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Metrics

Understanding TSS, CTL, and ATL — A Runner's Guide

As an endurance athlete you can factor in your training readiness. This article details how TSS, CTL, ATL, and TSB are factored, why the metrics work, and how to use them for peak performance.

03/30/2026 · 5 min read

You've spent time with Sequorr's analytics dashboard, you've seen three numbers that sit at the center of your training picture: TSS, CTL, and ATL. These aren't arbitrary — they're the foundation of how structured training actually works, and understanding them puts you in control of your fitness trajectory instead of guessing.

This guide breaks down what each metric means, how Sequorr algorithm works, and most importantly how you can use them to build into readinesss, manage fatigue, and peak at race day.


What Is Training Stress Score (TSS)?

TSS is a single number that captures how hard a workout was relative to what you're capable of. It accounts for both the duration and the intensity of your session — a short, explosive tempo run and a long easy effort can produce similar TSS values for very different reasons.

Think of it as a cost model. Every session you do has a dependant cost variable. The question is whether you're spending wisely relative to what you're trying to build.

TSS Formula
TSS = (Duration x Intensity Factor2 x 100) / Threshold Reference
Where Intensity Factor is the ratio of your session's normalized output to your threshold output (Functional Threshold Pace or Power). A workout done entirely at threshold produces ~100 TSS per hour.

Some practical anchors to help you calibrate:

Why this matters
TSS strips away the noise. You stop thinking "was that run hard enough?" and start asking "did today's cost fit my plan?" It lets you compare sessions that feel completely different — like an interval workout versus a long run — on the same scale.

CTL: Chronic Training Load (Your Fitness)

CTL is an exponentially-weighted rolling average of your daily TSS over roughly the last 42 days. It represents your accumulated training — what your body has absorbed and adapted to over weeks of consistent work.

CTL Calculation
CTLtoday = CTLyesterday + (TSStoday - CTLyesterday) / 42
This is an exponential moving average with a 42-day time constant. More recent training carries more weight, but fitness takes time to build — which is exactly what this calculation models.

The key property of CTL is that it rises slowly and falls slowly. You can't cram in a training session the same way you can squeeze in a coffee break. It takes consistent loading over weeks to move the needle. But the flip side is reassuring: a few missed days don't erase what you've built.

Reading your CTL trend


ATL: Acute Training Load (Your Fatigue)

ATL works identically to CTL but with a 7-day time constant. It represents your short-term training load — essentially, how fatigued you are from recent sessions.

ATL Calculation
ATLtoday = ATLyesterday + (TSStoday - ATLyesterday) / 7
ATL reacts quickly. A big training day spikes it; a rest day brings it down fast.

ATL is your early warning system. When it's significantly higher than your CTL, your body is accumulating stress faster than it can absorb. That's fine for a few days however, sustained for too long- it's a recipe for overtraining, illness, or injury.


TSB: Training Stress Balance (Your Form)

This is where it all comes together. TSB is simply the difference between your fitness and your fatigue:

TSB (Form)
TSB = CTL - ATL
Positive TSB = you're rested relative to your fitness. Negative TSB = you're carrying fatigue. The sweet spot for race day is typically +10 to +25.

The training cycle, visualized

Here's how a smart training block flows through these numbers:

  1. Build phase — Heavy training. TSB drops negative (-10 to -30). You feel the legs churning. This is the heavy work.
  2. Recovery week — Reduced volume. ATL drops, TSB moves toward zero. You're pacing alongside the work.
  3. Repeat — Each cycle, your CTL is a little higher. You're progressing relative to your input.
  4. Taper — 10-14 days before the race, you reduce load sharply. ATL plummets. CTL dips only slightly (42-day window, remember). TSB rises into positive territory.
Race day target
Most athletes perform their best when TSB is between +10 and +25. Too low and you're still carrying fatigue. Too high and you've rested too long — your CTL has eroded. The taper is about threading this needle.

How Sequorr Calculates This For You

Sequorr's training engine runs these calculations automatically using your synced activity data. Breakdown of how the calculations work:

We don't charge for this. These analytics are core to Sequorr and will always be free.


Practical Guidelines for Endurance Athletes

Weekly TSS targets by phase

These are rough ranges for a runner training 5-6 days per week. Your numbers will depend on your threshold and total volume, but the ratios matter more than the absolutes:

The 5-7% rule

A commonly cited guideline is to increase CTL by no more than 5-7 points per week. Ramp faster and you risk injury; ramp slower and you might not be progressing fast enough for your goal pace. Sequorr's dashboard makes this easy to monitor — just watch your CTL trend line.

Recovery weeks

Every 3-4 weeks, drop your training load by 30-40%. This lets ATL fall, TSB recover, and your body actually absorb the training you've done. Skipping recovery weeks is the most common mistake self-coached athletes make.

Sequorr tip
Open your Sequorr dashboard and look at your CTL trend over the last 8 weeks. Is it rising steadily? Flat? Falling? That single line tells you more about where your training is going than any individual workout ever could.

The Bottom Line

TSS, CTL, ATL, and TSB aren't psuedo science — they're scientifically researched and mathematically backed. But they give you something powerful: a shared language for understanding training cycles that remove guesswork and replaces it with intentional signals.

You don't need a coach to use these numbers. You need consistency, patience, and a willingness to trust the process. Sequorr puts the data in your hands. What you build with it is up to you.

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