20-Week Training Plan for Your First 70.3 Triathlon (The Complete Free Guide)
By TriathleteΒ·February 2026Β·β± 20 min readΒ·Updated for 2026 season
You’ve signed up. The entry fee is paid. The date is circled. And now the question every first-time 70.3 athlete faces: how do I actually prepare for this thing?
This is the most complete free 20-week 70.3 training plan on the internet. No paywall. No “premium access” required. Every single workout, every recovery week, every brick session β laid out week by week, with the nutrition, gear, pacing, and mental frameworks that most other sites either hide behind a subscription or simply don’t include.
Swim 1.2 miles. Bike 56 miles. Run 13.1 miles. Brag for the rest of your life. Let’s get you there.
20
Total training weeks
9β12
Hours per week at peak
5
Recovery weeks built in
100%
Free β no paywall
1. Plan Overview β What to Expect
This plan is built for first-time 70.3 athletes whose primary goal is to cross the finish line feeling strong β not just survive it. It follows a proven periodization structure used by professional coaches:
Weeks 1β8: Base Phase β Build aerobic capacity, technique, and injury resilience
Weeks 9β14: Build Phase β Increase intensity with threshold and race-pace training
Weeks 15β18: Peak Phase β Race-specific long efforts and brick sessions
Training volume starts at roughly 5β6 hours per week and peaks at 9β12 hours in weeks 15β17. Every 4th week is a recovery week with reduced volume. Two optional tune-up races are scheduled β a sprint triathlon around Week 10 and an Olympic distance around Week 14.
Important: This plan is a framework, not a rigid script. Life happens. If you miss a session, don’t try to make it up. If you miss an entire week, resume where you left off. Consistency over months matters infinitely more than any single workout.
2. Are You Ready? Prerequisites Checklist
Before starting this plan, you should be able to comfortably check these boxes. If you can’t, spend 4β6 weeks building up to them first.
π Swim
Swim 400m continuously without stopping
Comfortable in open water (or willing to train there)
Basic freestyle technique in place
π΄ Bike
Comfortably ride 30+ miles outdoors
Able to ride 2+ hours without major discomfort
Bike fit completed or scheduled
π Run
Run 30 minutes continuously
Long run of 5+ miles in recent weeks
No current running injuries
π Schedule
6β8 hours per week available in early weeks
Weekend mornings free for long sessions
Race date 20+ weeks away
3. Training Zones β What the Labels Mean
Every session in this plan is assigned an intensity zone. Heart rate zones are the most reliable method β get a chest strap if possible. RPE (Rate of Perceived Exertion on a 1β10 scale) works if you don’t have a HR monitor.
Z1
Recovery
Very easy. Conversational. RPE 2β3. <65% max HR.
Z2
Aerobic
Comfortable. Full sentences. RPE 4β5. 65β75% max HR.
Z3
Tempo
Comfortably hard. Short sentences. RPE 6β7. 75β85%.
Z4
Threshold
Hard. 1β2 words only. RPE 7β8. 85β92% max HR.
Z5
VOβ Max
Very hard. Can’t speak. RPE 9β10. >92% max HR.
Your 70.3 race pace will be approximately Zone 3 on the bike and Zone 3β4 on the run. At least 80% of your total training volume should be at Zone 1β2. This is the evidence-backed “80/20 rule” used by the world’s best endurance coaches.
Base Phase
Weeks 1β8 β Building Your Engine
Focus: Aerobic base, technique, durability. Low intensity, rising volume. Every 4th week is a recovery week.
The base phase is where most athletes go wrong β they train too hard, too soon. Resist the urge. These 8 weeks are about building the aerobic infrastructure that everything else sits on. Zone 2 should feel almost embarrassingly easy. That’s correct.
Week 1Foundation β Getting Your Legs Under You~5h 30min
Mon
RestFull rest. Monday is always your recovery anchor throughout this plan.
Tue
π Swim 1,500mWU 300m easy Β· MS: 8Γ100m Z2 (15s rest) Β· CD 300m easyπ Run 30min Z2Easy aerobic pace. Focus on relaxed form. Don’t check your pace β go by feel.
Wed
π΄ Bike 45min Z2Steady aerobic effort on the trainer or road. Target cadence 85β95rpm. Keep HR solidly in Z2.
Thu
π Swim 1,200mWU 200m Β· MS: 6Γ100m alternating drill + swim (20s rest) Β· CD 200mπ Run 25min Z2Shake-out run. Legs may feel heavy from Tuesday. That’s normal β keep it easy.
Fri
Rest or light stretchingPrepare mentally and physically for Saturday’s longer ride. Hydrate well tonight.
Sat
π΄ Long Ride 1h15min Z2Steady aerobic ride. Keep HR in Z2 throughout. Practice taking on nutrition every 45min β this is a habit you’re building for race day.
