Now that we’ve covered how long the marathon actually is, let’s tackle the big question I get all the time: “How the hell do I train for it?”
Look—nobody just wakes up and bangs out 26.2 miles unless they’re looking for a full-body breakdown. This distance demands respect.
But if you’ve got a plan, some grit, and a little patience, I promise it’s doable. I’ve coached tons of runners through it—and I’ve run my fair share of marathons too.
Let me break it down.
1. Start by Building a Base
Before jumping into any real “marathon training,” you need a solid running base. That means running a few times a week (I’d say minimum three) and building up your mileage slowly.
You don’t need crazy volume yet—but you should feel pretty steady running 15–20 miles total per week.
When I first got the marathon bug, I didn’t jump into some fancy plan. I spent six months just turning myself from a hobby jogger into a real runner. I remember when I first hit double digits—10 miles felt like I’d climbed Everest.
And honestly? That kind of progress is what gives you the confidence to chase 26.2.
Keep the pace easy. Don’t worry about speed. Focus on running often and staying consistent.
Think of it like laying bricks before building a house—you need a solid base or it all crumbles later.
2. Lock In a Plan (Usually 16–20 Weeks)
Once you’ve got your base down, it’s time to follow a structured training plan. Most marathon programs are about 16 to 20 weeks long—around four to five months.
This is where the real buildup happens.
I always recommend using a trusted plan. Hal Higdon has some great free ones, and if you’re brand new, the “Couch to Marathon” style plans work too.
The idea is simple: slowly increase your weekly mileage, usually peaking somewhere between 35 and 50 miles a week. More if you’re aiming for time goals. Less if you’re just trying to survive the distance.
Back when I trained for my first marathon, I printed out Hal’s Novice plan and stuck it to my wall. I’d cross off each day like a checklist.
Something about seeing “Saturday: 14 miles” made it feel more real. You’ll build up your long runs gradually—maybe 10 miles one week, 12 the next, then cut back to recover. That’s where the magic happens.
One of my coaching clients once told me, “What used to feel like the longest run of my life is now just another Tuesday.” That’s marathon training in a nutshell.
3. Respect the Long Run
The long run is the king of marathon training. This is your weekly chance to get uncomfortable and build the kind of endurance you’ll need on race day.
Most plans work you up to a max long run of 18–20 miles. That’s plenty. You don’t need to run the full 26.2 in training. On race day, adrenaline and crowd energy will carry you that final stretch.
I’ll never forget my first 15-miler. I barely slept the night before—I treated it like race day. I mapped out a route along Bali’s coast and told myself I was “just going for a sightseeing run.”
Spoiler: the last 2 miles were rough. But I got it done. Then the next week, I went longer. And longer. That’s how you build confidence.
Use these long runs to test your fueling. I learned the hard way—bonked hard around mile 17 once because I forgot to bring gels. Not fun.
Keep your long runs at an easy, conversational pace. This isn’t where you go for glory. If you have to walk, walk.
Some runners even follow the run-walk method from the start (shoutout to Jeff Galloway).
Long runs teach your body and your brain that you can go the distance. That’s everything.
4. Mix It Up – Speed, Strength, and Cross-Training
Long runs matter most, but variety will keep you balanced—and uninjured.
Your week should include a mix of easy runs, some medium ones, and maybe one “quality” session. That could be tempo runs, intervals, or fartlek (which is Swedish for “play” and basically means unstructured speed bursts). Even a few faster strides at the end of an easy run can make you feel snappier.
Personally, I love tempo runs. Holding a “comfortably hard” pace for a few miles teaches your brain to stay calm when your legs start complaining. It builds strength—and confidence.
Also: strength training. Don’t skip it. Two short sessions a week can bulletproof your body. I do squats, lunges, calf raises, planks—you don’t need fancy gym gear. Just your bodyweight is enough to build resilience.
Cross-training? Great for your off days. I’m talking cycling, swimming, yoga, hiking—anything that gets your heart rate up without pounding your joints. I’ve had weeks where a pool saved my training when my shins were cranky.
5. Recovery is Non-Negotiable
Here’s a mindset shift that took me years to learn: rest isn’t weakness. Rest is training. It’s when the gains happen.
You need at least one full rest day per week. Maybe two. That’s not optional. And sleep? That’s when the real recovery magic kicks in. Get your 7–9 hours. No debate.
