Road Cycling
Solo vs. Bunch Riding: Which Builds Better Fitness?
Does riding alone or in a group build better fitness? We compare the physiological demands of each and how to use both to sharpen your form.
Road Cycling
Does riding alone or in a group build better fitness? We compare the physiological demands of each and how to use both to sharpen your form.
Ask ten cyclists whether they get fitter riding alone or in a bunch and you'll get ten confident, contradictory answers. The truth is less tidy: the two disciplines build different qualities, and the rider who improves fastest is usually the one who understands what each is actually training. Here's how I think about it after years of coaching riders through exactly this question.
Before we pit solo against bunch, it's worth pinning down what we're measuring. "Fitness" isn't one number. For a road cyclist it's really a cluster of related capacities, and each type of riding develops them unevenly:
When someone says a group ride "smashed" them, they usually mean their repeatability and threshold got hammered. When they say a solo endurance ride "did nothing," they're often mistaking a lack of drama for a lack of adaptation. Both impressions are misleading, and that gap is exactly where good training decisions live.
Riding alone is the closest thing we have to a laboratory. Nobody attacks on the climb you wanted to spin up easy. Nobody sits up when you wanted to keep the pressure on. You own every watt.
That control is the single biggest argument for solo work, and it matters most for two things:
If your plan calls for 4 x 8 minutes at threshold with 4 minutes easy, you simply cannot do that reliably in a bunch. The group's rhythm will always win. Solo, you can hold a genuine, even effort — no coasting, no scramble — and that consistency is what drives the specific adaptation you're chasing. The difference between an interval done at a controlled steady effort and one shredded into surges is the difference between training threshold and just getting tired.
Long, steady endurance rides are deceptively hard to do in company because groups drift faster than intended and the drafting masks your true output. Alone, a genuine endurance pace feels almost too easy — and that's the point. Those rides build the aerobic base that everything else sits on top of. The catch is discipline: most riders go too hard on easy days and too easy on hard days, and solo riding only fixes that if you actually hold yourself to the plan.
The honest downside of solo work is that it's mentally taxing and easy to sandbag. There's no wheel to chase when motivation dips, no accountability when you quietly ease off with ten minutes of the interval left. Some riders thrive on that solitude; others quietly cheat themselves every session and wonder why they're not improving.
Group riding trains things you genuinely cannot replicate alone, no matter how disciplined you are.
The headline benefit is surge tolerance. Bunch riding is stochastic — a spiky, unpredictable pattern of efforts as the group accelerates out of corners, over rises, and every time someone near the front gets excited. Your power file from a hard group ride looks like a seismograph. That constant "hard-easy-hard" rhythm trains your ability to recover while still riding hard, which is precisely what racing and fast century rides demand. You can approximate it solo with over-unders, but it never feels the same as the real, involuntary punchiness of a good bunch.
Then there are the things that aren't strictly fitness but make you a better rider:
And there's the intangible: most people simply ride harder in company. The presence of others drags efforts out of you that you'd never voluntarily produce alone. That's a real physiological stimulus, and it's the reason a rider can plateau on solo training yet suddenly find another gear the moment they join a fast bunch.
The trade-off is precision. A bunch ride gives you a stimulus, but not a targeted one. You take whatever efforts the group throws at you, which is brilliant for general hardness and useless for developing a specific weakness. If your threshold is your limiter, no amount of group riding will fix it as efficiently as a few well-executed solo sessions.
Neither, and that framing is the trap. They build different fitness, and the rider who only does one is leaving adaptation on the table.
Think of it this way:
A rider with a huge solo engine who never rides in groups often gets shelled the moment the pace turns punchy — they have the power but not the repeatability or positioning to use it. A rider who only ever bunch-rides tends to be hard but blunt: good at surviving chaos, but with no top-end threshold to raise their whole ceiling. The best all-round riders I've worked with deliberately do both, and they know which one they're doing on any given day.
Here's a realistic weekly shape for someone riding four or five times a week. Adjust the volume to your life — the structure is the point, not the exact hours.
A few caveats worth respecting:
Solo riding gives you control, precision, and the base every other quality is built on. Bunch riding gives you sharpness, skill, and efforts you'd never wring out of yourself alone. Asking which is "better" is like asking whether the strength or the technique makes the climber — you need both, in the right order, at the right time.
Use your solo days to build and target. Use your bunch days to sharpen and extend. Do that consistently and you won't just get fitter; you'll get fitter in the specific ways that make you a better cyclist.
Keep reading
Smooth, safe riding starts with your eyes. Learn to read the road ahead, pick clean lines, and anticipate hazards before they force a sudden reaction.
Most riders scrub speed in the wrong places. This breakdown compares cornering and braking to show where time is really lost and how to carry momentum.