Speed-tracking apps do more than just show you a number; they tell the story of your workout. By combining speed with metrics like elevation and heart rate, you can stop chasing stats and start training smarter.
You want to know how fast you’re going.
It’s a simple question. But the answer tells a story. It’s the difference between a casual jog and a personal best, the proof that your training is paying off. An app that tracks your speed isn't for collecting numbers—it's for understanding your own work.
Most speed-tracking apps use your phone's GPS. They measure your change in position over time to calculate how fast you're moving. It's simple, and it works for almost anything outdoors: running, cycling, hiking, driving.
For indoor stuff like treadmill running, apps use your phone's accelerometer to guess your movement. It's not as accurate, but it's better than nothing.
The big names like Strava, Nike Run Club, and MapMyRide do more than just show you a number. They give it context. You get audio feedback on your pace per mile or see your route on a map, color-coded by speed. You can even see how you stack up against everyone else who's tackled that one killer hill.
That’s where it gets sticky. It turns a workout into a game.
Raw speed is a good metric, but it’s a blunt instrument. The best apps help you see the why behind the number by adding other data.
Think about it: a seven-minute mile on a flat, cool morning is completely different from a seven-minute mile up a steep hill in the middle of July.
This is where you start looking at things like:
When you see these metrics together, you stop chasing a speed and start training smarter.
Tracking one run is interesting. Tracking a month of runs is where you start to see real change. But staying consistent is the hard part.
I remember one Tuesday, driving my beat-up 2011 Honda Civic to the trailhead, feeling completely gassed. It was 4:17 PM. The thought of running up that first hill felt impossible. Motivation is cheap; it comes and goes. Discipline is what gets you out the door.
That’s where a different kind of app can help. While a running app tracks the activity, a habit tracker helps with consistency. Instead of just tracking a run, you're building the habit of running. An app like Trider can give you that nudge with reminders and streaks on the days you just don't feel like it. It’s about making the process part of your routine.
Sometimes you don't need all the bells and whistles. You just want a big, dumb number. If you're in a car or on a boat and just want your ground speed without the social network, there are dozens of simple GPS Speedometer apps.
They do one thing: tell you how fast you’re moving. They usually have big displays that are easy to read at a glance, perfect for a dashboard.
No frills. Just data.
Struggling to build a morning routine with an ADHD brain? Ditch the abstract to-do list and try visual habit stacking—linking a new, tiny habit to an existing one with a physical cue—to build a routine that sticks without draining your willpower.
ADHD paralysis shuts down your brain when you're overwhelmed by a massive to-do list. A gamified habit tracker breaks this freeze by turning chores into small, rewarding quests that provide the dopamine hit your brain needs to get started.
For a brain with ADHD, "just reading" is a myth. Stop fighting your focus and use these simple strategies to work *with* your brain to build a habit that actually sticks.
For the ADHD brain, the fear of rejection can be a paralyzing gut-punch that makes friendship feel impossible. Learn how to fight back and build connections with tiny, strategic wins that prove your brain's worst fears wrong.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play Store