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in Runners' Roundup, Running, Running Tips, Training &middot May 27, 2026

How to Structure Marathon and Half Marathon Training for Long-Term Progress

When training for long distances it’s important to balance the miles, recovery, and workouts. A well-structured training plan helps you build endurance, improve speed, stay consistent, and reduces the risk of burnout or injury. Without clear structure, it’s easy to either do too much or never progress enough to reach your goals.

Whether you are training for your first race or looking to improve your performance, understanding how to structure marathon or half marathon training is an important part of making long-term progress. The best training plans include a balance of easy runs, long runs, workouts, recovery, and cutback weeks that work together to help you adapt and get stronger.

Let’s break down how to structure marathon and half marathon training for long-term success.

Runners structuring their long distance training

The Importance of Long-Term Training Structure

If you are following a periodized training plan, then your season is planned out by macrocycles (your full training season), mesocycles (the training blocks within your training cycle), and microcycles (an individual week of training). Beyond this, you also need to build in recovery from a training cycle and base building if you need time to prepare for an upcoming training cycle.

It’s important to find balance in all parts of your training. There should be times that you push hard and also times that you back off. This will allow for longevity and consistent progress in running.

Start With a Strong Aerobic Base

Before working on speed it’s important to first build a strong aerobic base. This helps improve endurance and is accomplished by doing lots of easy runs and building your mileage. A strong aerobic base will set you up for success in long distance running and will be a foundation before you start adding in harder workouts.

The Key Phases of Marathon and Half Marathon Training

While the phases of a training cycle may vary, they usually follow a structure like this: base phase to build mileage and endurance, build/strength/speed phase where you work on strength and stamina, peak phase with race specific workouts, taper, and recovery post race.

How to Progress Mileage Safely

You may have heard of the 10% rule when it comes to increasing mileage. This means increasing your mileage by 10% each week. While in some cases this is a good guideline, it is nuanced and does not account for all runners and all situations.

Runners who are starting out with very low mileage can likely increase by more than 10% per week. If during week 1 you run 6 miles, a 10% increase would only get you to 6.6 miles. I’d be more likely to increase by a couple miles each week for a few weeks and then hold steady at that amount to make sure the runner is adapting well.

For runners doing very high mileage, a 10% increase may be excessive or unnecessary. If a high level runner does 80 miles one week, they likely do not need to do 88 miles the next week.

If you are in the 20-40 mile per week range and building towards a half or full marathon the 10% rule may be a good guideline for you. The point is to not increase your mileage too quickly and avoid huge jumps in mileage. Also, remember to take cutback weeks after building your mileage for a few weeks.

Balancing Workouts Throughout the Week

When training for a long distance race it’s important to balance your workouts appropriately. You need to consider how much weekly mileage is appropriate, how long your long run should be, and any speed workouts you want to get in. Also, there should be time build in for strength work and in some cases cross-training.

You can start by choosing the day of your long run, and then space out your speed workout (if doing one) so it is at least a few days away from your long run. Easy runs can be done before or after the long run and speed workout.

Try to avoid strength training right before a hard workout or long run, and if possible do it after (this could be in the afternoon after a speed workout or the next day after a long run or workout).

Find the best place for your rest day. This may be the day after your hardest workout, or a day that you know you will not have time to train.

The Importance of Recovery Weeks

After about 3 weeks of building mileage, take a cut back or recovery week. This is when you decrease load/mileage to recover from the hard work you have done. Look to cut your mileage by about 15-25% during a recovery week.

Adding Strength Training and Mobility Work

Strength training is very beneficial not only for runners but for overall health in general. Try to make time for it during your training. Two sessions that are about 20-30 minutes is great while training for a long distance race.

Mobility work is also important for helping your body to move well. This can be done in small increments before or after a run, or at any point throughout the week.

How to Transition Between Training Cycles

After completing a race it’s a good idea to take some recovery from hard training. This may be a week after a half marathon or 2 weeks after a full marathon. If you can give yourself a month in between training cycles that is ideal. You don’t need to rest from running the whole time, but it gives you a mental and physical break from hard training.

Common Training Mistakes That Limit Progress

If you notice that you are plateauing or not making progress in your running there are a few things to consider. Are you not giving yourself enough recovery? Are you pushing yourself in hard workouts but also balancing those with easy runs? Are you fueling enough and strength training? Do you need a break from racing long distances to focus on speed? Keep a training log so you can look back on your training and make adjustments.

Building Consistency for Long-Term Running Success

When it comes to running, consistency is key. This doesn’t mean pushing through pain or running hard every day. It’s about having a well balanced training plan and showing up most of the time. Being flexible and making adjustments will help you be successful, but constantly starting and stopping will make it hard to see progress.

Do you follow a structured training plan when running long distances?

You may also like:
How Many Races Should You Run Each Year Based on Your Goals?
Why Tempo Runs Matter and How to Add Them to Your Training.
How to Build Mental Strength Throughout Your Training Cycle

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Catrina says

    May 27, 2026 at 12:29 am

    These are great tips, Lisa!
    I am in that space between training cycles – I’ve just ran two marathons in four weeks and now I’m ready for a break. I have registered for a marathon in April 2027 in Zurich, so there’s plenty of time now to rest and recover from running!

    Reply
  2. Jenn says

    May 27, 2026 at 3:47 pm

    What a great breakdown. I have a plan in my head, but it’s nothing official. It’s some long runs and slower runs, and occasionally I’ll pop in some hills. It doesn’t always go according to plan, but it seems to serve.

    Reply
  3. Debbie says

    May 27, 2026 at 10:31 pm

    Great advice. I think that many runners forget how important recovery is.

    Reply

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