Is Runna better for beginners?
Runna is purpose-built for runners and advertises plans for all abilities, native iOS and Android apps, and audio cues. CoachUpFit also supports beginners, but its current experience is web-first rather than native.
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CoachUpFit vs Runna
Runna is a polished running-focused app with personalized plans and strong mobile UX. Strava announced an agreement to acquire Runna on 17 April 2025; that first-party announcement said the apps would remain separate and the transaction was subject to closing conditions.
If you only run, Runna's UX is harder to beat. If you mix sports or want deeper data-driven adaptation, CoachUpFit fits better. The honest tradeoff is multi-sport adaptive depth vs single-sport polish.
TL;DR — who should pick what
CoachUpFit
You want one plan across running, trail, cycling or triathlon, with CoachUpFit's Garmin/Strava wellness and load inputs plus ACWR and cycle-aware decisions.
Runna
You want a polished native iOS or Android running app. Runna personalizes plans around your goal and schedule, adapts them to performance, and syncs workouts to supported devices.
| CoachUpFit vs Runna | CoachUpFit | Runna |
|---|---|---|
Price (monthly) | Free adaptive base; Race €20/month optional | $19.99/month or $119.99/year ($9.99/month when billed annually). |
Sport coverage | Running, trail, cycling, triathlon | Running-focused plans with supplemental strength and cross-training support; the cited materials do not list a triathlon plan. |
Plan generation | Engine generates from goal, level, hours, recent Garmin/Strava data, race calendar | Personalized running plan from ability, goal or race, and schedule; Runna says the plan adapts to performance. |
Weekly adaptation from your data | Yes — rebuild based on HRV, completion, race proximity, sickness flags | Yes — Runna says plans adapt to performance and provides tools to adjust them; its cited pages do not claim the same HRV or Garmin Training Status inputs. |
Mobile UX | Web-first, mobile responsive (PWA-capable). No native app yet. | Native iOS and Android apps, both linked from Runna's current pricing page. |
Visual workout cards | Functional session cards with details + 'why today' explanation | Clear workout instructions plus first-party-documented live audio cues during runs. |
Audio cues during runs | No (workouts displayed; you run with your watch) | Yes — audio guidance during intervals via the app |
Strava integration | Full sync + webhooks (independent from Strava) | Connects with Strava; the 17 April 2025 acquisition announcement said the apps would remain separate |
Garmin integration | Full Garmin Connect sync — activities, HRV, training status, sleep, wellness | Syncs planned workouts to supported devices including Garmin; the cited pages do not claim CoachUpFit's HRV or Training Status inputs. |
Race-week tapering | Automatic taper per distance + adaptive to recent load | Race-focused plans adapt to performance; the cited pages do not detail a load-aware taper workflow. |
Cycle-aware training (female athletes) | Yes — cycle phase used as engine input | The cited Runna pricing and feature pages do not advertise cycle phase as a plan input. |
ACWR injury-risk monitoring | Built-in, dashboard-visible, alerts when load ramp exceeds safe zone | The cited Runna pricing and feature pages do not advertise a user-facing ACWR metric. |
"Why today" explanation per session | Every session has the plain-English rationale | The cited pages advertise coaching and workout guidance, but not a data-linked 'why today' explanation. |
Multi-sport / triathlon plan | Yes — generates 3-sport triathlon plans with brick sessions | No triathlon plan is listed in the cited materials; strength and cross-training can supplement running plans. |
Onboarding speed | 60-second quiz → plan ready | Smooth onboarding; Runna says the personalized plan is ready within minutes |
You want a running-focused plan with strength and cross-training support rather than one product spanning several race sports.
You want a polished native iOS or Android experience with audio cues during workouts. CoachUpFit does not offer a native app yet.
You're a beginner runner who wants a structured plan with clear visual cues. Runna onboards beginners particularly smoothly.
You value Runna's existing Strava connection and prefer its running-focused mobile workflow. The official acquisition announcement said the apps would remain separate.
You prefer Runna's paid running workflow: $19.99 monthly or $119.99 yearly after its advertised seven-day trial.
You want a dedicated plan for cycling, trail or triathlon, not supplemental cross-training inside a running-focused product.
You want CoachUpFit's explicit Garmin/Strava wellness and load inputs; Runna's current pages describe performance adaptation without claiming those same inputs.
You're an experienced athlete who wants ACWR injury-risk surfacing, automatic race-week tapering, and "why today" explanations as first-class features.
You're a female athlete who wants cycle-aware training as an actual plan input, not just an optional log.
You want explicit Garmin Training Status, Body Battery, HRV interpretation in your training decisions.
On 17 April 2025, Strava announced a definitive agreement to acquire Runna. The announcement said the apps would remain separate for the foreseeable future and that the transaction was subject to customary closing conditions.
This page does not infer product features or subscription bundling from the announcement. Runna and Strava describe their current integrations in their own product materials.
Runna is purpose-built for runners and advertises plans for all abilities, native iOS and Android apps, and audio cues. CoachUpFit also supports beginners, but its current experience is web-first rather than native.
Yes. Connect Garmin or Strava on CoachUpFit, complete the 60-second onboarding, and the engine reads your recent history to seed your new plan. Your past Runna sessions are still in Strava/Garmin, so the load context is preserved.
The first-party pages reviewed here focus on running plans with optional strength and cross-training support; they do not list a triathlon training plan.
CoachUpFit uses Garmin Training Status, HRV Status, Body Battery and load inputs in its weekly engine. Runna documents workout sync to Garmin, while the cited Runna pages do not claim those same physiological inputs.
Runna annual is ~$10/month; CoachUpFit's base app is free. Its multi-sport, adaptive, and female-physiology features are in CoachUpFit's free base. Race at €20/month changes the comparison only when you want real sport events woven into your season plan.
Updated July 13, 2026
Connect Garmin or Strava, generate a real week from your data, and compare it to your current Runna plan. The adaptive base is free forever, with no card. Add Race for €20/month only when you want season-race planning.
Ramon Curto designed CoachUpFit's endurance-training methodology from exercise-physiology principles. CoachUpFit applies it autonomously to the information you enter and the data you choose to connect; it is not ongoing one-to-one coaching or medical care.
Read the methodologyLast revised July 2026