Back in the day, I thought more miles = more progress. So I’d squeeze in runs on my rest days. What did that get me? Tight IT bands and burnout. Lesson learned.
I now plan “cutback weeks” every few weeks to let my body reset. I use foam rollers, yoga mats, compression socks, and, when I can afford it, a good sports massage.
Nutrition plays a big role too. After long runs, I down a smoothie with banana, berries, yogurt, and protein powder. If I don’t, I feel like a zombie for the rest of the day. And in hot places like Bali, I’m always sipping electrolytes. Hydration isn’t just for race day—it’s daily.
6. The Taper: Trust It
The last two to three weeks before your race, you’ll start cutting mileage. That’s called the taper—and yes, it feels weird. You might feel lazy or even sluggish. Don’t panic. That’s normal.
This is when your body heals, absorbs all that training, and gets fresh for race day.
I always get a little twitchy during taper week. I start noticing “phantom” aches or get worried that I’m losing fitness. But every time, race day rolls around and I feel like a beast.
Trust it. The work is done. You’re sharpening the knife, not putting it back in the drawer.
During taper, I take care of the boring stuff—check my gear, break in my shoes, plan logistics. I also visualize the race. Picture the start line. The finish. The moment you realize, “I’m actually doing this.”
Final Thoughts
No training plan is set in stone. Life gets in the way—injuries, travel, work. Miss a run? It’s not the end of the world. I once missed a full week with the flu before my first marathon. Thought it would ruin everything. It didn’t.
Marathon training is a journey. You’ll have good days and rough days. But every single mile gets you closer.
So, what’s your next step? Are you building your base? Picking a plan? Eyeing race day?
Let me know—I’d love to hear where you’re at.
You’ve got this. One step at a time.
Pacing Strategies: How to Survive 26.2 Without Getting Wrecked
Let me tell you straight: the marathon isn’t just about running—it’s about how you run it. The distance is a beast, and if you go out too fast, you’ll pay for it later. Hard.
There’s an old saying in the marathon world: “The real race starts at mile 20.” And it’s true. If you’ve managed your energy well up to that point, great—you’ve got a shot at finishing strong.
But if you’ve burned too hot too early, those last 6.2 miles will break you.
So here’s how I teach pacing to runners I coach—and how I run marathons myself:
Start Slower Than You Think
On race morning, the adrenaline is pumping. The crowd’s buzzing, you’re fresh from the taper, and suddenly you feel like Superman. Don’t fall for it.
That first mile will lie to you. Everyone feels amazing at the start. I’ve seen it a hundred times—runners shooting off like it’s a 5K.
Do yourself a favor: hold back. Think jog pace for the first few miles, even if it feels too easy. That’s the golden rule.
Ideally, aim for a negative split or even pacing—meaning you run the second half of the race as fast or faster than the first.
If your target pace is 10:30 per mile, cruise through miles 1–2 at 11:00. Settle into goal pace around mile 3 or 4. That “slow” start pays off when you’re still moving at mile 22 while others are melting down.
I learned this the hard way. During my first marathon, I got sucked into the fast pack early. Felt great… until mile 18. Then I crashed. Big time.
Next race, I made myself take it easy—what felt like a shuffle for the first 5K. People flew past me, but I kept repeating, “Run your race.” By mile 20, I was passing most of them back.
Pro tip: Ask yourself, “Am I running the first half faster than I’m willing to run the second?” If the answer is yes, slow down.
Break the Beast Into Chunks
26.2 miles is overwhelming if you think of it as one long grind. So don’t. Break it down into smaller battles.
Here’s what works for me: I run the marathon as two races—a 20-miler and a 10K. The first 20 miles are all about staying calm and controlled. The final 10K is when I dig deep.
Another way to slice it? Go by thirds:
- First 10 miles: Find your rhythm.
- Middle 10 miles: Hold steady.
- Final 6.2 miles: Throw down what’s left.
Some runners use time blocks, like “just focus on the next 30 minutes.” Others assign meaning to each mile—“Mile 4 is for my sister, Mile 5 is for Coach.”
It sounds cheesy, but in the pain cave, those little tricks matter.
A friend of mine splits her races by landmarks: halfway point, then mile 20, then “just 10K to go.” Even spectators get it—around mile 20, you’ll see signs like, “Just a 10K left. You’ve done this before!”
And that’s the truth. I’ve trained my brain to think: “You’ve run hundreds of 10Ks. One more? No big deal.”
