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News Every Day |

The Best Men’s Running Shoes, From Carbon-Plated Rockets to Everyday Workhorses

Somewhere around 2020, the running shoe industry decided that the laws of physics were merely suggestions. Nike stuffed a carbon plate—a rigid sliver of fiber that acts like a springboard with every stride—into a foam sandwich and broke the two-hour marathon. Adidas responded with its own supercritical foam. Hoka made maximalism mainstream. And then everybody—Saucony, Asics, New Balance, brands making perfectly competent shoes for decades—entered a materials arms race involving nitrogen-injected cushioning, wind-tunnel-tested uppers and foam compounds with energy return percentages cited like batting averages.

The premium foams that lived exclusively in elite racers two years ago now sit in everyday trainers. Carbon plates have migrated from marathon flats into daily shoes your podiatrist would approve of. A-TPU—a newer, more durable cousin of the PEBA foam that powered the original super shoe revolution—just won a major marathon for Asics and is threatening to redraw the entire midsole hierarchy. Meanwhile, brands you associate with yoga studios and Parisian concept stores are building legitimate running shoes, because the global run-club boom turned the category into the new streetwear.

The practical result: a man shopping for running shoes this spring faces more credible options across more categories than at any point in the sport’s history. We’ve narrowed it to 15 pairs covering the full spectrum—daily workhorses, race-day weapons and a few beautiful outliers that exist because someone in a design studio refused to make another boring shoe. Your feet have never had it this good.

Alo Runner

Alo came from yoga studios and now makes a running shoe with 70 percent recycled materials and a dual-density midsole that holds up better than skeptics expected. Spring’s new Gravel colorway reads like nubuck from across the street and pairs with chinos on days you’re running errands instead of miles, which for most guys is four days out of seven. No carbon plate or lab-tested foam jargon here. Just a clean shoe for the man whose identity doesn’t hinge on his VO2 max.

$195, Shop now

Alo Runner. Alo

Tracksmith Eliot NDO Ryder

Tracksmith’s NDO is the winter member of its growing shoe family: a weatherproof shell over a merino wool liner, because somebody finally acknowledged that running in March still means running through salt-crusted slush and black ice. Vibram traction grips frozen sidewalks, the Pebax midsole still delivers the same snap as their warm-weather shoe and the whole thing weighs 9.5 ounces, which is just about the same as most people’s winter gloves.

$220, shop now

Tracksmith Eliot NDO Ryder. Tracksmith

Satisfy TheRocker

Satisfy’s founder is obsessed with off-road RC cars, and he built his first trail shoe around that fixation: the outsole treads are modeled after miniature all-terrain tires, and the shoe ships in collectible packaging styled after a vintage Tamiya kit, complete with peel-off decal sheets. The foam and rubber underneath are serious enough that 17 pro athletes tested pairs past 400 miles without the grip or cushioning falling off.

$290, shop now

Satisfy TheRocker shoes. Satisfy

Saucony Endorphin Azura

Saucony took its race-day PEBA foam, stripped out the carbon plate and handed it to the guy who runs four mornings a week before his kids wake up and needs one shoe that handles it all. The Azura doesn’t care if you’re doing tempo repeats or dragging yourself through a Wednesday recovery jog where you’re mostly rehashing a bad meeting.

$150, shop now

Saucony Endorphin Azura. Saucony

Adidas Adizero EVO SL

Lightstrike Pro foam used to live behind a velvet rope in Adidas’s top-shelf racers, and now it’s in a trainer you could impulse-buy without clearing it with anyone. Continental rubber outsoles from the tire company grip wet pavement on those 6 a.m. March runs where every crosswalk is a puddle, and a limited Audi F1 colorway lets you cosplay as someone faster than you actually are.

$150, shop now

Adidas Adizero EVO SL. Adidas

Asics Superblast 3

Asics built a new foam called FF Leap using A-TPU instead of the PEBA that powers most competitors, and the same chemistry won the 2025 Boston Marathon on a sister model, so the lab data has real-world receipts. What that means underfoot is a midsole that’s more than 33 percent lighter and 13 percent bouncier than the brand’s previous foam. All that, paired with a trampoline-shaped outsole pod that loads energy as your foot rolls forward and releases it at toe-off like a diving board.

