BackFebruary 19, 20266 min readapple-watchvo2maxcardio-fitnesstrainingCentury

Apple Watch VO2 Max: Which Workouts Count (And How to Get Better Estimates)

Apple Watch only estimates VO2 max during specific outdoor workouts with good GPS and steady effort. Learn which workout types qualify, why your number might be stuck, and how to train to improve cardio fitness without guessing.

Apple Watch VO2 Max: Which Workouts Count (And How to Get Better Estimates)

TL;DR

  • Apple Watch estimates VO2 max (Cardio Fitness) only during certain workouts, usually Outdoor Walk, Outdoor Run, or Hiking.
  • You need good GPS, clean heart rate data, and enough steady effort for an estimate to show up.
  • Treadmill runs, indoor cycling, and random mixed workouts often do not generate a VO2 max update.
  • If your number is stuck, the fix is usually: more qualifying outdoor sessions, better watch fit, and more consistent pacing.
  • Training that improves VO2 max is simple: build an aerobic base, then add 1 to 2 quality interval sessions per week.
  • Century is built to turn Apple Health signals into a plan so you do not overreact to one metric.

What Apple Watch is trying to estimate

VO2 max is your maximal oxygen uptake. It is a strong marker of aerobic fitness.

The lab way to measure VO2 max uses a mask and a graded exercise test.

Apple Watch does not do that. It estimates cardio fitness using:

  • heart rate response
  • pace and motion
  • GPS and elevation context
  • your personal profile data

The result is useful as a trend, not as a perfect lab replacement.

Which Apple Watch workouts count for VO2 max

Most people get surprised by this.

Apple Watch does not update VO2 max from every workout.

In practice, the most common qualifying workout types are:

  • Outdoor Walk
  • Outdoor Run
  • Hiking

These workouts combine heart rate plus outdoor motion and GPS so Apple can estimate your energy cost and pace accurately.

If you do most of your training indoors, your cardio fitness number may update rarely.

Why your VO2 max might be missing or stuck

Reason 1: you are not doing qualifying workouts

If your training is:

  • strength training
  • indoor treadmill
  • indoor cycling
  • mixed cardio classes

You might build great fitness and still get few VO2 max updates.

The fix is not to change your whole program.

The fix is to add a small number of outdoor qualifying sessions.

Reason 2: GPS quality is poor

Tall buildings, dense trees, or spotty signal can break the pace estimate.

If pace is wrong, the model cannot trust the input.

Tips:

  • start your workout outside and wait a few seconds before you go hard
  • use the same route for a few sessions to reduce noise
  • keep your phone with you if you see frequent GPS issues

Reason 3: heart rate data is noisy

If the optical sensor loses contact, your heart rate can drop out or spike.

That breaks the estimate.

Tips:

  • wear the watch snug, one finger above the wrist bone
  • warm up before hard efforts (cold skin reduces accuracy)
  • consider a chest strap for key sessions if you care about precision

Reason 4: your effort is too easy or too chaotic

A qualifying session needs a clear relationship between heart rate and pace.

If you stop a lot, do short sprints, or keep changing intensity, the signal becomes harder to interpret.

If your goal is a clean estimate, do a steady outdoor effort.

How to get more accurate VO2 max trends on Apple Watch

You do not need to obsess. You need consistency.

1) Do 1 to 2 qualifying outdoor sessions per week

Examples:

  • 30 to 60 minutes Outdoor Run at easy to moderate effort
  • 40 to 60 minutes Outdoor Walk with a steady brisk pace
  • a hike with sustained effort, not constant stopping

If you do this for 4 to 6 weeks, you usually get enough data points to see a trend.

2) Keep conditions similar

Heat, hills, and wind change heart rate at a given pace.

This is normal.

If you want the cleanest trend line:

  • compare similar routes
  • compare similar temperatures
  • avoid comparing a flat run to a hilly trail run

3) Track the right supporting metrics

VO2 max does not move fast.

To avoid impatience, also watch:

  • resting heart rate trend
  • easy pace at a given heart rate
  • heart rate recovery after hard sessions
  • sleep consistency

Often your training is working before VO2 max updates catch up.

How to train to improve VO2 max (without wrecking recovery)

Improving VO2 max is not magic. It is good programming.

Step 1: build the aerobic base

Most athletes need more easy volume.

Aim for:

  • 2 to 5 easy sessions per week
  • conversational intensity
  • long enough duration to create a stimulus (for many people, 30 to 60 minutes)

Step 2: add 1 quality interval session per week

If you only do one hard workout, do intervals.

Two popular patterns:

  • 4 x 4 minutes hard with 3 minutes easy
  • 5 to 8 x 2 minutes hard with 2 minutes easy

Hard means uncomfortable but controlled.

You should be able to repeat the last rep with similar form.

Step 3: do not stack intensity when your recovery is trending down

The fastest way to stall is:

  • poor sleep
  • high work stress
  • too many medium-hard days

If your resting heart rate is trending up and HRV is trending down, reduce intensity for a few days.

Fitness grows when you absorb training.

What to do if Apple Watch says your VO2 max is low

First, do not panic.

A low estimate can happen because:

  • your qualifying workouts are rare
  • your watch fit is inconsistent
  • you run in heat or hills
  • you are returning from illness

The correct response is not to chase the number.

The correct response is to build a plan you can repeat for 8 to 12 weeks.

Two good videos for context (non-Century)

Disclaimer

This article is for education, not medical advice. If you have chest pain, fainting, or a known heart condition, talk to a qualified clinician before changing training.

Where Century fits

VO2 max is useful, but it is only one piece.

What you actually need is a decision system that considers:

  • training load
  • sleep
  • resting heart rate
  • HRV
  • recent intensity

Century helps you turn Apple Health data into a simple daily plan.

If you want to improve cardio fitness while staying healthy, Century is designed to keep your training honest and your recovery protected.

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Century is building a calm daily health score + plan - using the watch you already wear.