VO₂ Max plateaus aren’t always about effort—they often signal mismatched training, poor recovery, circadian disruption, or skipping foundational Zone 2 work. Track Redline Ratio to see if you’re efficiently using your aerobic ceiling. Stabilize signals, recover well, and rebuild from the base to resume progress.
What Is VO₂ Max, Really?
What is VO₂ Max?
VO₂ Max is the maximum amount of oxygen your body can use in one minute per kilogram of body weight (ml/kg/min). It measures how well your lungs, heart, blood, and cells work together to deliver and use oxygen for energy. A higher VO₂ Max means better cardiovascular fitness, more endurance, faster recovery, and lower risk of disease and early death.
The History of VO₂ Max
What is the history of VO₂ Max?
VO₂ Max was first described in the 1920s by physiologist A.V. Hill, who discovered a limit to the body’s oxygen use during intense exercise. Initially used to study elite athletes, it later became a key clinical metric linking cardiorespiratory fitness to longevity and disease risk.
How VO₂ Max Compares to Other Fitness Metrics
VO₂ Max is the most powerful fitness metric for predicting longevity—outperforming steps, heart rate, and calorie burn. While wearables offer estimates, only lab-tested VO₂ Max reveals your true cardiovascular and metabolic capacity. Here’s how it compares to other health measures and when to combine them.
Why VO₂ Max Declines with Age (and What You Can Do About It)
VO₂ Max naturally declines about 10% per decade after age 30—but most of that drop isn’t genetic. Sedentary habits, not time, drive the loss. With targeted training, strength work, and sunlight-driven circadian alignment, you can slow—or even reverse—VO₂ Max decline and preserve lifelong aerobic capacity.