Sun
π Long Run 45min Z2Easy pace. This should feel comfortable. No ego today β the purpose is time on feet, not speed.
Swim
~3,500m
Bike
~2h
Run
~1h 40min
Week 2Adding Brick Work β Your First Bike-Run Combo~6h
Mon
Rest
Tue
π Swim 1,700mWU 300m Β· MS: 10Γ100m Z2 (15s rest) Β· CD 400m easyπ Run 30min Z2Steady aerobic run. Start your warm-up walk for 2 minutes before your run.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h Z2 with Tempo TouchesWU 15min Z2 Β· Include 3Γ5min at Z3 (tempo) with 5min Z2 recovery between Β· CD 15min Z2. This is your first taste of intensity β keep the effort honest but controlled.
Thu
π Swim 1,500mTechnique focus: catch-up drill, fingertip drag, high-elbow catch. No rush.π Run 30min Z2Easy aerobic run. Notice how your body responds to back-to-back swim and run.
Fri
Rest
Sat
π₯ Brick: Bike 1h15 + Run 15minBike at Z2 throughout. The moment you dismount, rack your bike and immediately start running for 15 minutes at Z2. The goal isn’t pace β it’s learning what your legs feel like after cycling. Practice T2: rack bike, swap shoes, go. This sensation is called “brick legs” and it fades with training.
Sun
π Long Run 50min Z2Easy and conversational. Focus on smooth, relaxed running mechanics.
π Swim 2,000mWU 400m Β· MS: 5Γ200m Z2 (20s rest) + 5Γ100m Z3 (20s rest) Β· CD 300m. First time mixing Z2 and Z3 in the pool β Z3 should feel like purposeful effort, not maximal.π Run 35min Z2Easy run. Don’t let the swim fatigue push your run harder β stay in Zone 2.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h15 Z2Steady aerobic ride. Focus on smooth pedal stroke and consistent cadence throughout. Drink every 20 minutes.
Thu
π Swim 1,700m β Open Water if PossibleIf you have access to open water, use it. Practice sighting every 6 strokes: lift your head, spot a landmark, return your face to the water. In a pool: sighting drill β swim 4 strokes then head-up sight, repeat.π Run 35min Z2
Fri
Rest or 20min easy walkLight movement is fine. Stay off your feet for any long periods today.
Sat
π΄ Long Ride 2h Z2Your longest ride to date. This is a milestone. Fuel every 45 minutes β eat before you feel hungry. Bring more water than you think you need. If you start to feel empty, that’s too late. Practice your race day nutrition strategy today.
Sun
π Long Run 1h Z2Keep it genuinely easy β the purpose is time on feet off accumulated weekly fatigue. Walk 60 seconds every 15 minutes if needed.
Full RestDo nothing. You’ve earned it. Your body is adapting right now.
Tue
π Swim 1,500m Z1 EasyAll easy. Technique only. No intensity. Think of it as active recovery β you’re flushing the legs, not building fitness.
Wed
π΄ Bike 45min Z1βZ2Spin easy. Just turn the legs and enjoy it.π Run 25min Z1Very easy jog. If you feel the urge to push, resist it. Recovery weeks only work if you actually recover.
Thu
Rest or Light Yoga / StretchingHip flexors, hamstrings, shoulders. 20β30 minutes of intentional mobility work.
Fri
π Swim 1,200m Easy Z1Short and easy. Focus on feel for the water.
Sat
π΄ Ride 1h15 Z2Easy aerobic ride. No intensity. Enjoy the scenery.
Sun
π Run 40min Z1βZ2Easy, relaxed run. By the end of this week you should feel fresher than Week 3. That’s the adaptation working.
Swim
~2,700m
Bike
~2h
Run
~1h 5min
Week 5Back to Business β Open Water & First Real Brick~7h
Mon
Rest
Tue
π Swim 1,900mWU 400m Β· MS: 5Γ200m Z2 (20s rest) + 4Γ100m Z3 (15s rest) Β· CD 300m. Notice how your body feels back at normal training load after the recovery week.π Run 30min Z2Steady aerobic run. You should feel noticeably fresher than at the end of Week 3.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h15 with Tempo IntervalsWU 15min Z2 Β· MS: 3Γ8min at Z3 (5min Z2 recovery between) Β· CD 15min Z2. Your first proper tempo bike session β the Z3 efforts should feel purposeful but controlled, like you could hold this for 20 minutes if you had to.
Thu
π Swim 1,700m β Open Water RecommendedIf you have a lake, reservoir, or ocean nearby β use it today. Practice without lane lines. Sight every 6β8 strokes to a fixed landmark. Swim with a buddy for safety. If pool only: do sighting drills every 4th length.π Run 30min Z2
Fri
Rest
Sat
π΄ Long Ride 2h15min Z2Steady aerobic ride. This is your longest ride yet β 15 minutes longer than Week 3’s long effort. The goal remains Z2 throughout. Fuel every 40β45 minutes. If you have a cycling computer, check your average HR at the end to confirm you stayed in zone.
