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Strava revamps strength platform and expands partner integration

The app overhaul was revealed on Thursday, adding support for 14 more partners, logs and detailed muscle maps based on specific workouts.
Strava revamps strength platform and expands partner integration
Strava said on Thursday that it will take a deeper dive into strength with a revamped app experience targeting detailed work functionality in addition to new partner integrations. (Photo courtesy of Strava)
  • Strava overhauls strength platform to tracks reps, sets, weights and muscle groups with detailed training logs.
  • 14 partners integrations were revealed including Garmin, Whoop, Fitbod, 24 Hour Fitness and COROS.
  • User feedback prompted Strava to target a major revamp of the strength part of its app.

Strava revealed a major overhaul of the strength functionality on its platform on Thursday, with new parter integration, training logs and increased focus on reps, sets, weights and muscle groups.

The update reflects Strava’s renewed intent on targeting the strength segment and was prompted by user feedback that suggested deeper commitment to detailed workout programs.

“Strength has been one of the fastest-growing sport types on Strava for some time, with over 500 million uploads in 2025 alone, and our community has been clear about what they need from us,” Strava chief product officer Matt Salazar said. “This overhaul brings the same depth, motivation, and shareability that Strava is known for to a myriad of strength activities. Whether someone is training for a race, lifting for general fitness, or building strength as their primary activity, they now have tools that meet them where they actually are and this is only the beginning.”

The partner integrations include: 24 Hour Fitness, Amazfit, Caliber, COROS, Fitbod, Garmin, Hevy, iFIT Personal Trainer, JEFIT, Liftoff, Motra, REMAKER, Runna and Whoop.

“As Strava continues to expand its strength experience, richer context is essential,” Whoop chief product officer Ed Baker said. “By integrating WHOOP insights and broader health and performance signals into Strava, we are helping our members connect strength, endurance, and recovery so they can see the full picture of their performance more clearly than ever.”

The strength update will be rolled out in the coming weeks, according to Strava, and a dedicated page outlining the changes explains the new features in detail.

Exercises are now broken into sets, reps and weight and can easily be added or edited, while a diagram shows what muscle groups are worked on during the session in one view. Once an exercise is complete, the diagram is auto-populated at sync or during the activity.

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