The Nike Pegasus family – which shoe will be yours?
The Nike Pegasus has been around since 1983. It's the best-selling running shoe in the world and, according to Strava, one of the two most-worn shoes worldwide – across more than forty years and many generations. It started out as a pair of honest training shoes on the shelf. Today it has grown into a large family with sometimes very different shoes for very different purposes.
And if your foot rolls inward – meaning you overpronate – the Nike Pegasus line isn't the right choice. In that case, take a look at the Nike Structure instead.
Which Nike Pegasus suits which run?
Model
What it is
Who it's for
Surface
Nike Pegasus
Classic daily trainer with a balanced mix of ReactX and Air Zoom
Reliable all-rounder from easy long runs to tempo training
Road
Nike Pegasus Plus
Dedicated tempo trainer with a ZoomX midsole, noticeably lighter, without an Air unit
A lightweight shoe for fast sessions, intervals and tempo runs
Road
Nike Pegasus Premium
Dedicated high-stack shoe with ZoomX, ReactX and full-length Air Zoom – heavy, springy
Maximum cushioning with bounce; leans toward the Vomero but feels springier
You run half your miles on firm forest paths, gravel or light trails
Road to light trail
The DNA of the Nike Pegasus line
All Nike Pegasus models share a certain mindset: they're the honest training shoes that work great for almost every runner.
Technologically, the series has gone through several stages – from the first model in 1983 to today's ReactX generation:
1983
An Air unit in the heel only, Nike's waffle outsole and a then-revolutionary EVA foam. Mark Parker – the later Nike CEO – was part of the design team.
1995
Zoom Air arrives in the Nike Pegasus line and makes the ride noticeably more responsive.
2018
For the first time, a full-length Zoom Air unit running the entire length of the sole.
2024
ReactX foam replaces the older React material and returns around 13% more energy than its predecessor.
Through all its updates, the Nike Pegasus stays a training shoe for racking up miles – not a specialised racing shoe. The comfort and ride you get from it are right for most runners in most situations. And once you've caught the running bug, your Nike Pegasus will carry you across the finish line of your first marathon, too. Probably the reason Strava's annual report named it the most-used shoe among its 135 million users in 2024.
41 and 42 – the classic Nike Pegasus daily trainers
The Nike Pegasus 41 and 42 are direct descendants of the 1983 shoe: neutral and moderately cushioned.
The Pegasus 41 launched in 2024 and was the first to get the ReactX midsole. Air Zoom sits in the classic spots: forefoot and heel. If you know and love the Pegasus, the 41 feels like a familiar friend with a little more boost.
The Pegasus 42 arrived in April 2026. The update brought the biggest technical leap in years: instead of two separate Air Zoom elements, there's now a curved full-length Air Zoom unit beneath the entire length of the sole. Plus there's more room in the forefoot.
Pick the Pegasus 41 if …
you want to save a bit of budget.
you like the narrower fit.
you're after the familiar Pegasus character with a touch more boost.
Pick the Pegasus 42 if …
you'd enjoy a bit more toe room.
you're curious about the smoother ride of the new Air unit.
you want to give your feet a little jump for joy.
Nike Pegasus Plus – the lightweight tempo trainer
The Pegasus Plus is its own development within the Nike Pegasus family. It descends more from the earlier Pegasus Turbo. But instead of ReactX, it now packs ZoomX in the midsole – Nike's lightest and most responsive foam, otherwise found in racing shoes like the Vaporfly. There's no Air unit.
You run the Nike Pegasus Plus for tempo runs or intervals. Where the Pegasus 41 or 42 get sluggish when you pick up the pace, the Plus gives you more back. The trade-off: less cushioning for long, easy sessions, because while ZoomX has spring, it also bottoms out faster under more weight and over many miles.
+
So who's it for?
If you already have some experience, train your pace and want a lightweight shoe that doesn't weigh your legs down. You'll find more details on the Nike Pegasus Plus page.
Nike Pegasus Premium – a shoe of its own
The Pegasus Premium is the most unusual shoe in the family. Apart from the name, it doesn't have much in common with the daily-trainer Pegasus. It plays in a league once reserved for racing shoes – high-end from Nike's development lab: a ZoomX layer on top, ReactX foam below, and a full-length Air Zoom unit in between.
The Pegasus Premium has spring, but it doesn't bounce softly like a classic cushioned shoe. The Air unit gives it a noticeably responsive feel. That makes it less of a classic daily trainer and more of a shoe for steady runs at a moderate pace and well-cushioned easy sessions.
Nike Pegasus Trail 5 – off to the park
The Pegasus Trail 5 isn't a classic trail shoe for alpine terrain or muddy singletrack – its lugs are too shallow for that and it lacks a rock plate. But it's an excellent shoe for most runners heading to the park or the jogging trail in the woods. And don't worry: on the way there, the Pegasus Trail is still comfortable enough on asphalt.
The midsole uses the same ReactX technology as the Pegasus 41, plus a lugged outsole with around 3.5 millimetres of profile. If more than 30% of your typical run is on park paths or gravel, the Pegasus Trail 5 is worth considering. If you run almost exclusively on the road, stick with the Pegasus 41 or 42.
Which Nike Pegasus suits you? Three questions and you've got it.
Easy daily miles and the occasional tempo run → Pegasus 41 or 42.
Fast sessions and intervals → Pegasus Plus.
Long easy sessions with lots of cushioning → Pegasus Premium or, especially if you overpronate, the Vomero 18.
3
Where do you land on weight?
On the heavier side and lots of miles → Pegasus 41 or 42.
The Plus, with its ZoomX midsole, gives way faster under more weight.
Our favourite combo: the Pegasus 42 for long runs paired with the Pegasus Plus for speed.
Ready for your next run?
That's the Nike Pegasus family. Which shoe becomes friends with your feet depends on where and how you run. Click through the individual models to find your match.
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