Sun
π Long Run 1h10min Z2Easy. Walk 60 seconds every 15 minutes if needed. These long Sunday runs off Saturday’s long ride train your legs to handle the cumulative fatigue of a full race day.
π Swim 2,000mWU 400m Β· MS: 6Γ200m at Z2βZ3 alternating (20s rest) Β· CD 400m. The alternating pace teaches your body to shift gears β useful for open water racing.π Tempo Run 35minWU 10min Z2 Β· MS: 15min at comfortable Z3 Β· CD 10min Z2. First proper tempo run of the plan. Keep the tempo section conversational-hard β you shouldn’t be able to speak in full sentences, but you’re not sprinting.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h15 β Tempo IntervalsWU 15min Z2 Β· MS: 3Γ10min Z3 (7min Z2 recovery between) Β· CD 15min Z2. Slightly longer tempo intervals than last week β you should feel the fitness improvement from your base work.
Thu
π Swim 1,800mMixed pace: WU 300m Β· 4Γ150m at tempo Z3 (20s rest) Β· 4Γ100m easy Z2 (15s rest) Β· CD 300mπ Run 30min Z2Easy recovery run. Shake out the legs after Wednesday’s bike.
Fri
Rest
Sat
π₯ Brick: Bike 1h45 + Run 20minBike at Z2 throughout the 1h45. The moment you finish, transition immediately and run 20 minutes at Z2βZ3. Your brick legs will feel more familiar now than Week 2. Time your T2 transition β you’re building race-day habits. Fuel during the bike exactly as you plan to on race day.
Sun
π Long Run 1h20min Z2Easy run off Saturday’s brick. Some leg fatigue is expected β that’s training. If it feels too heavy, take 2 minutes walking every 10 minutes of running.
Swim
~6,000m
Bike
~3h 30min
Run
~2h 45min
Week 7Peak Base Week β Your Longest Base Efforts~8h 30min
Mon
Rest
Tue
π Swim 2,200mWU 400m Β· MS: 3Γ400m Z2 (30s rest) + 4Γ100m Z3 (15s rest) Β· CD 400m. The 400m efforts at Z2 build your open water pace β this is closer to actual race distance per effort.π Tempo Run 40minWU 10min Z2 Β· MS: 20min at comfortable Z3 (race-pace feel) Β· CD 10min Z2. You’re now doing 20 full minutes at tempo pace β this is a real workout. Stay controlled.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h30 β Sustained TempoWU 20min Z2 Β· MS: 2Γ15min Z3 (10min Z2 between) Β· CD 20min Z2. The two 15-minute tempo blocks are significant. Keep your cadence high (90+ rpm) during the tempo efforts.
Thu
π Swim 2,000m β Open Water Strongly RecommendedBy now, you should be getting comfortable sighting and swimming without lane lines. If pool: 10Γ200m alternating drill and swim at Z2.π Run 35min Z2
Fri
Rest or 25min light stretching / yogaThis is your pre-long-weekend rest. Prioritize sleep tonight β aim for 8+ hours before Saturday’s big ride.
Sat
π΄ Long Ride 2h45min Z2Your biggest ride yet. Keep your HR solidly in Z2 even on hills β if a hill pushes you to Z3, let your speed drop rather than chasing the zone. This teaches pacing discipline for race day. Fuel every 40 minutes. Drink to thirst. This session should feel manageable, not brutal.
Sun
π Long Run 1h25min Z2Easy and intentional. You’re building serious run durability now. Walk 60β90 seconds every 20 minutes if needed. Legs will be tired β that’s the point. Arriving at race day with this base underneath you is everything.
Swim
~6,500m
Bike
~4h 15min
Run
~3h
Week 8β‘ Recovery Week β Base Phase Complete~4h 45min
Mon
Full RestYou’ve completed the base phase. Your aerobic engine is built. Rest fully today.
Tue
π Swim 1,500m Easy Z1All easy. Slow, deliberate technique work. No intensity at all.
Wed
π΄ Bike 50min Z1βZ2Easy spin. No intervals, no intensity. Just move.π Run 25min Z1Very easy jog. Almost walking pace is fine.
Thu
Rest or YogaFocus on hip flexors, thoracic spine, and ankle mobility β all areas that tighten up from triathlon training.
Fri
π Swim 1,200m Easy Z1Short and easy. Just keep a feel for the water before the build phase begins.
Sat
π΄ Ride 1h20 Z2Easy aerobic ride. No intensity. You should feel fresh and ready to start the build phase next week.
Sun
π Run 40min Z1βZ2Easy, relaxed run. By now you’ve built a real base. Next week, we turn up the dial.
The build phase is where you stop just surviving workouts and start training to race. Threshold intervals, tempo runs, and longer brick sessions become the weekly anchor points. An optional sprint triathlon fits naturally around Week 10 as a dress rehearsal.
