Treadmill hill runs are one of the most effective ways to build running strength, power, and cardiovascular fitness. By varying the incline from 2% to 10%+, you can simulate everything from rolling hills to steep mountain climbs — all in the controlled environment of your treadmill.
Calorie Burn by Incline (30 min at 6 mph)
Calories for a 155 lb runner
Treadmill Incline Guide
- 1-2% incline: Simulates flat outdoor running with natural road variation
- 3-4% incline: Gentle hill — good for extended hill training and aerobic endurance
- 5-6% incline: Moderate hill — builds leg strength and increases calorie burn significantly
- 7-8% incline: Steep hill — high intensity, typically sustained for shorter intervals
- 9-10%+ incline: Very steep — power hiking pace or short sprint intervals only
Treadmill Hill Workouts
Rolling Hills
Alternate between 2% and 6% incline every 2 minutes for 30 minutes at a steady speed. This simulates an undulating outdoor course and builds both climbing and recovery fitness.
Hill Repeats
Run 90 seconds at 6-8% incline at a moderate speed, then recover for 90 seconds at 0-1% incline. Repeat 8-12 times. This is the gold standard workout for building hill-running strength.
Progressive Climb
Start at 0% and increase incline by 1% every 2 minutes until you reach 10%. Maintain a constant speed throughout. This tests your ability to sustain effort as the grade increases.
Calculate your hill run performance with our 6-Mile Run Benchmark Calculator.
