A conversational coach that syncs your Strava, remembers every chat, and adapts to how you actually feel.
Best for: Runners who want a real coaching relationship — dialogue, memory, and daily adaptation — not just a static plan to follow.
Strengths
- Conversational coaching with persistent memory of your history, constraints and injuries.
- Feel-based readiness: adapts to subjective fatigue and body signals, not just wearable scores.
- Recommendations grounded in a cited sports-science knowledge base; works in your AI assistant via MCP.
Trade-offs
- Web app and Telegram today — native iOS/Android apps are on the roadmap.
- Requires a Strava connection to read your training data.
- No real-time audio cues on your watch mid-run (it coaches between runs).
Pricing: 9.99/mo (or 6.66/mo billed yearly) — same price in USD, EUR, GBP or CHF. 7-day free trial.
The most polished structured-plan app, now owned by Strava, with real-time audio guidance on your watch.
Best for: Runners who want a beautiful app with watch-based audio cues and don't mind a subscription-only model.
Strengths
- Best-in-class UX and real-time audio pacing pushed to most watch brands.
- Plans adapt to feedback; strength and mobility sessions included.
Trade-offs
- Subscription-only (~$19.99/mo), no meaningful free tier.
- Plan-compliance focus rather than open-ended conversational coaching; no persistent dialogue memory.
Pricing: ~$19.99/mo or ~$119.99/yr. Verify current pricing.
The longest-running ML-driven coach, with a mature engine that rebuilds your plan daily.
Best for: Runners who want deep algorithmic personalization and don't mind a dated interface.
Strengths
- Mature, well-tested adaptive algorithm; handles missed/modified workouts well.
- Free basic tier available.
Trade-offs
- Interface feels dated; plan explanations can be opaque.
- Not conversational — it generates plans, it doesn't talk with you.
Pricing: Free tier; premium from ~$9.99/mo. Verify current pricing.
A beginner-friendly run-coaching app pairing adaptive plans with answers from real human coaches.
Best for: Beginners who want gently-paced plans plus the reassurance of asking a real coach a question.
Strengths
- Very beginner-friendly pacing; reviewers rate it above Runna for new runners.
- Ask real human coaches in-app (typically answered within an hour); strength sessions included.
Trade-offs
- No in-run audio cues; app-only, no AI-assistant or multi-channel access.
- Lighter on data-driven adaptation depth and persistent conversational memory.
Pricing: ~$14.99/mo or ~$79/yr, with a free trial. Verify current pricing.
Sports-science-driven adaptive plans for endurance athletes across multiple sports.
Best for: Multisport and triathlon athletes who want science-led adaptation across disciplines.
Strengths
- Strong physiological model; adapts around missed workouts, travel and poor sleep.
- Multi-sport (run, bike, swim, tri).
Trade-offs
- Geared to data-driven endurance athletes; steeper learning curve for casual runners.
- Less of a conversational, human-feeling coach.
Pricing: Subscription with free trial. Verify current pricing.
A hardware-agnostic AI coach with a genuinely free tier and Strava-based post-run analysis.
Best for: Budget-conscious runners who want free adaptive plans and post-run insights without buying a specific watch.
Strengths
- Free tier that doesn't expire; syncs with Strava; AI post-run analysis.
- Adaptive plans 5K to marathon.
Trade-offs
- Lighter on conversational depth and long-term memory.
- Smaller knowledge/science layer than dedicated science-first tools.
Pricing: Free tier; paid upgrade available.
Free, watch-native adaptive plans driven by your Garmin's physiological data.
Best for: Garmin owners who want free, automated plan adjustments based on watch metrics.
Strengths
- Free; deep physiological data (VO2max, Body Battery, HRV, Training Readiness).
- On-watch guidance during runs.
Trade-offs
- Requires a Garmin watch; no full marathon plans (5K–half only).
- Algorithmic, not conversational; no memory or context.
Pricing: Free with a Garmin watch.
Free, watch-native training intelligence for COROS owners — strong on monitoring, lighter on prescribing.
Best for: COROS watch owners who want free workout suggestions, recovery monitoring and race predictions.
Strengths
- Free with a COROS watch; strong recovery and race-prediction analytics.
- New MCP integration lets AI assistants read your COROS training data.
Trade-offs
- Requires a COROS watch; better at monitoring than building a full adaptive plan.
- Not conversational; no coaching memory or context.
Pricing: Free with a COROS watch.
An AI coach built with Eliud Kipchoge's team, with a four-persona coaching panel.
Best for: Runners drawn to elite branding who want weekly-refreshed plans and a polished mobile app.
Strengths
- Fresh weekly plans; strong brand and clean UX.
- Post-run feedback on stats and sensations.
Trade-offs
- Reviews note limited endurance progression and rigid pause/recovery handling.
- Younger product; less depth on shoes, races, science.
Pricing: 7-day trial, then monthly/yearly premium.
A general AI that writes a plausible plan in seconds — but can't see your data or track progress.
Best for: Runners who just want a quick one-off plan and aren't looking for ongoing coaching.
Strengths
- Free/cheap, instant, flexible to any question.
- Can connect to Coach Leo via MCP to gain real coaching tools and data.
Trade-offs
- No access to your Strava data; no progress tracking; weak cross-session memory.
- Generates plans, doesn't manage your training over time.
Pricing: Free tier; Plus ~$20/mo (general AI, not running-specific).