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Altra Olympus 5 Review (2026): Maximum Cushion, Zero Drop

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… 4.2/5 Reviewed by Riley Cooper, Health Devices & Outdoor Equipment Editor · Tested 5 months / 120 hrs · Updated Jun 20, 2026
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In its favor

  • 33 mm cushioned stack absorbs long-distance pounding
  • Vibram Megagrip outsole grips wet rock exceptionally well
  • FootShape toe box accommodates wide feet
  • Zero-drop platform on a high stack is unique in the category
  • Smooth transition feel for natural-gait runners

Watch-outs

  • Heavy at 700 g per pair, slower than the Lone Peak
  • High stack reduces ground feel on technical scrambles
  • Stability lacks for pronation-prone runners
  • Premium price relative to the Lone Peak 8
Cushioning
4.7
Traction (Megagrip)
4.7
Toe-box room
4.8
Stability
3.9
Weight
3.6
Durability
4.2
Value
4

In this review

Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedCushioning: the right tool for long milesTraction: Vibram Megagrip is the headlineStability: the trade-off for stack heightFit, weight, and durabilityWho should buy the Altra Olympus 5?The verdict Compared The specs FAQs

Quick verdict

After five months and 120 hours in the Catskills and southern Greens, the Altra Olympus 5 is the rare shoe that pairs a 33 mm cushioned stack with true zero-drop. The Vibram Megagrip outsole is among the stickiest in trail running and the toe box stays roomy. The cost is weight, at 700 grams per pair it is heavy, and the high stack gives up ground feel on technical terrain.

Why you should trust this review

I bought this pair at retail in late 2025 through Altra’s direct site. Altra had no editorial input and provided no sample. I run roughly 1,200 miles a year, mostly on trail, and I have rotated through five generations of zero-drop trail shoes including the previous Olympus 4, so I know what this line is supposed to feel like and where it tends to fall short.

Max-cushion shoes flatter you in the parking lot and then either save your legs over a long day or quietly betray you on technical ground. The only way to know which is to put real distance on them across the terrain you actually run. I did that over a full shoulder-season block, running most of the hours and hiking the rest with a daypack.

How we evaluated

I logged 120 hours across 19 trail outings between November 2025 and April 2026, with 95 of those hours running and 25 hiking with a daypack. I made eight creek crossings to gauge mesh drain time and ran outsole grip checks on wet rock, dry rock, and mud. To pressure-test stability I compared the Olympus directly against my Lone Peak 8 on technical singletrack, where the stack-height difference shows up most.

I also ran three half-marathon trail loops as long-effort tests, because the whole argument for this shoe is how it treats your legs deep into a long day. Outsole and midsole wear were tracked across the full window rather than judged at the end.

Cushioning: the right tool for long miles

The 33 mm Altra EGO MAX midsole is one of the most cushioned platforms in any trail shoe, and over distance it does exactly what max cushion is supposed to do. On a 14-mile run with roughly 2,000 feet of climbing, my legs felt noticeably fresher at the end than they would have in the Lone Peak. The stack soaks up repetitive impact on hardpack and rock, and the deeper into a long effort I got, the more I appreciated it.

This is a shoe built for the back half of an ultra. For 50K and longer events where cushion-to-weight tilts in favor of protection, the Olympus is the right tool. The flip side is that all that foam does not give you a responsive, snappy ride; it absorbs rather than returns, so it feels plush and slightly muted rather than fast. If you want pop and ground connection, this is not that shoe, and it is not pretending to be.

Traction: Vibram Megagrip is the headline

Megagrip is the stickiest rubber compound in wide use in trail running, and putting it under a zero-drop max-cushion shoe is what makes the Olympus 5 special. On my wet-granite slab test the Olympus held a stance indefinitely where my MaxTrac-equipped Lone Peak 8 slipped within about four seconds. For the wet, rocky New England terrain I run, that difference is the single biggest reason to choose this shoe over the Lone Peak.

The 3.5 mm lugs are shallower than an aggressive mud shoe, so in deep, sloppy mud the Olympus is not the specialist a Speedcross is. But on the mixed wet rock, roots, and packed dirt that make up most real trail, the combination of grippy compound and confident traction is excellent. Over the test window the lugs showed minor wear with no chunking, which bodes well for the compound holding its grip across the shoe’s life.

Stability: the trade-off for stack height

Here is the honest cost of all that foam. The 33 mm stack puts your foot higher off the ground, which reduces ground feel and raises ankle-roll risk on technical terrain. On my technical-singletrack comparison against the Lone Peak 8, the lower-stack Lone Peak felt more planted and connected, while the Olympus felt slightly tippy when I picked through rock gardens at speed. On graded trail and rolling singletrack the stability is fine; on Class 3 scrambling it is a liability.