Week 9Build Begins β First Threshold Work~7h 30min
Mon
Rest
Tue
π Swim 2,200m β Threshold SetsWU 400m easy Β· MS: 4Γ400m at Z3 (30s rest) Β· CD 400m easy. The 400m sets at Z3 are your bread-and-butter build-phase swim sessions. Keep each rep consistent β your last rep should be as strong as your first.π Tempo Run 35minWU 10min Z2 Β· MS: 15min at Z3 Β· CD 10min Z2. Same structure as Week 6 β but you should feel stronger and more controlled at Z3 pace now.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h15 β Threshold IntervalsWU 20min Z2 Β· MS: 2Γ15min at Z3βZ4 threshold effort (10min Z2 between) Β· CD 20min Z2. These are harder than your base phase tempo intervals β you should feel like you’re working at 80β85% of your max. Hold the effort steady, don’t fade in the second half.
Thu
π Swim 2,000m Mixed PaceWU 300m Β· MS: 6Γ200m (alternating Z2 and Z3 every rep, 20s rest) Β· 4Γ50m fast (15s rest) Β· CD 300mπ Easy Run 30min Z2Flush the legs from Wednesday. Stay easy β the quality comes Tuesday.
Fri
Rest or 20min yoga
Sat
π₯ Long Brick: Bike 2h30 + Run 25minBike Z2 for 2h30, making the final 30 minutes at race-pace Z3 effort. Immediately transition and run 25 minutes at Z3βZ4 (race run pace). This is your first real race-simulation effort. Use exactly the nutrition you plan to use on race day. Time your T2. Practice grabbing your race belt while walking.
Sun
π Long Run 1h15 Z2Easy recovery run from yesterday. Running off accumulated fatigue is race-specific training β this is exactly what your legs will feel like at mile 3 of your half marathon after the bike. Embrace it.
π Swim 1,800m β Easy to ModerateWU 400m Β· MS: 4Γ200m Z2 (20s rest) + 4Γ50m strong (15s rest) Β· CD 400m. Short race-prep swim β the sprints wake up your fast-twitch without accumulating fatigue.π Run 30min Z2
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h β Easy with Race-Pace SurgesWU 20min Z2 Β· 4Γ5min at Z3 race pace (5min Z2 between) Β· CD 20min Z2. Keep the legs sharp without accumulating fatigue before the weekend race.
Thu
π Swim 1,200m Very EasyJust loosen up. Optional.π Run 20min Easy Z1Shakeout. Keep it light β nothing that creates fatigue.
Fri
Rest β Race Registration & LogisticsCollect your race kit. Rack your bike if pre-race racking is required. Set up your transition area mentally. Pack your transition bag the night before. Eat a solid, familiar dinner β nothing new.
Sat
π Sprint Triathlon β Race HardTreat this as a quality training day in race conditions, not an A-race. Push the swim and bike hard. Race the run at full effort. Learn: your open water start, how to navigate T1 and T2, what fueling feels like at race pace, how your kit performs. Every sprint triathlon you do makes your 70.3 less intimidating.
Sun
π΄ Easy Ride 1h Z1βZ2Active recovery from race day. Flush the legs. Reflect on what you learned β transition efficiency, pacing, nutrition. These are lessons for your 70.3.π Easy Run 25min Z1
π Swim 2,400m β Threshold SetsWU 500m Β· MS: 5Γ400m at Z3 (30s rest) Β· CD 400m. Five sets of 400m at threshold pace is a serious pool session. Aim for consistent splits across all five reps.π Tempo Run 40minWU 10min Z2 Β· MS: 20min at Z3 (race pace feel) Β· CD 10min Z2. Your tempo blocks are getting longer β this is good.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h30 β Two Threshold BlocksWU 20min Z2 Β· MS: 2Γ20min at Z3βZ4 threshold (10min Z2 between) Β· CD 20min Z2. Two 20-minute threshold efforts is a landmark bike session. Don’t go too hard in the first rep β your second rep should be equal in pace or stronger than your first.
Thu
π Swim 2,000m MixedWU 400m Β· MS: 8Γ200m (alternating drills Z1 and hard Z3 each set, 20s rest) Β· CD 400mπ Easy Run 35min Z2
Fri
πͺ Core & Strength 30minGlute bridges, single-leg deadlifts, planks, hip flexor stretching, shoulder stability work. Triathlon-specific strength β no heavy lifting.
Sat
π₯ Long Brick: Bike 3h + Run 30minBike at Z2 for first 2h, then Z3 for final 1h. Immediately transition and run 30 minutes at Z3 (race run pace). This is your biggest training effort yet. Your nutrition protocol needs to be dialed in: gel or bar every 30 minutes on the bike, drink every 20 minutes, take a gel in T2 before the run. This is also when you identify any kit discomfort β chafing, saddle issues β so you have time to fix it before race day.
