The Skechers GoRun Persistence is a neutral daily trainer: 270 grams in a US 9, a 6 mm drop, a 32 mm heel and 26 mm forefoot stack, Hyperburst foam, and no plate. It costs ₹9,999 in India through Skechers, which makes it the most affordable shoe in this group and the most quietly useful for a lot of runners. Treat this review as a checklist, not a sales pitch. Work the four steps in order, and by the end you will know whether the Persistence is the everyday workhorse you want, or the wrong tool for you.
Step 1: understand what the Persistence is built to do
The Persistence is the unglamorous shoe that does the most work. A neutral daily trainer for the bulk of an ordinary running week. Easy runs, the commute jog, the steady weekday miles, the first shoe a new runner should own. No plate, no racing pretensions, no marketing theatre. The fifth-gen Skechers daily formula, priced to be bought and used hard.
Step 1a: the verified numbers
Here is the ground truth and only the ground truth. Weight: 270 grams in a US 9. Drop: 6 mm. Stack: 32 mm at the heel, 26 mm at the forefoot. Foam: Hyperburst. Plate: none. India price: ₹9,999 through Skechers. Anything past that list, such as exact outsole rubber or lab figures, is not verified here, so this review does not invent it.
Step 1b: why those numbers matter for daily miles
A neutral daily trainer has to be comfortable, durable and unremarkable in the best sense: you should forget you are wearing it and just run. The 32/26 mm stack is moderate, neither minimal nor maximal, which is the sweet spot for everyday miles because it cushions without lifting you far off the ground or feeling tippy. The 6 mm drop is gentle and friendly to most stride patterns. The Hyperburst foam, Skechers' supercritical midsole, gives this shoe a livelier feel than its price suggests. At 270 grams it is not light, but daily trainers rarely are, and on easy runs the weight is a non-issue. The absence of a plate is the right call. On easy and steady miles you do not want a plate dictating how your foot bends; you want a forgiving shoe that lets your stride move naturally. That is exactly what the Persistence does.
Step 2: match the Persistence to how you actually train
Run this checklist before you spend ₹9,999.
Step 2a: consider the Persistence if
You are a new or returning runner who wants one dependable, affordable shoe to build a habit on. You already own a fast shoe or a max-cushion trainer and need a no-fuss neutral shoe for ordinary easy miles. You run a moderate weekly volume and want value without giving up a quality supercritical midsole. You want a shoe you will not baby, something to log honest kilometres in without worrying about wearing out an expensive racer. Any of those, and the Persistence is aimed squarely at you.
Step 2b: look elsewhere if
You want a race-day or tempo shoe; there is no plate and at 270 grams this is not built for speed. You are chasing maximum cushioning for very high mileage or heavier body weight, where a taller stack protects better over long efforts. You prefer a plated, propulsive ride and will find a neutral trainer flat by comparison. You need a true stability shoe for significant overpronation, since this is a neutral design with no medial support. In those cases, browse the Running Lab gear shoes index for a better-matched category.
Step 3: compare the Persistence against the obvious alternatives
A direct comparison settles the decision faster than any single-shoe review.
Step 3a: versus the Skechers Maxroad 6
The Maxroad 6 is the bigger, softer, plated daily trainer at 40/34 mm and ₹13,999. The Persistence is lower at 32/26 mm, plateless, and ₹4,000 cheaper. For very long runs and heavier runners, the Maxroad's taller stack protects better. For ordinary easy and steady miles, the Persistence does the same core job for less money and feels a touch more connected to the road. If your budget is tight or your mileage is moderate, the Persistence is the smarter buy; if you live in long runs, the Maxroad earns the premium.
Step 3b: versus a plated daily trainer
Plated daily trainers add structure and a smoother roll, but they cost more and can feel firmer and more directive underfoot. The Persistence trades that away deliberately. On easy days, a plateless, forgiving shoe is arguably the better tool, because it lets your foot move freely and recover rather than being guided through a set bend. You give up a little snap you were not using on easy runs anyway, and you keep ₹4,000 in your pocket. For tempo and racing, a plated shoe wins, and the 2026 super-shoe comparison is where to look for those.
Step 4: apply the Persistence to Indian conditions
India asks a daily trainer to handle heat, soak up monsoon and survive heavy, frequent use. The Persistence is built for exactly that, and its price makes it easy to use without precious.
Step 4a: heat, monsoon and the road
The engineered upper breathes adequately for warm-weather running, which in most of India is most of the year. It will feel warm in peak summer, as everything does, but it drains and dries between sessions, which matters across a monsoon block. The moderate 32/26 mm stack is steady and predictable on wet roads, more stable than a tall soft trainer when the surface turns slick, though it is still a road shoe with road grip, so ease off on painted markings and tiles after rain. Keep it off mud and trail, where the outsole is out of its element.
Step 4b: lifespan and cost-per-use
A neutral daily trainer is a high-mileage shoe, and the Persistence is built and priced to be run hard. A reasonable expectation is 500 to 800 kilometres before the Hyperburst foam noticeably softens. At ₹9,999 the cost-per-kilometre is genuinely good, which is the whole appeal: this is the shoe you log volume in without flinching. Dry it fully between wet runs, because repeated damp use, more than heat, is what shortens the life of any supercritical foam, and rotate with a second pair if your weekly mileage is high.
Step 4c: fit, transition and where to buy
Most runners take their usual running size, leaving a thumb's width at the toe for feet that swell on longer runs. The moderate stack and 6 mm drop make this an easy shoe to transition into from almost anything. One accessibility-minded note from someone who has rebuilt her own running more than once: this is a neutral shoe with no built-in support, so if you genuinely need stability for overpronation, a dedicated stability shoe will serve you better than forcing this one to do that job. Buy from Skechers' official India site at ₹9,999 for a genuine pair and a real return path, and browse the rest of Skechers' shoe lineup to see where the Persistence sits against the Maxroad and the faster Razor.
The decision
It reduces to one question: do you want an affordable, dependable neutral shoe for ordinary easy and steady miles? If yes, the Persistence is built precisely for that: 32/26 mm of Hyperburst foam, no plate to get in the way, ₹9,999 for a daily trainer you will actually use hard. If no, meaning you want a racer or tempo shoe, need maximum cushioning, prefer a plated ride, or require real stability support, a different shoe serves you better. Run the head-to-head on the shoe comparison tool, then build a free training plan that fills this shoe with the everyday miles it was made for.