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By Road Cycling Training Team

Heat Training on the Trainer: Free Speed You're Probably Ignoring This Spring


Last July I lined up for a gran fondo in 95°F heat and watched half the field blow up before mile 40. My power was steady. My heart rate was controlled. I finished 20 minutes faster than expected.

The difference wasn’t fitness—I’d barely gained 5 watts since April. The difference was six weeks of deliberate heat training on my indoor trainer with the fan turned off. Sounds miserable. It was. But those sessions bought me more free speed than any interval block I’ve done.

Quick Answer

Start heat acclimation 5-6 weeks before your summer target event. Ride your indoor trainer without a fan for 45-60 minutes at easy endurance pace, 3-5 times per week. Research shows adapted riders gain 5-8% in threshold power and improved performance in both hot and cool conditions. It’s the closest thing to an altitude camp you can do in your garage.

Why Heat Training Works (And Why It’s Not Just About Surviving Heat)

Here’s what surprised me when I started reading the research: heat acclimation doesn’t just help you ride in the heat. It makes you faster in cool conditions too.

A 2010 study from the University of Oregon by Santiago Lorenzo and colleagues found that cyclists who completed a 10-day heat acclimation protocol improved their power at lactate threshold by 5% and their VO2max by 5%, even in cool conditions. The heat-adapted group outperformed a control group that trained at the same intensity without heat stress.

The adaptations are real and measurable:

  • Expanded plasma volume. Your blood literally increases in volume, improving oxygen delivery and cardiac efficiency. This takes about 5-7 days to begin.
  • Earlier and more profuse sweating. You start cooling yourself sooner. Core temperature stays lower at the same effort.
  • Lower resting core temperature. You begin exercise with more thermal headroom before hitting the danger zone.
  • Reduced heart rate at a given power output. Cardiac drift decreases. You hold steady power longer.
  • Improved lactate clearance. Your muscles process metabolic waste more efficiently under stress.

These aren’t small effects. A meta-analysis published in Sports Medicine confirmed that heat acclimation consistently improves endurance performance by 4-8% across multiple studies. That’s comparable to what riders chase at altitude camps costing thousands of dollars.

You can get most of this in your spare room with a trainer and a closed window.

Who Should Do This (And Who Shouldn’t)

This protocol makes sense if you:

  • Have a summer target event—gran fondo, road race, gravel race, century—especially in a warm climate
  • Already have a solid base training foundation with consistent riding
  • Own an indoor trainer (smart or dumb, doesn’t matter)
  • Can handle some discomfort without panicking

Skip this if you:

  • Are already overtrained or chronically fatigued
  • Have any history of heat illness, cardiac issues, or blood pressure problems
  • Haven’t been training consistently for at least 8-10 weeks
  • Are in the middle of a high-intensity race prep block. Heat sessions add stress, and you don’t want to pile that on top of VO2max intervals

If you’ve been following a spring race prep plan, wait until that build phase finishes before layering in heat work. Timing matters.

The Protocol: What Actually Works

There are two approaches. I’ve tried both.

Option 1: Dedicated Heat Sessions (My Recommendation)

This is the simpler method. You replace some of your easy endurance rides with heat rides on the trainer.

Setup:

  • Indoor trainer, any type
  • Fan OFF. This is the whole point. No airflow.
  • Room as warm as you can make it. Close windows, shut vents. If you have a space heater, even better, aim for 85-95°F ambient temperature.
  • Extra towels. You’ll need them. I’m not exaggerating.
  • Two large bottles of electrolyte drink. Minimum.

The Ride:

  • Intensity: Zone 2, easy endurance. RPE 3-4/10. This is not a hard workout. Keep power at 55-65% of FTP.
  • Duration: Start at 30 minutes, build to 60 minutes over the first week.
  • Frequency: 3-5 sessions per week for 5-6 weeks.

That’s it. Easy spinning in a hot room. The stress comes from the heat, not the power output.

Option 2: Add Heat to Existing Workouts

Some riders turn off the fan for the first 30-45 minutes of their regular indoor sessions, then turn it on for any intervals.

This works but is harder to dose correctly. You’re adding heat stress on top of training stress, and the total load can creep up fast. If you go this route, cut your interval power targets by 5-10% during heat sessions and monitor your heart rate closely.

Weekly Structure Example (Option 1)

DaySessionFanDuration
MondayRest or prehab routine——
TuesdayHeat ride, Zone 2OFF45-60 min
WednesdayNormal intervals (outdoor or indoor)ON60-75 min
ThursdayHeat ride, Zone 2OFF45-60 min
FridayRest——
SaturdayLong outdoor rideN/A2-3 hours
SundayHeat ride, Zone 2OFF45-60 min

Total weekly hours: roughly 7-9, which fits within a time-crunched schedule. The heat rides replace easy rides you’d be doing anyway, so they don’t add volume.

Week-by-Week Progression

Weeks 1-2: Introduction

  • Start with 30-minute heat sessions
  • Build to 45 minutes by end of week 2
  • 3 sessions per week
  • Monitor how you feel. Some riders adapt fast, others struggle early. Both are normal.
  • Watch for headaches, nausea, or dizziness. If any appear, stop the session, cool down, and rehydrate. You went too hard or too long.

