The Altra Lone Peak 8 is a zero-drop trail running shoe that’s good for hiking and running across a wide range of conditions. It’s a moderately cushioned shoe with a very wide toe box so your toes can splay out and relax. The effect feels like you’re walking in bare feet with an enhanced degree of trail feel. A 25 mm stack height makes the Lone Peak 8 a fairly stable shoe and helps prevent ankle rolling. The shoes have grippy 5 mm multi-directional lugs with a rock plate and a rubber toe kick for protection, with well-draining mesh uppers that prevent sand and trail grit from entering and eating your socks.
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Specs at a Glance
- Gender: Men’s (Women’s also available)
- Wide Sizes: Wide sizes are available in certain colors – visit Altra for best selection.
- Weight: 11 oz (men’s)
- Heel Drop: 0 mm
- Heel Stack Height: 25 oz mm
- Forefoot Stack Height: 25 mm
- Midsole: Proprietary Foam
- Outsole: Proprietary Outsole w/ 5 mm Lugs
- Rock Plate: Yes
- Gaiter Trap: Yes
- Width: Regular & Wide
- Weight (pair): 1 lb 6 oz
Trail Feel
The Altra Lone Peak 8 is a moderately cushioned trail running shoe that can be used for hiking, backpacking, and trail running. The shoe’s signature feature is an oversized toe box which lets your toes splay out as if you were walking barefoot through sand. This is very different from most modern shoes, including many trail runners, which still have narrow toe boxes that restrict toe movement, putting more pressure on the balls of your feet and metatarsals, and can result in longer-term conditions like Morton’s Neuroma, which manifests itself as a tingling or burning sensation in your toes. I suffer from Morton’s, and a shoe with a huge toe box like the Lone Peak helps eliminate my symptoms.
The Lone Peak is also a zero-drop trail running shoe meaning that the heel and the toes are level and an equal distance from the ground. The idea is that this allows for a more natural and more stable foot strike, mimicking the motion of barefoot steps, resulting in a more natural and efficient stride. It also means that impacts can be spread out across the entire surface of the foot.
One of my favorite features on the Lone Peak is the gaiter trap, located on the back of the heel of the shoe. It’s a piece of velcro that makes it very simple to wear a Dirty Girl Gaiter and removes the need to glue a strip of velcro there for that purpose. It also stays affixed permanently, whereas the homegrown velcro patches I have to glue on other trail runners fall off relatively quickly.
The Lone Peak 8 isn’t as wide in the heel or as long in the toebox compared to the previous model, even in a regular width size, which is a good thing as far as I’m concerned. The previous model tended to buckle and crease at the base of the toe box which I found annoying: it doesn’t do that anymore in version 8 of the shoe. The slightly smaller and shorter toebox also makes the Lone Peak 8 less sloppy on uphill climbs or scrambling across rocky terrain.
If it still feels too wide for you there are plenty of lace holes on the shoe to tighten the fit. If you still prefer a narrower fit, particularly in the heel, the Altra Superior will be a better choice.
Stability
The Lone Peak is very stable, in part because it’s a zero-drop shoe where your forefoot and heel are at the same height. With its 25 mm stack height, which is pretty average for a trail runner, it’s less prone to ankle rolling because you’re pretty close to the ground. That and the enhanced proprioception you get from walking with spayed toes make it much easier to sense changing trail conditions and terrain so you can adapt your stride accordingly.
Protection
As a trail runner, it is important to have a shoe that is going to protect the bottoms of your feet from what lies underfoot, but also have a breathable upper that allows your feet to ventilate while also keeping out particulates of mud, sand, and grit that will wreak havoc on your socks.
The Lone Peak 8 does both. The finely pored breathable mesh of the upper does a good job of keeping your feet cool while preventing coarse sand and grit from entering the shoe. Drainage is also excellent for those times, especially in spring, when you can’t avoid giant mud pits or high stream crossings. This is a big deal since many trail runners with large-pored mesh uppers fail miserably on this dimension, especially in sandy desert terrain.
The Lone Peak 8 has a rock plate (Altra calls it a Stone Guard), which is a must-have for hiking on more technical rocky trails. It’s embedded between the outsole and the midsole of the shoe for underfoot protection and helps protect the soles of your feet from being bruised by any of the sharp rocks and stones that you may walk over.
There’s also a well-padded rubber toe kick in front of the toes, slightly off-center and positioned in front of the big toe, although I wish it extended further down the sides of the toe box for more protection. While there is a soft rubber rand that runs along the outside of the toe box, it doesn’t cushion impacts as much as protect the mesh upper from abrasion.
