VO2 Max and Longevity: The Peter Attia Framework
How does VO2 max affect longevity and how do you actually improve it?
VO2 max — the maximum rate at which your body can use oxygen during exercise — is one of the single strongest predictors of all-cause mortality in large prospective studies, outperforming most traditional risk factors. Every 1-MET increase in cardiorespiratory fitness is associated with a meaningful reduction in mortality risk; improving it requires structured aerobic training, particularly high-intensity intervals.
Peter Attia frames VO2 max as the most powerful modifiable predictor of long life — more so than cholesterol, blood pressure, or BMI. The mechanism is not mysterious: a higher VO2 max means a more capable cardiovascular and mitochondrial system, one that handles metabolic demands with less strain. The good news is that VO2 max is highly trainable at any age. Below are the practices that move it, with honest evidence ratings for each.
Practices
- Build a zone 2 aerobic base
- VO2 max intervals
- Lactate threshold training
- Consistent aerobic exercise as a longevity practice
- Train grip and muscular strength alongside cardio
- Track resting heart rate as a fitness marker
- Protect VO2 max from detraining
Build a zone 2 aerobic base
Log 3–4 hours per week of low-intensity aerobic exercise to develop mitochondrial density and fat-oxidation capacity.
VO2 max intervals
Use 4–8 minute high-intensity intervals at near-maximum effort to directly stress and expand your oxygen ceiling.
Lactate threshold training
Train at the intensity just below where lactate spikes to push your sustainable pace higher.
Consistent aerobic exercise as a longevity practice
Show up for aerobic exercise consistently across years — the cumulative cardiorespiratory fitness gain is what predicts mortality reduction.
Train grip and muscular strength alongside cardio
Combine aerobic training with resistance training — grip strength and muscle mass are independent longevity predictors.
Track resting heart rate as a fitness marker
Monitor morning resting heart rate over weeks as a simple, free proxy for cardiorespiratory fitness changes.
Protect VO2 max from detraining
Maintain a minimum effective dose of cardio during busy or injured periods — VO2 max is hard to build and surprisingly fast to lose.
Practice this with IX Coach
Reading about a practice changes nothing on its own. IX Coach turns these into a guided, adaptive routine — discerning where you are in real time and walking the practice with you, session after session.
IX Coach: 7 days free, then $40/month (about $1.30/day).