The Brooks Adrenaline GTS 24 arrives in India at ₹13,499 as a stability daily trainer with a 12 mm drop, a 35 mm heel and 23 mm forefoot stack, a 268-gram weight in US 9, a DNA Loft v3 midsole paired with GuideRails, and no plate. Those are the verified numbers, and they are where any honest assessment has to start. The useful question for an Indian runner is not whether the Adrenaline is a “good shoe” in the abstract. It is narrower: for which runner, doing which sessions, does this specific combination of stability structure, high drop and moderate cushioning produce a defensible benefit? This review works through that on the specifications and the published evidence, not on enthusiasm.
The verified specifications, read carefully
Take the geometry first. A 12 mm drop is, by 2026 standards, high. Most new daily trainers have settled between 6 and 10 mm. A 35 mm heel over a 23 mm forefoot is moderate cushioning, not the maximal stack that dominates the marketing of the cushioned-trainer category. The 268-gram weight sits in the normal range for a structured daily trainer; the added grams over a neutral shoe are the cost of the medial support hardware.
The midsole is DNA Loft v3, Brooks’ nitrogen-infused EVA-based foam, tuned for durability and a consistent ride rather than peak energy return. The stability mechanism is GuideRails, which I will return to, because it is the single most misunderstood feature on the shoe and the reason the Adrenaline is so often bought by the wrong runner.
What GuideRails actually does
GuideRails is not a traditional medial post. Where a posted shoe wedges firmer foam under the arch to resist pronation, GuideRails places raised guardrails on either side of the heel that only engage when the foot or knee moves beyond its normal range. In Brooks’ framing, the system manages excess movement rather than imposing a correction on every stride. The practical effect is a stability shoe that feels closer to a neutral ride than the older, more aggressively posted designs it replaced.
This matters because the evidence on stability footwear has shifted. For three decades, retail fitting assumed runners who overpronate need motion-control shoes to lower injury risk. Multiple randomised trials over the last decade found that prescribing shoes by static pronation type did not reduce injury rates in the populations studied. The static arch-height model is no longer the basis for shoe prescription in the contemporary sports-medicine literature. What does hold up is narrower: runners with symptomatic, painful overpronation, and runners managing a history of conditions such as medial tibial stress syndrome or posterior tibial tendinopathy, tend to report fewer symptoms in a stability shoe. The Adrenaline GTS 24 is appropriate for those narrower indications, not as a universal recommendation.
The case for a 12 mm drop in 2026
A high drop is unfashionable, which is not the same as being wrong. The research on heel-toe drop and injury is mixed, and there is no single correct figure. There is a drop that matches a given runner’s history and tissue tolerance. Higher drops shift load away from the calf and Achilles complex and toward the knee; lower drops do the reverse.
The defensible reading is this. A runner with chronic Achilles sensitivity, a habitual heel striker who lands hard, or a runner returning from injury who wants to reduce calf loading has a reasonable case for the 12 mm Adrenaline. A forefoot striker, or a runner with patellofemoral knee pain who would benefit from less load at the knee, has a reasonable case against it. The shoe is a tool matched to a profile, not an upgrade for everyone. The wider Brooks lineup includes lower-drop options for runners outside this profile.
How it performs on Indian roads
The 35 mm heel stack provides adequate protection on the patched bitumen and concrete-paver surfaces that define most Indian urban running, without the tall, less-stable platform of a maximal trainer. For a runner who values footing security on uneven roads, the moderate height and the GuideRails structure are a sensible pairing.
On durability, DNA Loft v3 is an EVA-derived foam, and EVA-based midsoles soften measurably in heat. This is well characterised and not specific to Brooks. On a May morning in Chennai or Delhi, where road-surface temperatures climb high, the foam will feel softer than on a cool December morning in Bengaluru. It is more temperature-stable than the PEBA race foams, which is the right trade for a daily trainer expected to last several hundred kilometres. The mesh upper dries reasonably through monsoon humidity; a second pair of quick-drying socks and full drying between runs extends the practical life of any wet-season trainer.
Expected lifespan and value
Published test-fleet data and manufacturer guidance place daily-trainer midsole life in the region of 600 to 800 kilometres, with the durable, EVA-derived construction of the Adrenaline sitting toward the upper end of that band under normal use. Rotating it with a second shoe extends the figure, because the foam recovers between runs and the load is distributed across two pairs. A 2013 cohort study associated multi-shoe rotation with a lower running-related injury rate over the study period; the same rotation also lengthens foam life. At ₹13,499 the Adrenaline sits in the mid-tier daily-trainer band in India, broadly in line with comparable stability trainers from the major brands.
Who should buy the Adrenaline GTS 24
The evidence supports three profiles. The runner with a documented stability need, defined as symptomatic overpronation or a history of medial tibial stress syndrome or posterior tibial tendinopathy, who wants a durable daily trainer. The Achilles-sensitive runner who benefits from the 12 mm drop alongside a structured calf-strengthening programme. And the moderate-mileage runner, in the 40 to 60 km per week range, who wants one dependable daily trainer to carry the bulk of an aerobic week, paired with a faster shoe for tempo and race day.
It is not the right purchase for an asymptomatic neutral runner, for whom the contemporary evidence does not support choosing a stability shoe over a neutral daily trainer. It is not a tempo or race shoe; the weight and high drop are wrong for fast work, and a lighter, plated option is the defensible choice there. The 2026 super-shoe comparison covers the race-day end of the rotation, and the shoe comparison tool lets you weigh the Adrenaline against neutral and stability rivals on stack, drop and weight.
Where to buy it, and the verdict
Buy the Adrenaline GTS 24 from the official Brooks India site or a Brooks-authorised retailer, where sizing, returns and warranty are handled cleanly. For a stability shoe in particular, in-store fitting is worth the trip: the value of GuideRails depends on the heel locking in correctly, and a fit that slides undermines the structure you are paying for.
The verdict is measured by design. The Brooks Adrenaline GTS 24 is a durable, dependable, moderately cushioned stability trainer that earns its ₹13,499 for runners who fit the narrow stability profile or want the high drop for a specific reason. For everyone else it is simply a well-built daily trainer carrying support hardware they do not need. Match the shoe to the runner, then build the training around it. Browse the Running Lab shoe index for alternatives, and use the STRIDD plan generator to structure the week, assigning the Adrenaline to easy and moderate mileage while reserving faster shoes for quality work.