Why We Run on Sand: A Coach's Take on Soft-Surface Training
6 min read
Beach running gets a romantic reputation — sunrise, soft sand, low impact — but the physiological reality is more interesting. Soft-surface running raises ground-contact time and increases muscular load on the posterior chain by an estimated 15–20%. That's not necessarily easier; it's *different*.
What Sand Actually Does
- Reduces peak vertical impact by roughly 20% — protective for joints, especially during high-volume blocks
- Increases time-under-tension for calves, hamstrings, and glutes — strength and resilience benefit
- Slows pace by 30–60 seconds per kilometer at the same heart rate — useful for true Zone 2 runs that road-runners often turn into Zone 3
- Improves proprioception — uneven surface forces foot, ankle, and hip stabilizers to work harder
What Sand Doesn't Do
- It does not make you faster on the road by itself. Specificity still rules — race goals require some race-surface work.
- It is not automatically lower-injury — Achilles tendons in particular can complain when load increases too quickly.
How We Use It
Our Sunday session is structured as wet-sand running near the tide line, where the surface is firm enough for normal cadence but soft enough for the protective benefits. We avoid the deep dry sand for steady-state work — it's a strength tool, not an aerobic one.
Practical Rules
- Warm up on firm surface for at least 10 minutes before sand.
- Cap sand miles at 30% of weekly volume during marathon builds.
- Listen to your Achilles — soreness is normal, sharp pulling is not.
The view at sunrise is the bonus, not the point. The training stimulus is real and measurable.
Contacts
About Idigov Runners
IDIGOV Runners is a Dubai-based running community founded in 2023. We meet every Sunday at 7am on the beach for kilometers, conversation, and connections that extend far beyond the sand. All paces welcome, no application required.
