Recommended Marathon Workouts
At it’s core, training is all about the principle of adaptation. Your body adapts to the demands you place on it by growing stronger and becoming more efficient.
To train specifically for the marathon marathon, your goal should be to develop your aerobic threshold, improve your ability to burn fat as a fuel source when running at marathon pace, and increase your muscular endurance. The more you can develop and target these systems, the faster you will be able to race.
These recommended workouts are designed to address these challenges. It is 8 weeks of marathon race specific workouts you can add to your training plan based on the RunnersConnect philosophy.
Go directly to recommended workouts.
Step 1: Your Fitness Level
Use this calculator to help us assign you specific paces for your workouts. Find your most recent race result that you feel reflects your fitness level. This could be your PR or it could be a recent race after coming back from time off, etc.
In the distance dropdown, choose the distance of this recent race. In the time section,enter your race time as h:mm:ss. If you completed the race in under an hour, make sure to include a 0 for the hour. For example, a marathon time might look like: 4:25:15 while a 10k time might look like: 0:55:10.
Step 2: Recommended workouts
Now that we know your specific times for our workouts, we will get into the details of how many repeats, what distance, the rest, etc.
The plans will reference a specific pace from the chart above. For example, 3 miles at Tempo Run Pace. You’d then replace “Tempo Run Pace” with the actual pace assigned to you in the chart above.
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Beginner Workouts Click to expand
| Week |
Workout |
Details |
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| Week 8 |
Steady |
2k easy, 10k at STEADY PACE, 2k easy |
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Fast Finish |
25k long run w/kilometers 14-19 (5k) at 4:45 pace or faster |
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| Week 7 |
Alternating tempo |
3k w/u, 12k at ALTERNATING TEMPO PACE, 2k c/d |
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Cutdown run |
3k w/u, 8k cutdown at CUTDOWN PACE (each 2k), 2k c/d |
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| Week 6 |
Steady |
2k easy, 10k at STEADY PACE, 2k easy |
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Surges |
25k long w/7 x 90 sec surges SURGE PACE w/5 min easy btwn starting at 12k |
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| Week 5 |
Tempo Intervals |
3k w/u, 2 x 5k at TEMPO INTERVAL PACE w/4 min rest, 2k c/d |
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Lactate Clearance |
3k w/u, 4 x 2k at THRESHOLD INTERVAL pace w/2min quick jog (at JOG PACE) rest, 2k c/d |
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| Week 4 |
Steady |
2k easy, 10k at STEADY PACE, 2k easy |
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Fast Finish |
25k long run w/kilometers 11-19 (8k) at FAST FINISH pace or faster |
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| Week 3 |
Taper tempo |
3k w/u, 10k tempo (first 5k at MARATHON PACE, second 5k as fast as you can), 2k c/d |
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| Week 2 |
Taper MP |
3k w/u, 10k at MARATHON PACE pace, 2k c/d |
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Taper MP |
3k w/u, 2 x 5k at MARATHON PACE pace w/3 min rest, 2k c/d |
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| Week 1 |
Taper |
3k w/u, 5k at MARATHON PACE pace, 3 min rest, 4 x 1 minutes at 800 REPEAT PACE w/60 seconds rest, 2k c/d |
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A “beginner” would be anyone running less than 2-3 years, running less than 40 mpw (65km/week), or training for your first marathon. These workouts will fit comfortably into your existing weekly volume and intensity while still providing the marathon specific benefits.
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Experienced Workouts
| Week |
Workout |
Details |
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| Week 8 |
Tempo Intervals |
3k w/u, 2 x 5k at TEMPO INTERVAL PACE w/3 min rest, 2k c/d |
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Steady |
2k easy, 10k at STEADY RUN PACE, 2k easy |
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Fast Finish |
30k long run w/kilometers 23-28k (5k) at FAST FINISH pace |
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| Week 7 |
Basic Tempo |
3k w/u, 10k at TEMPO RUN pace, 2k c/d |
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Lactate Clearance |
3k w/u, 4 x 2k at THRESHOLD INTERVAL PACE pace w/2min quick jog (JOG PACE) rest, 2k c/d |
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| Week 6 |
Cutdown |
3k w/u, 8k cutdown at CUTDOWN PACE, 2k c/d |
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Steady |
2k easy, 10k at STEADY RUN PACE, 2k easy |
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Surges |
30k long w/7 x 90 sec surges at SURGE pace w/5 min easy btwn starting at 15k |
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| Week 5 |
Alternating tempo |
3k w/u, 10k at ALTERNATING TEMPO PACE, 2k c/d |
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2 x 6 mile |
3k w/u, 2 x 10k at MARATHON PACE w/10 min rest, 2k c/d |
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| Week 4 |
Tempo Intervals |
3k w/u, 3 X 3k at TEMPO INTERVAL PACE w/2 min rest, 2k c/d |
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Steady |
2k easy, 10k at STEADY RUN PACE, 2k easy |
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Fast Finish |
35k long run w/kilometers 22-30 (8k) at FAST FINISH or faster |
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| Week 3 |
Taper tempo |
3k w/u, 10k tempo (first 5k at MARATHON PACE, second 5k as fast as you can), 2k c/d |
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| Week 2 |
Taper MP |
3k w/u, 10k at MARATHON PACE pace w/3 min rest, 2k c/d |
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Taper MP |
3k w/u, 2 x 5k at MARATHON PACE pace w/3 min rest, 2k c/d |
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| Week 1 |
Taper |
3k w/u, 5k at MARATHON PACE, 3 min rest, 4 x 1 minutes at 800 REPEAT PACE w/60 seconds rest, 2k c/d |
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A “experienced runner” would be anyone running more than two years who is also running more than 40-45 miles per week (65-70km/week). You would not use these workouts for your first marathon unless you are over 55 miles per week (85-90km) These workouts will help you take your marathon training to the next level.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Which days should I do my workouts?
On the days you normally perform your workouts. Long runs are typically Saturday or Sunday. You should have at least 1 easy mileage or off day between workouts (unless it’s a steady/long run combination).
The goal of these recommended workouts is not to provide you with a full training plan, but allow you to apply race specific and physiologically optimal workouts to your training plan.
We designed it to help all the runners who emailed us looking for specific workouts or help, but did not want a full training plan. Many runners prefer writing their own plans and just are looking for helpful workouts or a way to spice up their existing plan.
If you did want a full, custom training plan we have that
available for a low price here.
These recommended workouts are a great way for you to build specific workouts into a plan you know works for you.
What do I do the rest of the week?
This is where training gets very individual. However, you should be filling the rest of your weekly schedule with easy running mileage, injury prevention or strength work, cross training if you like, and a longer run if there isn’t one already specified for that week.
What if I only have one workout assigned for a week?
If you are a beginner, I would fill the remaining running days of your week with one longer run and the rest easy mileage. Easy runs will help fully develop your aerobic system and, while they don’t seem as challenging as hard workouts, are the path to long-term success.
If you are a more experienced runner, then you can add a second tempo/endurance workout to your week. You would then fill out the rest of the week with easy mileage and a long run
Can I download my plan?
Unfortunately, in order to provide you with a specific pace assignment for each run and workout we don’t have a downloadable version.
How do I get a more customized plan?
We do offer custom training plans
We take data from your previous training data, current PRs, best training days and develop a personalized training schedule that is uniquely suited for your work/life schedule, strengths and weaknesses to ensure you get the most of your running.
Your schedule includes specific runs for every day of the week. Each day has exact mileage, warm-ups, paces, and strength work.