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Strava’s latest Power Skills feature is a nice addition for data-driven cyclists. Built on technology from The Breakaway (which Strava acquired earlier this year), this tool transforms your power meter data into actionable training insights. Here’s everything you need to know about using it to improve your riding.
How does Strava’s Power Skills work
Power Skills uses your cycling power meter data to identify your strengths and areas for improvement across different types of efforts. Think of it as a fitness report card that analyzes your cycling performance across multiple disciplines. You’ll see twelve specific Power Intervals that you can work on, each benchmarked against thresholds adjusted for age, gender, weight, and so on. Then, each skill is made up of different combinations of these Power Intervals.
From here, Power Skills breaks down cycling performance into three main categories, each targeting different aspects of cycling fitness. Here’s how Strava describes them:
Sprinting: Short bursts of extremely high output. Reflects your ability to generate explosive power. Power Intervals: 15 sec, 30 sec, and 1 minute.
Attacking: Balanced efforts that combine sprinting power with climbing endurance. Useful for short climbs or race breakaways. Power Intervals: 2 minutes, 3 minutes, 5 minutes, and 10 minutes.
Climbing: Long, sustained efforts on climbs, flats, or workouts requiring steady pacing and endurance. Power Intervals: 15 minutes, 20 minutes, 30 minutes, 45 minutes, and 60 minutes.
Before going any further, I should clarify that to use Strava’s Power Skills, you do need a Strava subscription and actual power meter data from your bicycle or indoor bike. If you’re interested in making this serious biking upgrade (which Strava historically recommends), Garmin offers trusted options here.
What makes this special?
For cyclists, power meters measure the actual watts of energy they’re producing while pedaling; it’s like having a direct measurement of your engine’s output. The tool breaks down a rider’s personal power records across those 12 intervals and highlights strengths and weaknesses, with the option to compare recent efforts against lifetime bests.
What’s particularly helpful is that it ranks your performances against a standard that adjusts for age and body weight, showing where they stand relative to “what’s possible” (your potential) across eight levels. This means a 50-year-old cyclist isn’t being compared to 20-year-old pros, which is huge for Strava’s famously competitive social media ecosystem.
Understanding your Power Skills profile
Power Skills compares your recent efforts against lifetime bests, so you can see if your training is moving you in the right direction across different intervals. Here’s what else to know to really make the most of it.
The visual breakdown
Your Power Skills profile shows a visual representation of your 12 key power intervals, from 5-second sprints to 60-minute efforts. Each interval is color-coded to show your relative strength in that area.
Skill rankings
Like I describe above, this system ranks your performance across eight levels, adjusting for age and weight. This means you’re being compared to realistic benchmarks for your demographic, not just elite riders. These rankings help you understand where you sit in the broader cycling population.
Strength and growth areas
The main point of Power Skills is to identify your natural strengths and highlights areas with the most room for improvement. This is crucial for targeted training. Instead of generic “ride more,” you get specific guidance on which energy systems need work.
Limitations to keep in mind
Elephant in the room: This feature only works for cyclists, not runners. So as a runner myself, I’m holding out hope that Strava finds a way to make this feature work even without a physical power meter on a bike. For now, Garmin seems to have figured it out.
Some other limitations to keep in mind are that this sort of feature requires consistent power meter data to be meaningful. Plus, it’s historical analysis only; it doesn’t prescribe specific workouts. It’s probably best used as one tool in a broader training approach, not the only metric you look toward for guidance. Still, Power Skills is a cool way to use data-driven insights to train smarter, not just harder.