What is Lactate Threshold Heart Rate (LTHR)?

Understanding LTHR: The Key to Smarter Heart Rate Training

Lactate Threshold Heart Rate (LTHR) represents the highest heart rate you can sustain for a prolonged period without lactate building up too quickly in your blood.

It marks the point where your body shifts from aerobic to anaerobic effort, and where fatigue begins to accumulate more rapidly.

In training, LTHR is one of the most useful performance markers for setting heart rate training zones.

By training just below or around your LTHR, you can improve endurance, increase efficiency, and delay fatigue during sustained efforts.

Unlike maximum heart rate (HRmax), which is largely genetic, your LTHR can improve with consistent fitness training.

It adapts over time as your aerobic capacity and lactate clearance improve.

You can determine your LTHR through field tests — such as a 30-minute time trial where you record your average heart rate — or estimate it from data collected during hard workouts or races.

Knowing your LTHR allows you to:

  • Personalize training intensity zones.

  • Track fitness progress over time.

  • Optimize performance when power data isn’t available.

Understanding what LTHR means helps athletes train smarter, balance recovery, and target the right physiological systems for steady progress.

If you don’t have your LTHR yet, you can still get started by using Max HR to calculate your cycling heart rate zones.

FAQs About LTHR

Practical answers to help you use LTHR to set your zones.