How to breathe while running as a beginner: why you get out of breath so quickly and practical tips to make running feel easier.
Have you ever asked yourself two minutes into your run, “Why am I out of breath already”? We’ve all been there. It’s one of the most common experiences for beginner runners.
In the early weeks, breathing feels like the hardest part of running. Your legs might feel fine, but your chest tightens, you start to gasp for air, and suddenly everything feels overwhelming. That reaction is normal – and it doesn’t mean that you’re doing something wrong, or that “running just isn’t for you”. It’s just your body adapting to something new.
It doesn’t have to feel this hard. You don’t need a perfect, complicated breathing technique. All you need for breathing to feel easier is to manage your effort, pace, and expectations.
This post breaks down why breathing feels so intense at the beginning, how to control it during a run, and how to make running feel easier within just a few weeks.
Why breathing feels so hard when you start running
1. You’re running too fast
This is by far the most common reason.
“Too fast” may still feel relatively slow, especially if you compare your pace to other, more experienced runners. It’s not a specific pace, but the effort level in relation to your current ability.
Many beginners feel like they should push themselves. When you decide to start running, it feels natural to “try hard”. But at the beginning, intensity is not what you need – it’s consistency. To build your aerobic capacity and still be able to show up the next day, you should run most of your runs at an easy pace.
Easy running should feel almost embarrassingly slow at the beginning. You should be able to talk, breathe rhythmically, and stay in control. If you’re gasping for air within the first few minutes, it’s usually not your lungs that are the problem – it’s the effort level.
Slowing down might feel awkward at first. It might even feel like you’re moving barely faster than walking. But that’s where endurance is built, and where breathing starts to settle.
(If you’d like to avoid other common setbacks, read: 9 common beginner running mistakes)
2. Your aerobic system isn’t trained yet
Even if you’re generally active, running is a very specific movement that challenges your body in many ways.
In the early weeks, your heart, lungs, and muscles are still learning to work together efficiently. Oxygen delivery, muscle strength, and endurance all improve with repetition – but that adaptation takes time.
Cardiovascular fitness isn’t built overnight. It builds through consistent, repeatable exposure.
Feeling out of breath in the beginning doesn’t mean you’re “not talented”, or that you’ll struggle with running forever. Your body needs time to adapt to a new demand.
The first weeks of running usually feel the hardest. Then you suddenly notice how your breathing feels easier, your heart rate settles faster, recovery improves, and easy pace starts to actually feel easy.
That shift is aerobic adaptation, and it comes from repetition and patience, not pushing harder.
3. You’re tense without realising it
When you start running, especially in public, your body can slip into a mild stress response – especially if you feel self-conscious, worried about how you look, or afraid of being judged. Your shoulders creep up, your jaw tightens, and your breathing becomes shallow and high inn your chest.
That tension restricts your breathing. Instead of deep, relaxed diaphragm breaths, they become tight, quick, and shallow. It can truly make running feel way harder than it needs to be.
If tension, not fitness, is the problem, try dropping your shoulders, unclenching your jaw, and consciously slowing your exhale down. It may change the entire experience.
4. Your sports bra restricts your breathing
This one surprises a lot of women.
A supportive bra is essential for comfort. In fact, next to your running shoes, it’s one of the only two must-haves you need to start running. (Read more in Beginner running gear: what to spend on vs what to save on).
But if your bra is too tight around the rib cage, it can restrict how your chest expands when you breathe.
Recent research has shown that tight sports bras can alter breathing patterns and reduce chest wall expansion during exercise. Over time, many women adapt by taking shallower, upper-chest breaths.
If your bra is digging in, riding up, or leaving deep marks on your skin, and you constantly feel like you can’t quite take a full breath, it might not be your fitness. It might be your fit.
A few quick checks:
- Can you take a deep breath without feeling pressure around your ribs?
- Does the band stay flat without digging in?
- Can you slide two fingers under the band comfortably?
Support should feel secure, not restrictive.
If breathing always feels tight, especially early in your run, consider reassessing your sports bra size or trying a different model.
Learn all 7 most common reasons in Why do I get out of breath so fast when running.
How to breathe while running: practical tips
You really don’t need a complicated breathing technique. Here are a few small, practical adjustments that you can make on your next run to make breathing feel more manageable.
1. Slow down
Most breathing problems are pacing problems.
Before you try to “fix” your breathing, check your effort:
- Can you speak in sentences?
- Can you control inhale and exhale?
- Does this pace feel sustainable for 20 minutes?
If the answer is no, slow down or take a short walk break.
If you’d like to learn more about pace versus effort in your early runs, check out How slow is too slow for beginner runners.
2. Use the conversation test
This is the simplest breathing guideline you’ll ever need.
- If you can talk in sentences → you’re in the right zone.
- If you can only say one word → you’re running too fast.
- If you’re gasping for air → walk and reset.
Running should feel controlled, not chaotic.
3. Breathe through both nose and mouth
Don’t force nose-only breathing.
When you’re running, your oxygen demand increases. Most runners naturally breathe through both the nose and mouth to move enough air in and out.