Weeks 3-4: Building

  • Sessions at 45-60 minutes
  • Increase to 4 sessions per week if tolerating well
  • You’ll notice you’re sweating sooner and more. Good. That’s adaptation happening.
  • Heart rate at the same power should start dropping by 5-10 bpm compared to week 1.

Weeks 5-6: Maintenance

  • Keep sessions at 50-60 minutes
  • 4-5 sessions per week
  • You should feel noticeably more comfortable. The same room temperature that was brutal in week 1 now feels manageable.
  • Begin tapering heat sessions 7-10 days before your target event.

Hydration and Nutrition: The Part Most Riders Mess Up

Heat training without proper hydration is a recipe for illness. Period. The sweat rates during indoor heat sessions are significantly higher than outdoor riding because there’s no evaporative cooling from airflow.

I’ve measured my sweat rate during these sessions at 1.2-1.5 liters per hour. That’s double a normal trainer ride. If you’re not replacing most of that fluid, you’ll feel terrible and the adaptation stalls.

During heat rides:

  • Drink 500-750ml per hour of electrolyte solution, more if you can tolerate it
  • Sodium is the priority. Target 500-700mg sodium per liter of fluid. Regular sports drinks often aren’t enough. Add electrolyte tabs or a pinch of salt.
  • Weigh yourself before and after the first few sessions. If you’re losing more than 2% body weight, drink more.

For a deeper look at indoor fueling strategies, I covered this in detail in our indoor training nutrition guide. The short version: eat something salty before, drink aggressively during, and don’t skip the post-ride recovery shake.

Post-ride:

  • Rehydrate with 150% of fluid lost (if you lost 1kg, drink 1.5L over the next 2 hours)
  • Include sodium and potassium in recovery drinks
  • A cold shower or ice bath after helps bring core temperature down faster, but isn’t required

Common Mistakes

Going too hard. This is the biggest one. Heat sessions should feel easy from a power standpoint. The heat provides the training stimulus. If you’re also pushing threshold power in a hot room, you’re asking for trouble. Keep it Zone 2.

Not enough fluid. Already covered, but it bears repeating. I bonked hard in my second heat session because I brought one bottle instead of two. Lesson learned at the cost of a ruined afternoon.

Starting too close to the event. You need 5-6 weeks minimum. Two weeks of heat riding before a July race won’t give you meaningful adaptations. Plan backward from your target date and start in early to mid-spring.

Skipping sessions. Consistency matters more than duration. Five 40-minute sessions beat two 90-minute sessions. The plasma volume expansion responds to repeated heat exposure, not single long bouts.

Ignoring warning signs. Dizziness, confusion, extreme nausea, or stopping sweating are signs of heat illness. End the session immediately, move to a cool space, and drink cold fluids. This should not happen if you’re riding at Zone 2 and staying hydrated, but pay attention.

How to Know It’s Working

Track these markers across the 6 weeks:

  • Heart rate at fixed power drops. If Zone 2 at 150 watts used to sit at 145bpm and now sits at 135bpm in the same heat, you’re adapting.
  • Sweat onset is earlier. You’ll start sweating within the first few minutes instead of 10-15 minutes in.
  • Perceived effort drops. Same room, same power, and it just feels easier. This is the most obvious sign.
  • Core temperature (if you track it). Devices like the CORE sensor show resting core temp dropping and peak temp stabilizing lower during efforts.

If you’re using a training platform like TrainerRoad or Wahoo SYSTM for your structured workouts, keep your heat sessions separate as unstructured free rides. Don’t let the AI training plans try to account for the extra stress. They won’t model it correctly.

The Payoff: What to Expect

Based on published research and my own experience, here’s what a full 5-6 week heat acclimation block delivers:

  • 3-5% improvement in power at threshold in temperate conditions
  • 5-8% improvement in performance in hot conditions (this is where the real gain lives)
  • Lower heart rate at every intensity level
  • Better thermoregulation that lasts 2-3 weeks after you stop the protocol
  • Psychological confidence riding in heat, because you’ve already done dozens of hours in worse conditions than race day

That 3-5% threshold bump in cool conditions is roughly 8-15 watts for a rider with a 280 FTP. That’s real. And you got it from easy spinning in a hot room, not from grinding through more VO2max intervals.

Timing It for Your Summer Calendar

Work backward from your target event:

  • Event date minus 7-10 days: Stop heat sessions, taper normally
  • Event date minus 6-7 weeks: Begin heat acclimation protocol
  • Right now (March-April): Finish your spring base and race prep work, then transition into heat training

If your first summer target is late June or early July, starting heat training in mid-May gives you the full adaptation window. That means March and April are for building fitness. The heat block adds the finishing layer on top.

The Bottom Line

Heat acclimation is the most underused legal performance enhancer available to amateur cyclists. The research is strong, the protocol is simple, and the equipment cost is zero (you already own a trainer and you already have a room).

The catch? It’s uncomfortable. Riding in a hot room without a fan is genuinely unpleasant for the first two weeks. But if you’ve done structured intervals, you already know how to tolerate discomfort for a purpose.

Start planning your heat block now. When July arrives and everyone else is melting at the feed zone, you’ll be the one still holding power.


Based on personal experience with two summers of heat acclimation protocols and published exercise physiology research. Individual responses vary. If you have any medical conditions, consult your doctor before starting heat training.