Sun
π Long Run 1h30 Z2Easy. Your legs will be heavy after Saturday’s brick. Walk breaks are not weakness β they are smart pacing. These Sunday runs are the engine room of your run fitness off the bike.
Swim
~7,000m
Bike
~4h 30min
Run
~3h 15min
Week 12β‘ Recovery Week β Midway Through the Plan~5h
Mon
Full RestYou are halfway through your 70.3 journey. Rest fully and reflect on how far your fitness has come since Week 1.
Tue
π Swim 1,500m Easy Z1All easy. Focus on long, smooth strokes. No intensity.π Run 25min Very Easy Z1
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h Z2Easy aerobic spin. Absolutely no intensity. Enjoy the movement.
Thu
π Swim 1,200m Easy Z1Short and restorative. Technique focus only.
Fri
Rest or Light YogaThis is the week your body goes from fatigued to fast. You will come out of this recovery week feeling noticeably stronger. Trust the process.
Sat
π΄ Bike 1h15 Z2Easy aerobic ride. No intensity. Legs should feel fresher than last week.π Run 20min Easy Z2
Sun
π Run 40min Easy Z2Easy and enjoyable. You should finish this run feeling like you could have done more β that’s exactly where you want to be heading into Week 13.
π Swim 2,800m β Race-Pace SetsWU 500m Β· MS: 3Γ600m at Z3 (45s rest) + 4Γ100m fast Z4 (20s rest) Β· CD 500m. The 600m sets are your longest sustained swim intervals in the plan. They simulate the effort of a continuous open water swim. The 100m fast efforts add speed at the end β just like a race finish.π Tempo Run 45minWU 10min Z2 Β· MS: 3Γ8min at Z3βZ4 (3min Z2 jog between) Β· CD 10min Z2. Interval format now β harder efforts with recovery between. This is race-pace training.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h45 β Three Threshold BlocksWU 20min Z2 Β· MS: 3Γ15min at Z3βZ4 threshold (8min Z2 between) Β· CD 20min Z2. Three sets of 15 minutes at threshold is your most demanding bike session yet. The third set will be hard β that’s the adaptation stimulus. Stay consistent β don’t fade on the last set.
Thu
π Swim 2,200m β Open WaterOpen water session β practice drafting behind another swimmer, mass-start positioning, and sustained effort without walls to push off. These skills are worth minutes on race day.π Easy Run 35min Z2
Fri
πͺ Core & Strength 30minSame routine as Week 11. Consistency in strength work builds the injury resilience to survive your biggest training weeks ahead.
Sat
π₯ Long Brick: Bike 3h15 + Run 35minBike: Z2 for 2h, Z3 for 1h, Z3βZ4 for final 15 minutes. Immediate transition and run 35 minutes at Z3 race pace. This is your most race-specific session to date. Your legs will feel the full weight of 13 weeks of training β and they should still carry you through. Use exactly your planned race nutrition. Practice the run mental game: when it gets hard at minute 20, remind yourself this is the dark patch, and it passes.
Sun
π Long Run 1h40 Z2Easy. The longest Sunday run in this plan. Your longest long run is not about pace β it’s about time on feet and building the mental fortitude to keep moving when your body says it’s done. Walk breaks are part of the protocol today.
π Swim 1,800m β Easy with Race-Prep EffortsWU 400m Β· MS: 4Γ200m Z2 (20s rest) + 4Γ50m strong (15s rest) Β· CD 400m. Keep the body sharp without accumulating fatigue before the weekend race.π Run 30min Easy Z2
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h β Easy with Race-Pace FeelsWU 20min Β· 3Γ5min at race pace Z3 (5min Z2 between) Β· CD 20min. Light pre-race sharpener β just enough to remind your legs what fast feels like.
Thu
π Swim 1,000m Very EasyShakeout. 15 minutes of easy swimming β no effort.π Run 20min Easy Z1
Fri
Rest β Race Eve PreparationLay out all race gear. Prepare transition bag. Eat your practiced pre-race dinner. Set alarms. Visualize your race start, transitions, and how you’ll feel in the final stretch of the run.
Sat
π Olympic Triathlon β Race at Full EffortThis is your most important training event before race day. Race it hard and race it smart. Practice every element of your 70.3 race-day strategy: pre-race breakfast, warm-up routine, T1 and T2 mechanics, nutrition timing on the bike, run pacing, mental management. Analyze what worked and what needs to change for your 70.3.
Sun
π΄ Easy Ride 1h Z1Active recovery. Gentle spin to flush race-day legs.π Easy Run 20min Z1Very easy. This week’s job is done β you’ve just completed your most race-specific training week yet.
Swim
~2,800m + race
Bike
~2h + race
Run
~1h 10min + race
Peak Phase
Weeks 15β18 β Your Biggest Training Weeks
Focus: Race-distance simulation, confidence-building, peak fitness. This is where the race is won in training.