Nose breathing can be great during your warm-up or very easy running. As effort increases, let your breathing adjust naturally.
There’s truly no benefit to keeping your mouth closed. Your comfort matters.
4. Try a simple breathing rhythm
Some runners find that a light rhythm helps them control their breathing easier.
For example:
- Inhale for 3 steps, exhale for 2
- Inhale for 2 steps, exhale for 2
Only use this if it feels natural. Breathing shouldn’t feel forced or mechanical.
5. Relax your upper body
Tension restricts breathing more than most people realise.
Do a quick posture reset mid-run:
- Drop your shoulders
- Unclench your jaw
- Keep your arm swing light
- Run tall, with a slight forward lean from the ankles
When your posture opens up, your rib cage and diaphragm can expand more freely. That alone can make breathing feel noticeably easier.
Should you breathe in through your nose or mouth while running?
It depends on your effort – and comfort.
At an easy pace, breathing through your nose, or both your nose and your mouth, is completely fine. If you’re running slowly enough to hold a conversation, you don’t need that much oxygen, and nasal breathing often feels natural and comfortable.
As your effort increases, your body needs more oxygen. At a moderate pace, most runners switch to breathing through both the mouth and nose. During harder efforts, mouth breathing is normal – it allows you to move more air in and out quickly, which supports the increased oxygen demand.
Breathing through your mouth doesn’t mean you’re unfit – it means your body is working harder.
If you’re constantly forced into mouth breathing at what’s supposed to be an easy pace, that’s usually a pacing issue. Slow down, control your effort, and be honest with yourself. When you start running your easy runs truly easy, your breathing will settle.
Run-walk method for easier breathing
Run-walk method is one of the simplest and smartest ways to gain control of your breathing. Taking a break between running sections isn’t a setback or failure, but a legitimate training strategy. Instead of pushing into panicked gasping for air air, you reset before it escalates.
When you mix in walking intervals, your breathing naturally slows down. Your body gets a chance to clear carbon dioxide, relax, and get back into controlled rhythm.
What the run-walk method also does is prevent your heart rate from climbing too high too early. That means you can sustain your effort longer without feeling drained. Read more about Running heart rate and Zone 2 training.
Over time, those controlled efforts build your aerobic base more effectively than pushing too hard, getting out of breath, and finishing completely fatigued.
If you’d like a simple, weekly structure to run-walk intervals, start here: 4-week plan to start running.
Why does it work? Effort that you can actually repeat builds consistency. Consistency forms a routine. If your goal is to create a sustainable running habit, the run-walk method is one of the most effective ways to do it. Find out more in How to build a running habit that fits a busy schedule.
When does breathing get easier for beginners?
This is one of the most common questions – and the honest answer is: gradually. It doesn’t suddenly “click” overnight. It improves as your aerobic base develops.
Week 1-2: the hardest phase
The first couple of weeks often feel uncomfortable. You might be out of breath quickly, your heart rate climbs fast, and even short runs can feel really intense. That’s all normal.
Your cardiovascular system is adapting to a new demand. With time, your heart learns to pump blood more efficiently, your lungs adjust to higher airflow, and your muscles start to use oxygen better.
Week 3-4: noticeable shift
If you stay consistent, and run your easy runs truly easy, you’ll usually notice an improvement around week three or four.
Breathing settles faster after the first few minutes. Recovery between intervals improves. Your heart rate feels steadier.
Week 6-8: the real difference
Around the 6-8 weeks mark, most beginners notice a major improvement.
Easy pace starts to feel controlled, you can hold conversation more easily, your runs feel smoother – not chaotic and intense.
This is aerobic base development in action.
Your body is getting better at delivering oxygen to working muscles, clearing carbon dioxide efficiently, and sustaining effort without spikes in breathing and heart rate. That progress comes from consistency, not intensity.
(If you’re starting running and wondering whether your progress is normal, read: First weeks of running: what beginner progress really looks like.)
Signs your breathing is improving
- You recover faster after stopping or slowing down
- You don’t panic when your breathing increases
- You can talk more easily at an easy pace
- Easy runs feel calmer and more controlled
- You no longer dread the first five minutes
None of these changes happen overnight, but they’re great sign of running progress that show up before your pace or distance improve. If you stay consistent, that’s when running genuinely starts to feel easier.
Breathing while running: warning signs to watch for
Breathing hard during a run is normal, especially in the early weeks. But there are certain symptoms that deserve a closer look:
- Chest pain
- Dizziness
- Persistent wheezing
- Ongoing chest tightness
- Known asthma
If you experience any of these, pause your training and speak with a healthcare professional. It’s always better to check and be reassured than to push through something that doesn’t feel right.
Moving forward
Breathing feels hard at first because you’re doing something new and adapting to it, not because you’re bad at running.
You don’t need a perfect, complicated breathing technique. You also definitely don’t need to prove anything, especially in your first few weeks. Forcing unnatural breathing isn’t the way to go.
Breathing gets easier when effort matches your current fitness. Progress happens when you repeat manageable runs over time. And manageable runs are what build a lasting routine.
Running shouldn’t feel like survival. Run in a way that lets you show up again tomorrow.


