Delhi in November. The air is brown. Your throat itches before you finish kilometre two. Your watch says it is a perfect morning for a run. Your lungs are paying the bill.
This is the article nobody writes honestly. Most pollution-and-running pieces hedge. We will not. If you live in Delhi, Mumbai, Kanpur, Lucknow, Faridabad or Ghaziabad, you already know what bad air feels like. The question is what to do with it.
The truth about running in polluted air
Running in heavily polluted air is worse for you than not running in heavily polluted air. The math is brutal. Resting breathing pulls roughly six to eight litres of air per minute through your lungs. Easy running pulls forty to sixty. Hard running pulls a hundred and twenty. You are inhaling fifteen to twenty times more PM2.5 per minute when you run than when you sit.
The acute symptoms are real. Burning throat. Headache. A dry cough that lingers. The chronic effects are worse and quieter. Reduced lung function. Cardiovascular risk. A measurable association between long-term particulate exposure and a long list of bad outcomes the WHO has been documenting for decades.
So why do anything? Because the alternative — not moving — also kills you. Sedentary behaviour drives the same cardiovascular disease the pollution does. The answer is not surrender. It is intelligence.
What the AQI actually means
India's National AQI runs zero to five hundred. Below fifty is good. Above two hundred is poor. Above three hundred is very poor. Above four hundred is severe. Delhi spends large parts of November and December in the severe band. Mumbai trends lower but climbs into poor on bad days.
The bands are not advisory. They are doctors writing on a tax return. Above three hundred, healthy adults experience measurable symptoms. Above four hundred, even short outdoor activity hurts you.
The five-band running rule
Decide before you wake up. Not at the door.
AQI under 100. Run. Normal training. This is what most Indian cities have for most of monsoon and early winter. Take advantage.
AQI 100 to 200. Run, but shorten. Cut speedwork. Stay below threshold pace. Run before sunrise when traffic is lighter. Skip the highway-side park.
AQI 200 to 300. No outdoor speedwork. Easy runs only, under forty minutes. Run away from traffic. Mask if you can tolerate one.
AQI 300 to 400. Treadmill. Indoor cycle. Strength training. The outdoor run is not worth what it costs your lungs. This is not an opinion. This is data.
AQI 400 and above. Indoors. All training, indoors. No exceptions for a quick five.
Build the habit of checking
Check AQI before you sleep. Check it again when you wake up. Use SAFAR-India, CPCB, or any global aggregator like IQAir. Your nearest monitoring station may be three kilometres away — the reading is directional, not exact. When in doubt, the doubt is the answer.
If you have to run outside
Some days you have a race in the calendar. Some days the AQI is borderline and the alternative is the third skipped run in a week. Here is what to do.
Run early. The hour before sunrise consistently has lower particulate readings than the hour after. Industrial activity and traffic ramp through the morning. Six a.m. is better than eight a.m. Five a.m. is better than six.
Run away from roads. A run on the inside loop of a park is dramatically cleaner than the same run along the perimeter beside traffic. Choose stadiums, sports complexes, internal society loops, the inner roads of large parks.
Wear a real mask. Not a surgical mask. An N95 or N99 with a tight seal. It is uncomfortable. It is hot. It restricts breathing. Some runners find they cannot wear one and run at the same time. If you can, on borderline days, do it.
Indoors is not weakness
The cultural reflex in Indian running is to push through. To run anyway. To dismiss the air. That reflex will cost you years of healthy running.
A treadmill run is a real run. A long indoor workout on a stationary bike is real training. An hour of strength work and mobility is real fitness. None of this is a downgrade. It is a substitution.
If you are new to indoor training, the how to start running guide covers the basics that translate to treadmill work. The 5K plans can be run almost entirely indoors during bad-air weeks.
Long-term strategy for Indian air
If you live in Delhi NCR or another high-pollution city, your annual training plan should bend around your local air calendar. Most years, October through January is the bad window. The right move is to plan accordingly.
Build base in monsoon and post-monsoon. June through September, the rains usually scrub the air. Train hard. Race shorter distances. Push volume.
Through the bad-air months, hold fitness. Indoor work. Treadmill intervals. Mobility. Strength. Race goal is to not lose ground, not to peak.
Peak in February and March. Air clears. Temperatures stay manageable. This is where most northern-Indian runners should be targeting their key races.
The kids and parents around you
Children's developing lungs and adults over sixty are more vulnerable than you are. If you are running while your eight-year-old is cycling beside you in 350 AQI, that is the conversation to have, not whether the run was worth it. Your body recovers faster than theirs does.
What this means for race day
If you are signed up for a Delhi-region race in November or December, watch the air the week before. Most race organisers will not move the race for air. You will be making the call yourself. Show up. Check the AQI at start time. Run within yourself if it is bad — slow the pace, skip the surge in the last 5 km. Finish, do not chase a time, and rest hard for three days after.
If the race is during severe air, consider not running it. There is no medal worth a chest infection that lasts three weeks.
For better-air-window races, the rest of the year and the southern half of India offer plenty. Look at races in Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Kochi, Goa, Pune, the southern circuit broadly. Some of the best running in this country happens away from the AQI map.
Where to go from here
Three steps for the next month. Check AQI every morning. Plan around it, not through it. Move indoors when the air says so.
If you do not have a plan, build one with the STRIDD plan generator — it works for treadmill weeks the same as outdoor weeks. Pace your indoor sessions with the calculators. The rest of Running Lab and the practical running tips have specifics on shoes, gear and recovery.
You run because it makes you stronger. Run in air that does the same.