This is the block that separates confident finishers from survivors. Your longest swims, rides, and runs happen here. The brick sessions reach race-distance proportions. Week 16 is a critical recovery week β do not skip it or reduce it further.
π Swim 3,000m β Race-Pace Sustained EffortsWU 600m Β· MS: 3Γ600m at Z3 race pace (45s rest) + 6Γ50m sprint Z4 (20s rest) Β· CD 600m. The 600m sets are your race-simulation engine. Focus on pacing them evenly β don’t go out fast. Your sprints at the end build finishing speed.π Tempo Run 45minWU 10min Z2 Β· MS: 25min at Z3 race pace Β· CD 10min Z2. Twenty-five continuous minutes at race pace. This is the longest tempo block of the plan.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h30 β Race Pace BlocksWU 20min Z2 Β· MS: 3Γ20min at Z3 race pace (10min Z2 between) Β· CD 20min Z2. Three 20-minute race-pace blocks simulate the sustained effort of the 70.3 bike leg. By the third block your legs will be working for it β that’s correct. Hold your pace.
Thu
π Swim 2,500m β Open WaterFull open water session. Practice the mass-start: swim hard for the first 200m as a group would, then settle. Practice drafting directly behind another swimmer. Sight aggressively. This session needs to make race-day open water feel familiar.π Easy Run 35min Z2
Fri
πͺ Strength 30min + MobilityGlutes, core, hip stability. Longer stretching today β thoracic, hip flexors, calves. Your body will thank you during the long efforts this weekend.
Sat
π₯ Race Rehearsal Brick: Bike 4h + Run 45minThis is the workout that makes you believe you can finish your 70.3. Bike 4 hours at Z2βZ3 (the same effort level you’ll use on race day). Immediately transition and run 45 minutes at race pace Z3. Wear your exact race kit. Use your exact race nutrition: gel every 30min on bike, hydrate every 20min, gel in T2 before the run. Time your transition. The goal: exit this session having executed your race-day plan flawlessly. Make notes on anything that needs adjusting.
Sun
π Long Run 1h30 Z2Easy and proud. You just survived your biggest training day of the plan. Today’s run off Saturday’s brick builds the specific race fatigue adaptation that will make mile 10 of your race manageable. Walk when you need to. Keep moving.
Swim
~8,500m
Bike
~5h 45min
Run
~3h 35min
Week 16β‘ Critical Recovery Week β Do Not Skip This~5h 30min
Mon
Full RestWeek 15 broke you down in the best possible way. Week 16 is where the adaptation happens. This is not optional rest β it is mandatory training.
Tue
π Swim 1,500m Easy Z1All easy, all technique. No intensity. Your body is rebuilding.π Run 25min Very Easy Z1
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h Easy Z2Easy aerobic spin. No intervals. No effort spikes. Just movement.
Thu
π Swim 1,200m Easy Z1Short and restorative. Focus on feel.
Fri
Rest or Gentle YogaSleep 9+ hours tonight if possible. Sleep is the most powerful recovery tool available to you. No training session is as valuable as consistent deep sleep during a recovery week.
Sat
π΄ Bike 1h30 Z2Easy aerobic ride. By today you should feel noticeably fresher than last Saturday. That’s the adaptation working. Enjoy it.π Run 20min Easy Z2
Sun
π Run 45min Easy Z2Easy and controlled. By Friday of this week you should feel fast, fresh, and hungry to train. If you don’t, sleep more and eat more. You’re about to enter your two biggest training weeks of the entire plan.
Swim
~2,700m
Bike
~2h 30min
Run
~1h 30min
Week 17Your Biggest Training Week β Everything You’ve Got~12h
Mon
Full RestThe biggest week of the plan starts tomorrow. Rest fully today. Eat well. Sleep early.
Tue
π Swim 3,200m β Race-Distance Time TrialWU 600m Β· MS: 1,900m continuous at race pace Z3 (this is your 70.3 swim distance β time it and use it as your race-day pacing reference) Β· CD 700m easy. This swim will tell you your realistic race pace. Don’t go out too fast. Negative-split it: first 950m slightly conservative, second 950m slightly stronger.π Tempo Run 50minWU 10min Β· MS: 3Γ10min at Z3βZ4 race pace (3min Z2 jog between) Β· CD 10min. Hard workout after a big swim. This is intentional β the fatigue teaches you to run when you’re already tired.
Wed
π΄ Bike 2h β Full Race-Pace SessionWU 20min Z2 Β· MS: 4Γ20min at Z3 race pace (8min Z2 between) Β· CD 20min Z2. Four 20-minute race-pace blocks. This is the single most demanding bike session in the plan. The fourth set is a test of character. Keep it together β this is your breakthrough workout.
