Running Shoe Outsole Explained
In brief: The outsole is the bottom layer of a running shoe that contacts the ground. It provides grip, protects the midsole and resists abrasion.
What is the outsole?
The outsole is the rubber layer on the very bottom of the shoe. It is the part that touches the road or trail, so it handles traction, durability and protection of the softer midsole foam above it. Its rubber compound and tread pattern are tuned to the surface the shoe is built for.
How it works
The outsole grips through a mix of rubber compound and lug or tread geometry. On road shoes the pattern is shallow and broad for smooth, durable contact. On trail shoes it uses deeper lugs that bite into soft ground. Outsole rubber is also placed strategically, with tougher rubber in high-wear zones and exposed foam elsewhere to save weight.
Materials and variations
Common types include blown rubber, which is light and cushioned, and carbon or solid rubber, which is denser and more durable. Many shoes combine both. Trail outsoles often come from specialist rubber makers and are tuned for wet rock, mud or hardpack. Full-coverage outsoles last longer; partial coverage saves weight.
What to look for
Pick an outsole that matches your surface: smooth, durable rubber for roads, aggressive lugs for trails. Check where the rubber is placed if you wear shoes out in a particular spot. Worn-down outsole tread is a clear sign a shoe needs replacing.
The outsole and your running kit at OD's
Outsole choice is mostly about where you run. We can point you to the right grip for road, track or trail across the brands we stock, with next-day delivery and free click and collect.