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Sub 3:30 Marathon Plan: 16 Weeks

The complete plan to break 3 hours 30 minutes in the marathon. Pacing, key workouts and race strategy for intermediate runners.

Training · March 15, 2026 · 12 min read
In this article
  • Prerequisites
  • Your Training Paces
  • The 4 Key Weekly Workouts
  • 16-Week Plan Overview
  • Race Day Strategy
  • Nutrition & Fueling
  • Mistakes to Avoid

Prerequisites

Breaking 3:30 in the marathon is not for everyone, but you don't need to be an elite athlete either. If you meet these benchmarks, this plan is for you:

  • Half marathon under 1:40 — This proves you have the aerobic base required.
  • 10K under 45 minutes — Indicates your cruising speed is sufficient.
  • 50+ km per week for the last 2-3 months — Your body needs to be adapted to the volume.
  • At least one completed marathon — Not mandatory, but experience with the distance helps enormously.

If you don't meet these benchmarks yet, work first with our half marathon training plan and come back when you have the base.

Runner training on a road at sunrise

Your Training Paces

For a sub 3:30 marathon (target pace: 4:58/km / 8:00/mile), these are the paces you'll work with during the 16 weeks:

  • Easy run (Z2): 5:40-6:10/km — 70-80% of your weekly volume. You should be able to hold a conversation.
  • Moderate run: 5:15-5:30/km — Slightly faster than easy, for moderate volume days.
  • Tempo/Threshold: 4:40-4:50/km — Sustained effort pace. Can speak in short phrases.
  • Intervals (VO2max): 4:15-4:30/km — 800m-1600m intervals with active recovery.
  • Marathon pace (MP): 4:55-5:00/km — The pace you'll race at. Should feel comfortable in 10-15 km blocks.

To control these paces precisely, a GPS running watch is essential at this level.

The 4 Key Weekly Workouts

Each week of the plan revolves around 4 sessions you cannot skip:

1. Long Run (Sunday)

The most important session. Starts at 22 km and builds to 32-34 km in peak weeks. Pace should be easy (5:40-6:00/km), except for long runs with marathon pace blocks.

2. Intervals (Tuesday or Wednesday)

Develop your VO2max and running efficiency. Examples: 6x1000m at 4:20/km with 2 min recovery, or 10x800m at 4:15/km with 90s jog.

3. Tempo/Threshold (Thursday or Friday)

Improve your ability to sustain effort. From 20 min continuous at threshold pace to 2x5 km at 4:45/km with 3 min recovery.

4. Moderate Run with Progression (Saturday)

45-60 min starting easy and finishing the last 10-15 min at marathon pace. Teaches your body to run fast on tired legs.

Golden rule: The 4 key sessions are non-negotiable. Days in between are easy runs or rest. If you need to sacrifice something, sacrifice easy volume, never the quality sessions.

16-Week Plan (Phase Summary)

Phase 1: Base Building (Weeks 1-4) — 50-60 km/week

Typical Week (Phase 1)
MonRest or cross-training
Tue8 km with 6x400m at 4:20 (90s rec)
WedEasy run 10 km
Thu10 km with 20 min tempo at 4:50
FriEasy run 8 km
Sat10 km progressive (last 3 km at MP)
SunLong run 22-24 km easy

Phase 2: Development (Weeks 5-10) — 60-75 km/week

Typical Week (Phase 2)
MonRest or 30 min easy
Tue12 km with 8x1000m at 4:25 (2 min rec)
WedEasy run 12 km
Thu12 km with 2x4 km tempo at 4:45 (3 min rec)
FriEasy run 8 km
Sat12 km progressive (last 5 km at MP)
SunLong run 26-30 km (with 10 km at MP)
Group of runners training together in a park

Phase 3: Race-Specific (Weeks 11-13) — 70-80 km/week

Typical Week (Phase 3)
MonRest
Tue14 km with 5x1600m at 4:20 (2:30 rec)
WedEasy run 12 km
Thu14 km with 30 min continuous threshold
FriEasy run 10 km
Sat12 km with last 6 km at MP
SunLong run 32-34 km (with 15 km at MP)

Phase 4: Taper (Weeks 14-16) — 55→35 km/week

Week 14 (recovery)
MonRest
Tue10 km with 4x1000m at 4:25
WedEasy run 8 km
Thu8 km with 15 min tempo
FriEasy run 6 km
Sat8 km easy progressive
SunLong run 22 km easy
Week 16 (race week)
MonRest
Tue6 km with 4x200m progressive
WedEasy run 5 km
Thu4 km easy + 4x100m at MP
FriComplete rest
SatJog 20 min + stretches
SunMARATHON DAY! Goal: sub 3:30
Recovery weeks: Weeks 4, 7, 10 and 14-16 are recovery weeks. Reduce volume by 30% but maintain the intensity of key sessions (fewer reps, same pace).

Race Day Strategy

A sub 3:30 marathon is won or lost in the first 15 km. The negative split strategy (faster second half) is the most effective:

  • Km 1-10: Start at 5:00-5:05/km. It will feel easy, and that's exactly the point. Control your ego.
  • Km 10-21: Settle into 4:58-5:00/km. Now you're at your target pace.
  • Km 21-30: Hold 4:55-4:58/km. If feeling good, don't speed up yet. Save it for the end.
  • Km 30-35: This is where the real race starts. Maintain 4:55/km. Focus on technique.
  • Km 35-42: Give everything you have. If you were conservative, you'll pass hundreds of runners who went out too fast.

Nutrition & Fueling

At sub 3:30 pace, you need a solid nutrition strategy. Your glycogen stores won't last past km 30 without replenishment:

  • Carb loading: 3 days before, increase carbs to 8-10 g/kg body weight.
  • Pre-race breakfast: 3 hours before. Rice, white bread with jam, banana. Nothing new, everything tested in training.
  • Gels during the race: One gel every 30-40 minutes from km 8 onwards. That's 4-5 gels total.
  • Hydration: A cup of water at every aid station (every 5 km). Alternate between water and sports drink.

Essential marathon gear

Shoes: Nike Vaporfly 3 — The carbon plate makes a real difference in the marathon.

GPS Watch: Garmin Forerunner 265 — Advanced metrics and precise GPS to control your paces.

Belt: FlipBelt Classic — Carry gels without bouncing.

Mistakes to Avoid

  • Going out too fast: The number one mistake. If your first 5 km are under 4:50/km, you're mortgaging your race.
  • Skipping recovery weeks: Supercompensation happens during rest, not during training. Respect the recovery weeks.
  • Running long runs too fast: Long runs are about time on feet, not setting records. Only the final ones include marathon pace blocks.
  • Wearing new shoes on race day: Use your race shoes in at least 3-4 quality workouts before the marathon.
  • Ignoring injury signals: A niggle lasting more than 3 days needs attention. Better to miss a week than miss the marathon.

Train with a Group

Preparing a sub 3:30 marathon alone is tough. Those 30+ km long runs at 7 AM are much more bearable with company. On CorrerJuntos you can find runners with the same time goal and train key sessions together.

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José Márquez
José Márquez Founder of CorrerJuntos · Sub-3:30 Marathoner

Runner since 2012 and sub-3:30 marathoner. Founded CorrerJuntos with a simple idea: no runner should have to train alone.

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