Thu
π Swim 2,800m Open WaterOpen water session. Swim continuous efforts with sighting. Practice swimming in a pack with training partners if possible. Race conditions as close as you can create them.π Easy Run 40min Z2Easy flush run. This is your last easy day before the weekend monster session.
Fri
Rest β Eat, Sleep, PrepareFull rest. Eat high-quality carbs tonight. Lay out all gear for Saturday. Get to bed early. You are about to do the hardest training session of your life.
Sat
π₯ Race Simulation Brick: Bike 4h30 + Run 1hThis is it. Your ultimate training session. Bike 4h30 at race effort Z2βZ3 (with the last hour at sustained Z3). Immediately transition and run 1 hour at race pace Z3. Use exactly your race-day nutrition plan. Wear your exact race kit. This session will tell you if your nutrition works, if your kit chafes, if your pacing is sustainable, and how your mind handles discomfort. Pay attention to everything. You will finish this and know β with certainty β that you can complete your 70.3. That knowledge is worth more than any fitness gain.
Sun
π Long Run 1h45 Z2Your longest run. Easy, easy, easy. Walk for 2 minutes every 20 minutes if needed. This run is entirely about time on feet off the biggest brick of your life. When your legs say stop, your mind says one more step. This is your race finish training.
Swim
~9,000m
Bike
~6h 30min
Run
~4h
Week 18Final Hard Week β Begin the Wind-Down~9h 30min
Mon
Full RestAfter Week 17, full rest Monday is absolutely non-negotiable. You’ve earned it.
Tue
π Swim 2,500m β Race-Pace SetsWU 500m Β· MS: 3Γ500m at Z3 race pace (40s rest) + 4Γ100m strong Z4 (20s rest) Β· CD 500m. Volume slightly down from Week 17, quality maintained. Your swimming should feel efficient and controlled now β 18 weeks of pool and open water work is in the bank.π Tempo Run 45minWU 10min Β· MS: 2Γ10min at Z3βZ4 with 3min Z2 between Β· CD 10min. Slightly shorter than last week β still quality, beginning to wind down volume.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h30 β Race-Pace MaintainedWU 20min Z2 Β· MS: 2Γ20min at Z3 race pace (10min Z2 between) + 1Γ10min at Z3 Β· CD 20min Z2. Two long race-pace blocks plus a shorter one. Volume down, intensity sharp.
Thu
π Swim 2,000m MixedWU 400m Β· MS: 6Γ200m alternating Z2 and Z3 (20s rest) + 4Γ50m fast (15s rest) Β· CD 400mπ Easy Run 35min Z2Easy aerobic run. No pressure. Enjoy the movement.
Fri
πͺ Short Strength & Mobility 20minLight core work only. Longer stretching and rolling β this is injury prevention, not training.
Sat
π₯ Final Long Brick: Bike 3h30 + Run 45minBike 3h30 at race effort Z2βZ3, including 45 minutes at race pace in the middle. Immediate transition and run 45 minutes at race pace Z3. This is your final race simulation. Volume is slightly down from Week 17 by design β you want to go into taper feeling strong, not emptied out. Execute your nutrition plan one final time. Note any last adjustments needed.
Sun
π Long Run 1h30 Z2Easy and deliberate. This is the last long run of your training plan. The next time you run this far, it will be on race day β and you will have a crowd cheering you on. Let that sink in today.
Swim
~7,000m
Bike
~5h
Run
~3h 35min
Taper
Weeks 19β20 β Trust the Process
Volume drops 40β60%. Intensity maintained. Arrive to the start line fresh, sharp, and confident.
The hay is in the barn. The taper is not the time to add fitness β it’s the time to let the fitness you’ve built show up on race day.
β Classic endurance coaching wisdom
Week 19Taper Week 1 β Volume Down, Feel Fast~6h
Mon
Full RestThe taper begins. You may feel anxious about doing less β this is taper madness, and it is completely normal. Trust the science: your body is absorbing 18 weeks of training right now.
Tue
π Swim 2,000m β Mix of PaceWU 400m Β· MS: 4Γ300m Z2βZ3 (25s rest) + 4Γ50m fast (15s rest) Β· CD 400m. Keep some sharpness without accumulating fatigue. The fast 50s remind your fast-twitch fibers they exist.π Run 35min β Include 3Γ3min at Race PaceWU 12min Z2 Β· 3Γ3min at race pace Z3 (2min Z2 between) Β· CD 12min Z2. Short, sharp, purposeful. Keep the legs remembering what fast feels like.
Wed
π΄ Bike 1h β Include 3Γ8min at Race EffortWU 15min Β· 3Γ8min at race pace Z3 (6min Z2 between) Β· CD 15min. Short and punchy. Remind your legs what race pace feels like. Don’t add more β resist the taper anxiety urge.
