Normalized Power and Variability

Advanced 10 min read 1 views Nov 28, 2025

Normalized Power and Variability

Normalized Power accounts for the variable nature of cycling efforts and their physiological cost.

Why Normalized Power Matters

  • Average power doesn't tell the full story
  • Surges and hard efforts cost more than steady riding
  • 200W steady ≠ 200W average with variation
  • NP better reflects actual physiological demand

Variability Index (VI)

  • VI = Normalized Power ÷ Average Power
  • 1.00-1.05: Very steady (time trial, climbing)
  • 1.05-1.10: Relatively steady (tempo ride)
  • 1.10-1.20: Variable (criterium, group ride)
  • 1.20+: Very variable (attacks, steep hills)

Applications in Racing

  • Time trials: Target VI < 1.05 for optimal pacing
  • Criteriums: VI often 1.20+ due to corners and attacks
  • Road races: Monitor NP to avoid burning matches
  • Training: High VI workouts (VO2max) vs low VI (threshold)

Intensity Factor (IF)

IF = Normalized Power ÷ FTP. Indicates relative intensity of effort. IF of 1.0 = riding at FTP. IF > 1.0 is above threshold (unsustainable long-term). Use IF to ensure you're training in intended zones.

Discussion

Have questions or feedback? Join our community discussion on Discord or GitHub Discussions.
Table of Contents
Quick Actions
Glossary