Beginner Cycling Training Plan (2026): Your First 8 Weeks
If you are new to structured cycling, you do not need a complicated plan — you need consistency and gradual progression. Here is a simple beginner framework for your first 8 weeks.
How many days a week?
Start with 3 rides per week. Three consistent rides beat five you cannot sustain. Two easy rides and one slightly longer ride is plenty to start building fitness.
How hard should you ride?
Most of your riding should be easy — you can hold a conversation. Beginners improve fastest by building an aerobic base, not by suffering every ride. Add one short harder effort only once you are comfortable riding regularly.
A simple 8-week structure
- Weeks 1–3: 3 easy rides, add a few minutes each week to the long one.
- Week 4: recovery week — ride less, let your body adapt.
- Weeks 5–7: keep 3 rides, make the long ride longer, add short tempo bursts on one ride.
- Week 8: easy week and a longer "goal" ride to see your progress.
Beginner mistakes to avoid
- Riding every ride at medium-hard — you never recover and never build base.
- Jumping distance too fast — increase gradually to avoid injury.
- Skipping recovery weeks — adaptation happens during rest, not just riding.
Track it so you know it is working
Even as a beginner, measuring your training load shows whether you are progressing safely. TrainCurve scores your rides and tracks your fitness and fatigue automatically, so you build up without overdoing it. Start free. And when you are ready for structure, see our full cycling training plan guide.
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