$210, shop now

Asics Superblast 3. Asics.

Nike Vaporfly 4

The shoe that broke the two-hour marathon is now the lightest Vaporfly ever made, trimmed across the upper, midsole and outsole so there’s genuinely less shoe between your foot and a new personal record. Your physical therapist may have opinions about the stack height, but your finishing time won’t care.

$280, shop now

Nike Vaporfly 4. Nike

Hoka Mach 7

The Mach 6 had a wet-traction problem that its fans discussed the way you’d discuss a friend’s drinking: carefully and (probably) in private. New sticky rubber forefoot compound solves it, and this remains the one-shoe-does-everything pick for the guy who refuses to own a rotation and needs to handle tempo days, recovery jogs and the occasional race out of the same box.

$145, shop now

Hoka Mach 7. Hoka

New Balance 1080v15

New Balance killed the Fresh Foam name and replaced it with a supercritical foam blend that drops a full ounce off the previous version, which matters when you’re stacking 40-mile weeks and gravity stops being abstract. Four width options for the entire spectrum of foot shapes that other brands pretend don’t exist. The 1080 has always been the Honda Accord of running shoes; the v15 is the model year where they finally turbocharged it.

$170, shop now

New Balance 1080v15. New Balance

On Cloudmonster 3

On’s perennial problem is that its shoes look better than they ride, and the Cloudmonster 3 takes its most aggressive swing at closing that gap. How? The midsole is carved into hollow pod segments that compress individually as your foot rolls through each stride, creating a sensation no other brand replicates. The shoe of choice for every guy running the West Side Highway at dawn who needs his gear to look credible at the coffee shop 20 minutes later.

$190, shop now

On Cloudmonster 3. On

Reebok FloatZig Double

Reebok spent years in running’s witness protection program and re-emerged with a shoe built around StableStack, a dual-density midsole that’s firmer on the inner side and softer on the outer, so it corrects your stride without clunky plastic scaffolding. The nitrogen-injected foam soaks up pavement the way a good mattress absorbs a long day, which makes this the shoe you hand to the buddy who keeps asking what to buy but balks at everything that costs more than dinner for two.

$140, shop now

Reebok FloatZig Double. Reebok

Saucony Endorphin Pro 5

This Saucony pair orients its PEBA layers around a slotted carbon plate that flexes where other super shoes feel like diving boards, designed for the guy who’s entered a spring half-marathon and doesn’t feel like financing his footwear to do it. The slots in the plate let it bend longitudinally, so you get the forward drive without the rigidity that turns the last three miles into a negotiation with your calves.

$225, shop now

Saucony Endorphin Pro 5. Saucony

Brooks Glycerin 23

Brooks injected nitrogen into its cushioning system to create a foam that genuinely adapts to your footstrike, which sounds like catalog copy until the landing at mile eight feels materially different from mile one and you realize something weird is happening underfoot. These aren’t racing shoes. They’re the pair for Saturday’s long run, Sunday’s recovery shuffle, and every weeknight where you just need the pavement to feel forgiving because nothing else in your day was.

$170, shop now

Brooks Glycerin 23. Brooks

Norda 001A

This is the Montreal-made trail shoe for the collector who treats footwear like watches. Performance is exceptional. So is the waitlist. The upper is bio-circular Dyneema, a material originally developed for body armor, and the Vibram outsole is rated to 700-plus miles, so the cost-per-wear math eventually works in your favor if you’re patient enough. Spring’s Kaleidoscopic collection includes a Hokusai-referencing Kanagawa colorway for the guy who treats trail shoes the way certain men treat mechanical watches.

$295, shop now

Norda 001A. Norda

Salomon S/Lab Phantasm 3

Salomon wind-tunnel-tested the gaiter upper and found it cuts aerodynamic drag up to 28 percent versus traditional lacing, a stat that sounds invented until you multiply air resistance across 26.2 miles and realize the savings are measured in minutes. You will look confused when you put these on for the first time. By run three, the absence of lace pressure across the top of your foot becomes the kind of comfort that ruins every other shoe you own.

$280, shop now

Salomon S/Lab Phantasm 3. Salomon
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