Swimming Training Zones: Stop Guessing, Start Programming

Most coaches work three zones without knowing it. Understanding all five changes the way you plan an entire week.

Most coaches work three zones without knowing it. Understanding all five changes the way you plan an entire week.
Many swimmers train at the same intensity from session to session without knowing it. Not for lack of motivation, but for lack of a reference point. Every session is done "at a comfortable hard pace." The body adapts within a few weeks, and progress stops. Not because of the swimmer. Because of the program.
Training zones are that reference point. They are intensity ranges grounded in the physiology of effort, allowing each block to be programmed with a clear intention.
The human body does not produce energy the same way depending on the intensity of the effort. At low intensity, it burns mainly fat via the aerobic pathway. As intensity rises, it shifts to glycogen, then to anaerobic mechanisms that produce lactic acid. Beyond a certain threshold, the effort can only last a handful of seconds.
Each training zone corresponds to an intensity range that engages specific physiological mechanisms. Programming without zones means leaving it to chance to decide what you develop in each session.
The five-zone model is the most widely used in swimming and other endurance sports. A typical distribution for a balanced training plan over one week:
This distribution illustrates a fundamental reality: the foundation of training must be aerobic. The high zones (Z4-Z5) are powerful but costly. Used without a solid base, they exhaust without building.
HR < 70% of max — conversational effort
The effort is so light that you could hold a full conversation. This zone is primarily used to recover between two intense sessions or between sets within the same session. It promotes the clearance of metabolic waste accumulated during effort, and it is often the first zone sacrificed when time is short, to the detriment of long-term recovery.
HR 70-80% of max — sustained effort without accumulation
Between 70 and 80% of maximum heart rate. This is where the engine is built. Z2 develops the heart's pumping capacity, improves the use of fat as fuel, and densifies muscular capillaries. A swimmer who spends a lot of time in Z2 becomes more enduring. Concretely: their threshold paces drop, they recover between sets, and they can complete three sessions in a week without depleting their reserves. The field rule: if your swimmer cannot hold a conversation in Z2, they are already too high. It is the most underestimated zone, and often the most sacrificed in favor of sessions that "hurt" but do not build.
HR 80-90% of max — lactate production and elimination in balance
Between 80 and 90% of maximum. At this intensity, the body produces lactate but is still able to eliminate it as fast as it generates it. That is the threshold. Exceed it by a few percentage points, and debt begins: lactate accumulates, arms grow heavy, and the swimmer loses pace despite themselves. Working in Z3 pushes this threshold to higher speeds: your swimmers will be able to swim faster without "burning" in acid. Long controlled-pace sets (such as 8×200m or 4×400m) are classics of this zone.
HR 90-95% of max — high intensity, long recoveries
Between 90 and 95% of maximum. The effort is intense, repetitions are short, recoveries long. This zone develops maximal oxygen consumption — the body's capacity to use available oxygen to produce energy. Sets like 10×100m with a departure every 2 minutes fall into this category. Z4 sessions are demanding. The reason to limit them to two per week: full recovery after a Z4 session takes 48 to 72 hours. Beyond two sessions, you accumulate residual fatigue that prevents adaptation. It is not intensity that is lacking. It is the recovery window that closes.
HR > 95% of max — maximal effort, 10 to 30 seconds
Above 95% of maximum. Efforts last 10 to 30 seconds. The goal is no longer cardiovascular: it is raw power, neuromuscular coordination, maximum swim speed. Starts, explosive turns, and maximal streamlines are trained in Z5. This zone is not programmed often, but it is irreplaceable for swimmers looking to improve their times over 50m or sharpen their turn exits.
In running or cycling, heart rate is the reference. In swimming, it is more complicated. Cold water, the horizontal position, and partial breath-holding between breaths mean heart rate responds differently. It rises more slowly and reaches lower peaks than in running.
That is why many swimming coaches prefer to work by pace rather than heart rate. You know your swimmer's best time over 100m in the stroke being trained — call it T100. To calibrate zones by pace: Z3 is swum between 1.10×T100 and 1.05×T100 (a swimmer at 1'10 per 100m swims Z3 between 1'17 and 1'14). Z4 between 1.05×T100 and T100. Z5: T100 or below, on efforts shorter than 30 seconds.
A typical 90-minute session could be structured as follows:
This framework is simple. Its value is that it forces the coach to choose one intention per session. You cannot work on everything at once. A threshold session cannot also be a maximum speed session. Choosing a zone means choosing an objective.
Distribution varies by season period. In October, when the season restarts: 80% of volume in Z1-Z2, Z4-Z5 sessions are rare. In January, before championships: more Z3, two Z4 sessions per week. The simple rule: the closer to competition, the lower the overall volume and the higher the intensity.
Here is a sample week for an intermediate training group (4 sessions per week):
Notice the progression through the week: the heavy sessions (Z4) are placed mid-week, after a base session. The Saturday technical session serves as both active recovery and quality work.
Training zones are not an additional constraint. They are a tool for clarity. When you assign a zone to each block of your session, you know exactly what you are asking of your swimmers. They know exactly at what intensity to engage. No more guesswork or sessions left to chance.
Most coaches know that zones exist. Few actually structure their weeks around them. The reason: it requires giving up the "complete" session that touches everything. One intention per session also means accepting that the next day will be low intensity. That is where it breaks down. Start with the 70% rule: if your swimmers spend less than 70% of weekly volume in Z1-Z2, you do not have a zone-based program — you have zones on paper.
The most widely used model in swimming has 5 zones (Z1 to Z5). There are also 3-zone and 7-zone models. The 5-zone model offers the best balance between physiological precision and everyday practicality for a club coach.
Use perceived effort from 1 to 10 after exiting the pool: Z1-Z2 between 3 and 5 out of 10, Z3 between 6 and 7, Z4 between 8 and 9, Z5 maximal non-repeatable effort. Swim pace relative to your best time over the distance being trained is a reliable complementary reference.
Heart rate ranges are similar, but in swimming HR rises more slowly and reaches lower peaks. The horizontal position, water temperature, and partial breath-holding between breaths reduce the cardiac response. That is why swim pace and perceived effort are preferred in practice for calibrating zones.
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