My personal system looks like this:
- Miles 1–5: Warm-up jog.
- Miles 6–13: Lock into rhythm.
- Miles 14–20: Test begins.
- Miles 21–26.2: Victory lap… well, let’s call it that to stay positive.
It doesn’t feel like a victory lap—but labeling it that way tricks my brain into believing the finish is inevitable.
Don’t Get Cocky in the Middle Miles
Once the adrenaline wears off and you’re cruising along between miles 5 and 18, that’s when runners make sneaky mistakes. You feel good. Maybe too good. And then you start speeding up.
That “comfortable” pace? It might be lying to you again.
Here’s the danger: pushing too hard too early eats into your glycogen. That’s your body’s main fuel source during the marathon. Burn through it too fast, and you’ll meet The Wall.
I coach runners to set conservative time goals for their first marathon—and stick to them. Even if the early pace feels “too easy,” don’t speed up just yet.
It’s way better to pick it up in the final 10K than to bonk at mile 18 and have to walk it in.
Trust me, passing people at the end feels a lot better than being the one getting passed while praying for a water station.
The 20-Mile Mark: The Real Fight Begins
Ah yes, The Wall. It’s real. Around mile 20, your glycogen is tapped, your legs are toast, and every step starts to feel like a negotiation with gravity.
Avoiding it? That starts long before mile 20. It’s about pacing (see above) and fueling early and often. I recommend taking in calories—around 100–150 every 45 minutes. Start fueling before you’re starving.
Gels, chews, sports drinks… whatever your gut can handle. Hydrate consistently. Sip, don’t chug.
Even if you do everything right, mile 20 is still tough. During my first marathon, I hit the wall at mile 18. Hard. My quads locked up, I was dizzy, and I had to stop to stretch. I lost a lot of time and confidence.
The next time, I stuck to my fuel plan. Took my gels like a machine. Pacing was dialed in. Mile 20 still hurt—but this time, I was ready for it. I pushed through without stopping.
Respect the wall. Prepare for it. It’s not just physical—it’s mental warfare.
Use the Crowd. They’re There for You.
Big marathons come with one serious perk: the energy. Use it.
Soak in the cheers. High-five some kids. Read those signs (my favorite? “Pain is temporary, race results on the internet are forever.”). And if your name is on your bib, strangers will cheer for you personally. It’s awesome.
Chat with runners mid-race if it helps you stay grounded. I once had a quick convo with a guy from Texas at mile 11—we were both cruising, and that 30-second exchange gave us both a boost.
Late in the race, when the pain is peaking, even a nod from another runner who’s hurting can remind you—you’re not alone.
And if you’ve got a little gas left and see someone struggling at mile 23, toss them a line: “Come on, let’s finish this mile.” I’ve done that. I’ve also been the one who needed that nudge.
Running brings people together like nothing else.
Mantras Matter (Especially When You’re Hurting)
Every marathon has dark moments. Could be a cramp, a mental breakdown, a lonely stretch with no crowd. You’ll hit a spot where your brain says, “Why am I doing this?!”
That’s when you need your mental tools. A good mantra can pull you back from the edge.
I use:
- “This is what you trained for.”
- “You can do hard things.”
- “Pain is temporary. Pride is forever.”
One of my runners literally hums “I get knocked down, but I get up again…” from Tubthumping when things get rough. Whatever works.
I also dedicate miles to people. “Mile 22—run it for your dad. Mile 24—for every beginner who ever thought they couldn’t.” It’s weirdly effective.
You’re going to suffer. Might as well have some mental armor ready.
Adjust on the Fly. It’s Okay.
Not every marathon goes according to plan. Weather shifts. Stomach acts up. Or you realize at mile 8, “This isn’t my PR day.”
Adjust. Don’t let ego ruin your experience. Walking doesn’t mean failure. Slowing down might mean you actually finish stronger.
One time, I went into a race aiming for a PR—but the heat was brutal. By halfway, I knew it wasn’t happening. So I let go of the time goal and ran with joy. High-fived kids. Thanked volunteers. Ate an orange slice at mile 18 (best orange of my life). Finished with a smile.
Guess what? That race is still one of my favorites.
What About You?
- What’s your marathon pacing plan?
- Have you ever hit the wall?
- What mantra gets you through the tough miles?
Drop your thoughts below—I want to hear your story.
Let’s keep helping each other run smarter, suffer better, and finish proud.