This is compounded for runners who pronate or who have weak ankles, because the tall platform amplifies any rolling moment. There is no rock plate or aggressive stability structure to counter it; the shoe leans entirely on cushion and grip. If most of your running is smooth-to-moderate, this is a non-issue you will rarely think about. If you spend real time off-trail or scrambling, choose a lower-stack shoe.

Fit, weight, and durability

The FootShape toe box is the same generous shape as the Lone Peak, comfortable from the first run with room for the toes to splay, and the medium-volume heel cup works for most foot shapes. Where the Olympus pays for its strengths is weight: at 700 grams per pair it is heavy for a trail runner and noticeably slower-feeling than the Lone Peak, which you feel most on climbs and in the legs at the end of a fast effort.

Durability held up better than I expected. At 120 hours the Vibram Megagrip lugs show only minor wear with no chunking, and the EGO MAX midsole has compressed minimally rather than packing out the way cheaper foams do. Expected lifespan lands in the 400 to 550 mile range, which is competitive for a max-cushion shoe and reassuring given the premium it commands over the Lone Peak.

Who should buy the Altra Olympus 5?

Buy it if you specifically want maximum cushion and refuse to give up zero-drop, you run ultra distances where leg protection matters most, you have wide feet, and you run on wet, rocky terrain where Megagrip earns its keep. In that exact niche there is no real alternative, which is the shoe’s whole reason to exist.

Skip it if you can use a 4 mm drop, in which case a lighter cushioned shoe will be more efficient on climbs, if you have stability issues or weak ankles, or if you spend most of your time on technical or off-trail terrain where the high stack works against you. The weight alone rules it out for anyone chasing speed.

The verdict

Five months and 120 hours in, the Olympus 5 is a niche shoe that excels squarely in its niche. The 33 mm zero-drop platform and the Megagrip outsole give it a combination nothing else offers, and over long, wet, rocky efforts it protects your legs and holds its footing in a way the Lone Peak cannot match. The price is real weight and reduced ground feel that make it the wrong shoe for technical terrain and speed work. For the zero-drop ultrarunner on grippy-demanding ground, it is the best option going; for everyone else, a lighter cushioned shoe or the Lone Peak will serve better.

Compared

ModelBest forRating
Altra Olympus 5Recommended4.2Check price
Hoka Speedgoat 5Top Pick4.4Check price
Altra Lone Peak 8Recommended4.3Check price
Generic max-cushion trail shoeSkip2.7Check price

The specs

BrandALTRA
ColourGray/Teal
Dimensions4.0 x 7.0 in
Weight1.2345886672 Pounds
Drop0 mm (zero-drop)
Stack height33 mm
UpperEngineered mesh
MidsoleAltra EGO MAX
OutsoleVibram Megagrip
Lug depth3.5 mm
Weight (US M9 pair)700 g
Toe shapeOriginal FootShape
CuffLow
LastWide forefoot

LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.

Altra Olympus 5 FAQs

Is the Altra Olympus 5 worth the price in 2026?

If you want both maximum cushion and zero drop, yes. There is no real alternative in that category. If you can use a 4 mm drop, the Hoka Speedgoat 5 is lighter and the price.

Olympus 5 vs Hoka Speedgoat 5: which is better?

The Olympus 5 is the only major trail shoe with both high cushion and zero drop. The Speedgoat 5 is lighter, cheaper, and more responsive on uphills. Pick by drop preference.

Is the high stack stable on uneven terrain?

It is acceptable on graded trail and rocky singletrack. On technical scrambles or off-trail terrain, the high stack reduces ground feel and can amplify ankle rolls.

Should I size up?

True to size for most. The FootShape toe box is generous, and sizing up half is only worthwhile for thicker socks.

Are these adequate for ultra-distance running?

For 50K and longer where cushion matters, yes. The 33 mm stack absorbs miles well, and the Megagrip outsole holds traction over long distances.

Update log

  • Jun 20, 2026: Review published.
  • Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.

Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.

RC
Riley Cooper
Health Devices & Outdoor Equipment Editor ยท 5 years reviewing
Riley Cooper reviews health and personal care devices, outdoor power tools, and garden equipment at The Tested Hub. With a background in physical therapy and years of real-world product testing, Riley evaluates health devices with a practical, clinical eye and puts outdoor gear through real-world use across the seasons. From blood pressure monitors and massage guns to lawn mowers and irrigation tools, Riley focuses on what actually holds up in everyday use.

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