2025 m. liepos 10 d. · 8 min
This is some basic, sample markdown. Strava or it didn’t happen. The mantra still rules group rides and lunchtime runs. Yet in 2025 even die‑hard “Stravaddicts” grumble about creeping costs—$79.99 a year for Premium in most regions, family plans at $139.99, and a new Strava + Runna bundle priced at $149.99 / yr.(strava.com, press.strava.com) Meanwhile, the feature treadmill churns: AI route planning, performance predictions and a tougher cheater detection tool.(theverge.com) Those updates are welcome, but not everyone needs KOM leaderboards or wants to cede all training data to one network.
If you crave deeper workout analytics, lower prices, or just fewer orange notifications, dozens of alternatives await. We stress‑tested eight of the most compelling options—logging rides, syncing wearables and analysing splits—to help you pick the platform that matches your goals.
Platform | Core strength | Free tier? | Starting price | Route planning | Social features |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Centenary Day | Whole‑life schedule + meals | ✅ | $9 / mo | Basic; advanced Q4 25 | Family leaderboard (coming) |
Garmin Connect | Device‑level metrics & heat maps | ✅ | Free | ✅ (Course Creator) | Badge challenges |
TrainingPeaks | Coach‑oriented analytics | Trial | $9.92 / mo (annual) | 3rd‑party (Plan My Route) | Coach–athlete feed |
MapMyRun / MapMyRide | Route builder & form feedback | ✅ | $5.99 / mo | ✅ (web + mobile) | Challenges & audio cheer |
Komoot | Offline navigation & tours | Free region | $59.99 One‑time World Pack | ✅ (turn‑by‑turn) | Collections, highlights |
Nike Run Club | Free guided runs & coaching | ✅ | Free | Minimal | Friend leaderboards |
Zwift | Indoor social rides | Trial | $14.99 / mo | Virtual worlds | Group rides, races |
Adidas Running | Multi‑sport & streaks | ✅ | $9.99 / mo | Web builder | Streak leaderboard |
What it nails: Segment leaderboards, heat‑map‑powered route suggestions, glorious social kudos, and an unmatched archive of crowd‑sourced endurance data. Strava’s June 2025 upgrade added smarter AI routing and a leaderboard integrity tool that has already removed 4.45 million dodgy rides.([theverge.com](https://www.theverge.com/news/671452/strava-ai-routes-leaderboard-update?utm_source=chatgpt.com)) Performance Predictions, launched in May, estimate finish times for key distances.([press.strava.com](https://press.strava.com/articles/strava-launches-performance-predictions-to-help-runners-train-smarter-and?utm_source=chatgpt.com))
What users gripe about:
Unlike Strava, which focuses on what you just did, Centenary Day organises what you’ll do next—across training, meals, sleep and even medical tasks. A drag‑and‑drop Weekly Routine integrates strength, endurance and recovery blocks (cold plunge, sauna) with automated meal events. Each activity scores against evidence‑based guidelines—Zone‑2 minutes, strength twice weekly, digital curfew—and turns circles green as you align. The result: athletes spot bottlenecks (too many late rides, not enough mobility) before over‑training bites.
Endurance‑specific perks land this summer: Garmin and Polar workout imports, VO₂max trend overlays and Zone‑2 heart‑rate caps that autofill if wearable data is present. Route planning is minimal today, but GPX uploads pin to the schedule and create mobile reminders. Family tier (five users) lets you sync partner races and automate grocery scaling—handy when marathon prep spikes carb days.
If you already wear a Forerunner or Edge, Garmin Connect delivers nearly everything Strava does—and more—free. You get training load, Body Battery, HRV status, power curves, heat‑map courses and badge challenges. Garmin’s ecosystem also serves dynamic Training Readiness scores, modelling fatigue versus fitness, something Strava charges for via Premium.
True, the social feed is smaller and segments less competitive, but if you value granular biometrics and pay nothing, Garmin Connect is hard to top.
TrainingPeaks reigns in the coach market. Upload your ride, and metrics like TSS, IF, CTL and ATL auto‑populate. Charts dive far deeper than Strava’s Fitness & Freshness curve—at the cost of a steeper learning curve. Premium ($120 / yr) unlocks advanced analytics and mobile Dash. Coaches can drag workouts onto your calendar and comment on execution.
Route planning is outsourced (Ride with GPS plugins), and the social feed is strictly coach–athlete, but if you chase FTP gains or IRONMAN slots, TrainingPeaks is the gold standard.
Under Armour’s MapMy suite offers route building, live audio coaching, and (with UA shoes) real‑time cadence & stride‑length feedback. Phone‑only athletes will love the MVP tier ($5.99 / mo) which adds heart‑rate zones and training plans.
