Last updated: May 2026
Most recreational marathoners don’t blow up because they’re undertrained — they blow up because they go out too fast. Pacing is the single most controllable variable in marathon performance, and getting it wrong in the first third of the race is the most common cause of a painful final 10K. This guide covers the strategies, target splits, and adjustments that give you the best chance of running your strongest possible race.
Why Pacing Matters More in the Marathon Than Any Other Distance
At shorter distances, going out slightly too fast is recoverable. At marathon distance, it is not. Here’s why:
The body stores approximately 2,000 calories of glycogen in muscles and the liver — enough to fuel roughly 18–20 miles of running at marathon effort. When you run harder than your aerobic threshold early in the race, you burn through glycogen at a disproportionately higher rate. Research shows runners who start 5–10% too fast deplete their glycogen stores approximately 30% earlier than runners who hold back.
The result is the wall — a sudden, dramatic loss of pace that typically hits between miles 18–22. By that point, no amount of effort or motivation can compensate for depleted glycogen. Proper pacing is the primary tool for delaying or preventing it.
The 10-10-10 Method
The 10-10-10 method is one of the most practical marathon pacing frameworks because it provides clear pace targets for each third of the race, rather than attempting to hold one steady pace for all 26.2 miles.
The race is divided into three segments:
- Miles 1–10 (Phase 1): Run 15–20 seconds per mile slower than goal pace. This feels deliberately conservative and should feel easy, especially with race-day adrenaline.
- Miles 11–20 (Phase 2): Run at goal pace. This is the section where fitness does its work.
- Miles 21–26.2 (Phase 3): Race to the finish. If Phase 1 was executed correctly, you will have glycogen reserves and the ability to push.
10-10-10 Target Splits by Goal Time
| Goal Time | Phase 1 Pace (mi 1–10) | Phase 2 Pace (mi 11–20) | Phase 3 Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3:00 | 7:10–7:15/mi | 6:52/mi | 6:40–6:52/mi |
| 3:30 | 8:20–8:25/mi | 8:01/mi | 7:50–8:01/mi |
| 4:00 | 9:25–9:30/mi | 9:09/mi | 8:55–9:09/mi |
| 4:30 | 10:35–10:40/mi | 10:18/mi | 10:05–10:18/mi |
| 5:00 | 11:45–11:50/mi | 11:27/mi | 11:15–11:27/mi |
Even Splits vs. Negative Splits
Even splits mean running each half at the same pace. This is the theoretical ideal and what an optimal race looks like in practice for trained athletes at their fitness ceiling.
Negative splits — running the second half slightly faster than the first — are statistically the most common pattern among finishers who achieve personal bests. A modest negative split of 1–3 minutes over the full marathon is realistic for most recreational runners when pacing is conservative early.
The key insight: even splits are the goal, but deliberately starting slightly conservative produces a negative split because the back half feels better than expected. Runners who aim for negative splits as a strategy often run their best races.
Adjusting for Course Conditions
Hills
Running hills by pace produces inconsistent effort and accelerates fatigue. Instead, pace hills by effort:
- On uphills: allow pace to slow by 10–15 seconds per mile while maintaining the same perceived effort. Fighting to hold pace on a climb is glycogen-expensive.
- On downhills: resist the urge to bank time. Running downhills aggressively damages quads through eccentric loading, which compounds badly in the final miles.
- The goal is to arrive at the top of each climb with the same energy expenditure as flat running — not faster, not slower.
Heat and Humidity
Every 5°F above 55°F adds approximately 20–30 seconds per mile to sustainable marathon pace. In races above 70°F, pre-race pace targets need to be adjusted upward (slower) before the start — not reactive adjustments after you’ve already overheated. Heat is not recoverable mid-race. Set a conservative adjusted goal at the start and hold it.
Race Day Execution
Ignore the first mile. GPS watches take time to calibrate, and crowded starts push runners through the first mile faster than intended. Use effort and heart rate, not split data, for the first 10 minutes.
Don’t chase other runners. Most runners around you in the first half are going out too fast. Their pace is not your pace.
Fuel on schedule, not on hunger. Hunger is a lagging indicator of glycogen depletion. By the time you feel the need for fuel, you are already behind. Take gels or chews at every aid station from mile 5–6 onward, whether or not you feel like you need them.
The check-in at mile 20. If you arrive at mile 20 feeling strong, the pacing worked. If you arrive at mile 20 feeling terrible, you went out too fast. The marathon is won or lost in the first half.
How to Set Your Goal Pace
Your marathon pace target should come from a recent race result at a shorter distance, not from an aspirational finish time. A realistic goal is the most reliable path to a good result — overambitious targets produce blowups, conservative targets produce negative splits and PRs.
Calculate Your Goal Marathon Pace
Enter a recent 5K, 10K, or half marathon time to get your predicted marathon finish time and per-mile pace targets.
Related Reading
Negative Split Running: What It Is and How to Train for It →