Running Gait Cycle Explained
In brief: The gait cycle is the complete sequence of movements from the moment one foot lands to the moment the same foot lands again. In running it includes a stance phase on the ground and a swing phase in the air, with a brief flight phase where neither foot touches down.
What is the gait cycle?
The gait cycle is one full repetition of running motion for a single leg, measured from one footstrike to the next strike of the same foot. It is split into the stance phase, when the foot is on the ground, and the swing phase, when the leg moves forward through the air.
Why it matters
Understanding the gait cycle helps explain where impact, support and propulsion happen. Coaches and gait analysts break the run into these phases to spot where a runner loses efficiency or where strain might build, such as a long ground contact or a heavy landing.
The phases
Stance covers initial contact, midstance and toe-off, where the foot absorbs load and then pushes off. Swing covers the leg lifting, swinging through and reaching forward for the next strike. Running differs from walking because it includes a flight phase, when both feet are off the ground.
What to look for
A smooth gait cycle has a controlled landing, a stable midstance and a strong toe-off, with little wasted up-and-down movement. Many running metrics, such as cadence and ground contact time, are simply ways of measuring parts of this cycle.
The gait cycle and your running kit at OD's
Shoes are designed to support different points in the gait cycle, from heel landing to toe-off. The team in St Helens can explain how this shapes shoe design, and we offer next-day delivery and free click and collect.