Socially, MapMy hosts challenges and integrates with UA Rewards. Route builder isn’t as refined as Strava’s AI beta, but still allows heat‑map overlays and elevation plots.
If Strava excels at urban segments, Komoot rules gravel and alpine tours. Its world‑pack licence ($59.99 one‑time) unlocks offline vector maps with turn‑by‑turn voice prompts. You can string multiday bike‑packing or thru‑hiking routes, insert food & water POIs and check crowd‑sourced surface types.
Komoot’s social layer is qualitative—photo highlights, route collections—rather than kudos counts. Ride files export to Garmin and Wahoo, and Strava’s June 2025 update copied some of Komoot’s POI features([runningmagazine.ca](https://runningmagazine.ca/the-scene/strava-announces-new-and-improved-routes-feature-for-subscribers/?utm_source=chatgpt.com)), but Komoot remains the navigation king.
NRC offers professionally produced audio workouts with coaches and athletes like Eliud Kipchoge. Guided Runs include motivational storytelling and pace cues; Strava’s equivalent requires loading external podcasts.
All features remain free: cadence tracking, basic pace zones, weekly challenges. Friends leaderboards exist but lack segments or heat maps. For runners who want simplicity and zero cost, NRC excels.
When winter hits, Strava segments go dormant—but Zwift spins on. Pay $14.99 / mo to ride or run in Watopia, draft friends, or race weekly events. TrainingPeaks and Garmin workouts sync automatically, and Zwift Files export back to Strava or Centenary Day.
With 1.5 million monthly actives, Zwift’s community chat, pace bots and power‑based races scratch the social itch minus potholes.
Formerly Runtastic, Adidas Running tracks 90+ activities—kayak to climbing. Premium ($9.99 / mo) adds adaptive training plans and heart‑rate zone coaching. Streak leaderboards motivate daily consistency, and integration with Adidas online store nets discount vouchers.
Route building exists on web but lacks heat‑map intelligence. Still, for multi‑sport dabblers who want 30‑day streak badges, Adidas beats Strava’s run/ride bias.
App | Annual cost | Free route planning? | Advanced analytics? |
---|---|---|---|
Strava Premium | $79.99 | Yes (Premium) | Moderate |
Centenary Day Pro | $108 | Basic | Holistic |
Garmin Connect | $0 (with device) | Yes | High |
TrainingPeaks Premium | $119 | 3rd‑party | Very high |
MapMy MVP | $71.88 | Yes | Low |
Komoot World | $59.99 (one time) | Yes | Low |
Nike Run Club | $0 | No | Low |
Zwift | $179.88 | Virtual | Moderate |
Adidas Running Premium | $99.99 | Yes | Moderate |
Feature | Strava | Centenary | Garmin | TrainingPeaks | Komoot |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Segment leaderboards | ✅ | 2026 | Partial | ❌ | ❌ |
AI route suggestions | ✅ (Premium) | Roadmap | Heat map | ❌ | ✅ |
Nutrition integration | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ (MyFitnessPal) | ✅ (MFP) | ❌ |
Training load metric | Relative Effort | Guideline stars | Training Load | CTL/ATL | ❌ |
Price under $10 / mo | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ (one‑time) |
If you chase KOMs, love heat‑map route building and enjoy deep social kudos, Premium earns its keep, especially after the May 2025 AI upgrades. If you simply log workouts and analyse power, Garmin Connect or TrainingPeaks may satisfy for less—or zero—cost.
Garmin Connect is unrivalled for device owners; Nike Run Club for runners who want guided audio workouts.
Komoot for off‑grid adventures; Strava’s new AI Routes for urban loops; Garmin Course Creator for multi‑sport marathons.
Yes—Settings → Download Data. Most alternatives (Centenary Day, TrainingPeaks) accept GPX/FIT imports so you preserve history.
Strava’s orange kudos remain addictive, but 2025’s landscape proves you can train smarter without paying extra—or by paying for features Strava lacks. Whether you seek multi‑sport life balance (Centenary Day), coach‑grade analytics (TrainingPeaks), offline nav (Komoot) or fully free guided runs (Nike Run Club), there’s a platform ready to log your next kilometre—and maybe the one after that.
Centenary Day nėra tik produktas – tai judėjimas. Auganti žmonių bendruomenė, pasiryžusi kontroliuoti savo sveikatą, prailginti savo gyvenimo trukmę ir įkvėpti kitus daryti tą patį.
Nesvarbu, ar optimizuojate savo rutiną, tyrinėjate ilgaamžiškumo mokslą, ar ruošiatės radikalios gyvenimo pratęsimo ateičiai, mes esame čia, kad palaikytume jus kiekviename žingsnyje.
Ar esate pasiruošę kurti savo sveikiausią šimtmetį?
straighten your back
take a deep breath
drink some water