VO2 Max Bike Intervals: 5×8-Minute Outdoor Builder Session
Session Overview
A demanding outdoor VO2 max session for experienced riders looking to build top-end aerobic power ahead of hilly or high-intensity racing. Five 8-minute efforts at a hard, sustained intensity build the kind of aerobic ceiling that makes race-pace efforts feel more manageable by comparison.
What You’ll Need
- A rolling or gently uphill outdoor route with minimal traffic and junctions, or a long uninterrupted stretch of road
- A bike computer or power meter to pace the intervals (heart rate works as a backup but lags behind effort at this intensity)
- A route or turnaround point that allows roughly 75-80 minutes total riding time
Warm-Up (15 minutes)
Start easy and build gradually over 15 minutes, finishing with 3 x 1-minute efforts at just below threshold with a minute of easy spinning between each, to open the legs up before the main set.
Main Set
5 x 8 minutes at an intensity you could only just hold for the full 8 minutes if pushed — roughly 106-120% of FTP if you’re riding to power, or the effort where conversation is impossible and you’re breathing hard within the first minute. Take 4 minutes of easy spinning recovery between each effort.
- Effort 1-2: settle into the pace, resist the temptation to go out too hard on the first rep
- Effort 3: usually the hardest to hold mentally — focus on steady breathing and a consistent cadence
- Effort 4-5: hold the same power/effort as the earlier reps rather than letting it drift down; a small drop-off across the set is normal, a big one means the pacing was too hard early on
Cool-Down (10 minutes)
Spin easy for 10 minutes at a genuinely low effort, letting your heart rate settle well before you finish the ride.
Coaching Notes
- This is a hard session — only attempt it with a solid aerobic base already in place, and space it at least 48-72 hours from your next hard bike or run session
- Scale down to 4 x 6 minutes if five full reps at this intensity isn’t achievable yet; better to hit the target intensity for fewer reps than to hit all five reps well under effort
- RPE should sit at 8-9 out of 10 for each interval — if you’re finishing each rep feeling like you had another two minutes in the tank, the pacing was too conservative
- Slightly rolling terrain or a gentle headwind on the way out and tailwind back can help hold a steady effort more easily than dead-flat roads
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Training at your own risk. The information provided is for general guidance only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Please consult a doctor before starting any new exercise programme, especially if you have any pre-existing health conditions.