Traction
The Lone Peak 8 has multi-directional 5 mm lugs, that provide a good grip on trails and rock. The key to their success is how soft the rubber is. This soft rubber is key to providing traction, particularly on wet surfaces, similar to the softer rubber used in snow and all-weather car tires. However, be forewarned that the soles tend to wear out fairly quickly, somewhere between 250-400 miles, especially if you hike or run in rocky terrain. While Altra soles provide adequate traction on wet rock, shoes made by a climbing shoe company like La Sportiva perform much better in such conditions, although the mileage you get out of them will also be comparable.
The Lone Peaks lugs are deliberately arranged on the bottom of the sole and sized and oriented for different functions. For example, the lugs under the metatarsals at the ball of the foot are the largest and designed to provide traction when running or climbing on steep terrain. The lugs toward the rear of the shoe are oriented in the opposite direction to enhance braking and widely spaced to enhance drainage, while there are reinforced areas under the big toe and on the outside of the heel to make the sole last longer.
Interspersed in and among the lugs are drain holes to shed water if the shoes get soaked, for example, in a stream crossing. The drains are fed by a circular hole cut into the footbed under the ball of the foot and below the insole that comes with the shoe. While most of the water that gets into the shoe drains through the mesh upper, some does make it under the insole and through this drainage port. Good drainage in a trail runner is a must-have if you hike in a wet climate with a lot of stream crossings.
Recommendation
Altra Lone Peak 8 Trail Runners are a good choice if you are someone who is looking for a trail shoe that provides a lot of ground feel, a moderate degree of protection, and a moderate cushion. They have a large toe box that lets your toes splay out and relax with aggressive lugs underfoot that are positioned and oriented to provide enhanced traction and braking. This new version is true to size, which is another difference from the previous very which tended to run a bit wide and long. If you want a narrower fit we recommend that you try the Altra Superior 6 trail runner instead.
While zero-drop shoes like the Lone Peak do promote a more “natural” stride like that of walking barefoot, they put a lot more stress on your lower legs and feet than shoes where the heels are higher than the toes. You’re best off transitioning to the Lone Peaks or other zero-drop shoes over a period of 4-6 weeks to stretch and strengthen your feet and calves before running off to hike in them on a long-distance thru-hike or a high-mileage day hike.
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Great review. I have the LP 6 and 7 and they are great shoes. Very comfortable stable and grippy but as Phil says the soles wear down quickly. I’ve retired my LP 6s from trail use but they still have plenty of life left for casual situations and they are so light and flexible that they make great travel shoes and pack easily into a suitcase or backpack.
have been wearing LP starting with the 2.5’s. They go from backpacking/hiking to casual to garden to art. Cant say enough good things about them.
Have to say I love wearing these on mild to moderate trails…comfy and simply feel good for your toes! That said, as you noted the tread wears out relatively soon as does the shoe overall. When they wear out they become more of my ‘kick around’ shoe or even a water shoe. My favorite trail shoe for traction (even in packed snow) is the Salomon Speedcross..effectively a light hiking boot in a trail shoe. Great traction overall, even on harder routes, but not quite as comfy as these for me.
I’ll be the lone critic. The Lone Peak and Olympus shoes gave me a wicked case of plantar fasciitis. Compared to the Hoka Speedgoats, these shoes have much less cushioning, with flimsy construction considering the exorbitant price. More “ground feel” does not always lend to durability and long term comfort. Just my $0.02 from experience.
The Hokas have a drop from heel to toe. The Altras do not. That’s probably what causing your discomfort.
Great Review question are they Breathable some of the old models had vents to let the water out which was great not sure if these help to get the water out and dry fast which I’m looking for.
The fabric has many tiny holes which make them very breathable and drain water very quickly. There is also a hole under the footbed and vents in the sole, but they’re more cosmetic than effective.
I love your blog. I am curious about this particular section of your review: “The previous model tended to buckle and crease at the base of the toe box which I found annoying: it doesn’t do that anymore in version 8 of the shoe. The slightly smaller and shorter toebox also makes the Lone Peak 8 less sloppy on uphill climbs or scrambling across rocky terrain.”
Just curious because Altra customer service said the outsole has not changed. What makes the forefoot more supportive / rigid, in your opinion? I’d love to stay in Altras but my 1st metatarsal is shorter than average, requiring my other toes to work harder to pick up the slack, and so my coach and podiatrist have been suggesting I wear shoes with a more supportive / rigid forefoot.
Thanks!
Just what I said. The sizing has changed enough, primarily in length, that it doesn’t crease at the base of the toe box anymore. Yes, the outsole hasn’t changed. But the sizing is more true to size than previously.