Adidas Supernova Rise — India price, specs & where to buy

Most reviews of the Adidas Supernova Rise will tell you it's a great daily trainer. The honest answer is it's the most underrated daily trainer Adidas has launched in five years — and Indian runners keep ignoring it for shoes that cost twice as much. At ₹11,999 and 280g, with Dreamstrike+ foam and a 10mm drop, this is a shoe that does its job without asking for applause. Here's why that matters.

The daily trainer category has lost its way

Walk into any Adidas or Decathlon in Mumbai or Bangalore and ask for a daily trainer. You'll get pointed at shoes costing ₹15,000-₹18,000 with plates, super-foams, and marketing language about "explosive energy return". Most Indian runners don't need any of that for their easy runs. They need a comfortable, durable shoe at a reasonable price. The Supernova Rise is exactly that.

The industry has spent five years convincing us that every shoe needs a plate, a super-foam, and a six-paragraph marketing story. The Supernova Rise refuses that script. It's just a well-built daily trainer. That's it. That's the pitch.

What ₹11,999 actually buys

At this price, you're getting a 38/28mm stack, a 10mm drop, 280g, Dreamstrike+ in the midsole, and a Bounce midsole insert in the rearfoot. The Dreamstrike+ foam is Adidas's TPU-EVA blend — not their top-tier Lightstrike Pro, but well-engineered for daily duty. The outsole is Continental rubber, which is genuinely durable on Indian roads.

Don't dismiss the 10mm drop. Most current daily trainers run 6-8mm. A 10mm drop is unfashionable, but it's also easier on the calves of heel-strikers — which describes most Indian runners I see at Cubbon Park or Marine Drive on a Sunday morning.

Where the Supernova Rise actually fits

This is your easy-day shoe. Your long-run shoe if you're targeting a half-marathon at conversational pace. Your recovery-run shoe after a hard tempo. The Supernova Rise is not built for racing. It's not built for tempo work. It's built for the 80% of running that should be easy — and most Indian runners have terrible easy-day shoes because they keep buying race shoes by mistake.

The 80/20 reality of weekly mileage

For a runner logging 40km a week, 32km of that should be easy. That's the entire job of the Supernova Rise. Spending ₹18,000 on a plated shoe for these miles is a waste. Spending ₹11,999 on a daily trainer that lasts 700-900km is correct.

What this shoe doesn't try to be

This is the part most reviewers won't say. The Supernova Rise is not exciting. It doesn't have a marketing hook. There's no plate, no Lightstrike Pro foam, no "infused" anything. Run it and you'll feel a comfortable daily trainer that's been engineered to do one job well. That's it.

If you want a shoe that feels like a race weapon, look at the Adios Pro 4. If you want a versatile plate-daily, the super-shoe comparison has options. If you want a shoe you can run 60km a week in for the next 9 months without thinking about it, the Supernova Rise is the answer.

Why under-marketed is sometimes a feature

The shoes that get the loudest marketing are usually the ones with the shortest lifespan. Race shoes burn out at 300km. The Supernova Rise will do 700-900km of mixed-pace running because it's built around durability, not race-day economy. That's a feature, not a flaw.

The buy/skip decision

Buy it if you're running 30-60km a week, want one durable daily trainer, prefer a higher drop (10mm), and don't care about marketing hype. Buy it if you're a beginner who wants a shoe that won't punish form errors. Buy it if you're returning from injury and need cushioning without a plate.

Skip it if you race more than twice a year and need a dedicated race shoe. Skip it if you weigh under 60kg and run cadence-style — you'll find the 280g overbuilt. Skip it if you've already trained for years in 4-6mm drop shoes; the 10mm will feel old-school.

How to use it in a two-shoe rotation

Pair the Supernova Rise with a tempo shoe (a plated trainer) for a complete two-shoe setup. Easy runs, long runs, and recovery in the Supernova Rise. Tempos, intervals, and race-pace long-run finishers in the plated shoe. Total spend: roughly ₹25,000 for two shoes that cover everything from easy miles to race day. That's cheaper than one top-tier race shoe alone.

Build a training block around it via the STRIDD plan generator. Run a head-to-head against another daily option in shoe compare. Or browse the wider gear shoe hub for additional context. The Supernova Rise won't dominate any "best of 2026" lists. It'll just keep showing up for your easy runs, week after week.

Frequently asked questions

What's the price of the Adidas Supernova Rise in India?

The Adidas Supernova Rise retails at ₹11,999 in India through Adidas stores and authorised online channels. End-of-season sales — typically January and July — can drop it to ₹9,000-₹10,500. At MRP, it sits in the affordable daily-trainer tier alongside the Puma ForeverRun Nitro 2 and below the Nike Pegasus and Asics Cumulus.

Is the Supernova Rise good for beginners?

Yes — arguably one of the better beginner trainers in the Indian market. The 10mm drop is forgiving for heel-strikers, the 280g weight provides protection without feeling sluggish at easy paces, and the price keeps it accessible. The Continental rubber outsole handles Indian road surfaces well. Beginners don't need plated tempo shoes; they need durable, comfortable, forgiving shoes. This is one.

How long will the Supernova Rise last?

Expect 700-900km of useful life as a daily trainer. The Dreamstrike+ foam is more durable than Lightstrike Pro race foams, and the Continental outsole holds up on Indian asphalt, tile, and patchy concrete. At 60km a week, that translates to roughly 10-13 months of use before the foam starts compressing and the ride loses its initial feel.

What's the difference between the Supernova Rise and the Adios Pro 4?

Different shoes for different jobs. The Supernova Rise (₹11,999, 280g, no plate) is built for easy miles, long runs, and recovery. The Adios Pro 4 (₹22,995, 215g, carbon EnergyRods) is built for race day. Most Indian runners would benefit from owning both — the Supernova Rise as the workhorse, the Adios Pro 4 reserved for target races.

Can I use the Supernova Rise for half-marathon racing?

For most Indian runners targeting a 2:00+ half-marathon, yes — the cushioning and weight are appropriate for the distance. For a target half-marathon PB in the sub-1:45 range, a lighter shoe will help. The Supernova Rise is best used as a training shoe that can race when needed, not a dedicated racing tool.

Does the 10mm drop feel old-fashioned?

It does compared to the current 4-8mm trend, and that's mostly fine. Higher drops shift load off the calves and onto the quads, which suits heel-strikers and beginners. If you've trained for years in low-drop shoes, the 10mm will feel different — sometimes uncomfortably so. If you're new to running or naturally heel-strike, the 10mm is actually an advantage, not a flaw.