Zone 2 — The Mitochondrial Foundation
Why low intensity beats hard intervals for density
Counterintuitive but well-established: Zone 2 (60–70% max HR, conversational pace) builds MORE mitochondrial density than HIIT, even though HIIT improves mitochondrial QUALITY faster. Both have value. Most longevity-focused practitioners now stack both — 80% Zone 2, 20% high-intensity.
PGC-1α — the master regulator
Zone 2 work activates PGC-1α (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-alpha), the master regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis. PGC-1α expression literally tells cells to manufacture more mitochondria. Sustained Zone 2 training over 8–12 weeks measurably increases PGC-1α and mitochondrial density.
The Attia + San-Millán protocol
Iñigo San-Millán (with Peter Attia) popularised the 3–4 hours/week Zone 2 dose for longevity. Heart rate cap typically 60–70% of max, or until you can't comfortably hold a conversation. Performed on indoor bike, treadmill, or rowing erg — modality matters less than the duration and intensity discipline.
True or False
HIIT builds more mitochondrial density than Zone 2.
This step is interactive — open the Thier app to try it.
How to find your actual Zone 2
Three practical heuristics for finding Zone 2 without a lab lactate test: (1) the talk test — you can speak full sentences, but singing makes you breathless; (2) nasal-breathing-only — if you can hold the pace breathing only through your nose, you're in Zone 2; (3) heart-rate ceiling at 180 minus your age (Maffetone formula), adjusted ±5 bpm based on training history. Lactate finger-prick meters ($150-ish) give the gold-standard 1.5–2.0 mmol/L Zone 2 ceiling if you want precision.
Key Takeaway
Zone 2 is the most under-rated longevity lever per unit time. 3–4 hours per week of conversational-pace work activates PGC-1α and builds the mitochondrial density that protects every organ. Use the talk test or 180-minus-age to find your zone without a lab. Skip the temptation to go harder — the Zone 2 stimulus is specific, not just 'more cardio.'