. Can they grow from a scrappy fitness app into a responsible public company that still feels like a community? It is a high-stakes transition. We will be watching closely to see if they can cross that finish line with their reputation intact.
Taylor
That is the end of today's discussion on Strava's latest moves and the challenges they face. It is a fascinating look at how tech, business, and fitness all collide. Thank you so much for joining me tonight, Holly, and thank you for listening to Goose Pod, Project. It has been a pleasure.
Holly
It was such a delight to share this evening with you. I hope you found some useful insights for your own fitness journey. Remember to move with joy and listen to your heart. Thank you for listening to Goose Pod. See you tomorrow, and have a truly wonderful night.

Strava's new "Instant Workouts" feature, designed for personalized training, is criticized for its poor execution. Users cannot view workout details on their watches, requiring screenshots. This, combined with Strava's ongoing conflict with Garmin and an impending IPO, suggests a rushed rollout prioritizing corporate narrative over user experience.

I Tried Strava's New 'Instant Workouts' Feature, and It Isn't Great

Read original at Lifehacker

Meredith DietzMeredith DietzSenior Staff WriterExperienceMeredith is a marathon runner and stand-up comedian. As Lifehacker’s Senior Staff Writer, she covers personal fitness tech, home gym equipment, and more.Read Full BioJanuary 21, 2026Add as a preferred source on GoogleAdd as a preferred source on GoogleCredit: Screenshots / Meredith DietzTable of Contents---Earlier this month Strava unveiled its new Instant Workouts feature, a subscriber-exclusive tool that seems like a natural way to leverage its acquisition of Runna.

In a Reddit post, Strava said this feature builds upon Runna's already successful Instant Workouts feature.Instant Workouts uses your activity history to generate personalized workouts across four intents ("Maintain," "Build," "Explore," or "Recover"). The idea is that the more you upload, the more personalized your recommendations become.

Another major selling point is the automatic route generation feature, which draws on Strava's massive database of billions of historical activities to suggest optimal paths for each workout.The timing of this rollout seems deliberate as the company positions itself for its anticipated IPO. And on paper, it sounds like exactly the kind of innovation that would indeed justify a Strava subscription.

In practice, however, the execution leaves a good bit to be desired.A half-baked launchUnfortunately, the feature's current implementation falls far short of its potential. The most glaring issue: You cannot actually view your workout details once you've started the activity in the app. Strava generates solid, complex, multi-interval workouts—but provides no way to reference them on your watch during your run or ride.

You'd have to screenshot the workout beforehand or print it out.For the majority of us athletes who rely on our devices to guide interval training, pace targets, and recovery periods, this renders the feature practically useless. Strava has acknowledged this limitation in a Reddit post, promising that device integration for Garmin and Apple watches is "coming soon."

But the timeline for that "soon" is questionable at best.The relationship between Strava and Garmin has reportedly grown frosty following a lawsuit last fall, and there's little incentive for Garmin to prioritize features that primarily benefit Strava's subscription revenue and investor appeal. Without Garmin's cooperation and swift implementation, a significant portion of Strava's serious athlete user base remains locked out of the feature's full utility.

Solid workout designOn the bright side, in my opinion, the workouts themselves show promise—though others disagree. The training plans generated appear to take into account individual fitness levels reasonably well. From my testing, the prescribed intervals, pacing, and progression made sense given my current training status and recent activity history.

These all make sense for me.Credit: Meredith DietzThat said, user experiences vary considerably. Some athletes report receiving workouts that seem disconnected from their actual fitness or goals, while others note that the workout descriptions use non-standard terminology that doesn't align with how most training plans communicate intervals and pacing.

0;}} catch (e) {console.warn('Failed to fetch comment count:', e);}}}" x-init="fetchCommentsCount()" x-cloak="">What do you think so far?Then there's the route generation. In a well-traveled area with dense activity heat maps like New York City, my suggested routes tend to be solid and sensible enough.

As always, my personal preferences are to avoid extra crowded streets or sketchy areas, which Strava never seems to take into account. Ultimately, the algorithm benefits from years of crowdsourced data showing which streets, paths, and loops are actually popular with runners and cyclists.However, users in less densely populated areas or regions with sparser Strava usage report wildly inconsistent results.

Some routes make no logical sense, sending athletes on inefficient paths or suggesting roads that aren't suitable for the prescribed workout type. The feature's quality appears directly tied to the richness of local Strava data, creating a drastic two-tier experience.And once again: Until I can push the workout and corresponding map to my watch, this feature doesn't mean much to me.

The bottom lineIf you ask me, Strava's Instant Workouts feature feels rushed to market, likely timed to generate positive press ahead of the IPO rather than to actually serve athletes. Basic functionality that should have been present at launch—like being able to see your workout in the app or send it to your watch—is mysteriously absent.

The wonky workout descriptions and inconsistent route quality only compound the sense that this needed more time in development.The Daily NewsletterReady to do everything better?Get daily tips, tricks, and tech guides from our expert team.

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