Thu
π Swim 1,500m EasyEasy throughout. Technique and rhythm. This is the last meaningful swim session before race day.π Run 25min Easy Z2
Fri
Rest β Logistics & VisualizationBegin final race prep: check your kit list, confirm your equipment is race-ready, plan your drive to the venue. Spend 10 minutes visualizing your race from start to finish β swim, T1, bike, T2, run, finish line. See it clearly. Feel it.
Sat
π΄ Short Confidence Brick: Bike 1h + Run 20minBike: mostly Z2 with 15 minutes at race pace in the middle to stay sharp. Run: 10 minutes at race pace off the bike, then easy. This session should feel easy and fast β that’s the taper working. End it feeling like you could have done more. That’s exactly right.
Sun
π Easy Run 45min Z1βZ2Easy, relaxed, and deliberate. Next Sunday is race day. This run is your last chance to visualize your finish-line moment. Let yourself feel it.
Swim
~4,500m
Bike
~2h
Run
~2h 5min
Week 20π Race Week β Everything You’ve Worked ForRace Day!
Mon
π Swim 20β30min Easy Z1Very easy. Just loosen up. No intensity, no effort. Keep the body moving.
Tue
π΄ Bike 45min β 3Γ5min at Race PaceWU 15min Β· 3Γ5min at race pace Z3 (5min Z2 between) Β· CD 15min. Short and sharp. This is your final quality session of the entire training plan. Finish it feeling crisp, not tired.π Run 20min EasyEasy 20-minute shakeout run after the bike. Legs should feel sharp and bouncy.
Wed
π Swim 1,000m EasyShort and easy. Keep a feel for the water. Pack your transition bag tonight β lay out everything in order: wetsuit, goggles, bike kit, run kit, nutrition.π Run 20min Easy
Thu
Rest β Travel & Race RegistrationOptional: 15min easy spin to shake out legs if you’ve been driving. Register. Collect your race kit and timing chip. Walk your transition area if you can access it. Know where to enter from the swim, where your bike is, and which way to exit to the run.
Fri
Shake-Out β 20min EasyOptional: 300m easy swim in race water β get a feel for the temperature, the depth, the sighting landmarks. Short 10min easy jog. Walk transition. This is your last chance to familiarize yourself with the course. Eat your practiced pre-race dinner: pasta, rice, familiar carbs. No experimenting. Be in bed by 9pm.
Sat
Full Rest β Race EveSet two alarms. Lay out every piece of race equipment in the order you will need it. Double-check your transition bag against your checklist. Eat your exact race-eve dinner β you’ve practiced this. Be in bed by 9pm. You are ready. Everything you need is already inside you.
Sun
π RACE DAY β You’ve Earned Every MeterWake up 3 hours before race start. Eat your practiced breakfast immediately. Arrive at transition 90 minutes before your wave. Set up methodically. Warm up in the water if allowed. When the gun goes off: swim your pace, bike smart, earn your run. In the dark patch on the run β and it will come β remember this: you have done harder days in training. You are ready. Cross that finish line and know that you did something extraordinary.
Swim
~1,300m + race
Bike
45min + race
Run
40min + race
4. Nutrition Guide for 70.3 Training
Nutrition is the fourth discipline of triathlon and the one most athletes get wrong. Here’s what you need to know across training and racing.
Daily Training Nutrition
Phase
Carbohydrates
Protein
Key Priority
Easy training days
4β5g per kg body weight
1.6β1.8g/kg
Replenish glycogen, support recovery
Hard training days
6β8g per kg body weight
1.8β2.0g/kg
Fuel performance, maximize adaptation
Recovery weeks
3β4g per kg body weight
1.8β2.0g/kg
Higher protein to maintain muscle during low volume
Pre long workout
1β2g/kg, 2β3h before
Low fat, low fiber
Full glycogen, no GI issues
During long ride (>90min)
60β90g/hour
Not needed
Mix glucose + fructose to hit upper targets
Post workout
1g/kg within 30min
25β30g within 30min
Recovery window β don’t miss it
Race Day Nutrition Plan
Golden rule: Never try anything new on race day. Every gel, every drink, every food item used in the race must have been tested in training first. GI disasters end more races than fitness limitations.
Stage
Intake Target
Notes
Pre-race breakfast (3h before)
60β100g carbs Β· Low fat Β· Low fiber
Toast + banana + sports drink is reliable. Practiced in training.
Swim
Nothing
Stay calm. Sight every 6β8 strokes.
T1
1 gel if needed
Pre-open the wrapper. Grab your bottle.
Bike (per hour)
60β80g carbs Β· 500β750ml fluid
Start eating at 20min. Every 30min: gel/chew or bar. Drink to thirst.
T2
1 gel or cola
Quick transition. Walk 5 steps β it’s worth it.
Run (per hour)
30β45g carbs Β· 300β500ml fluid
Aid stations every mile β walk 5 steps while drinking. Gel at miles 4 and 8.
5. Essential Gear Checklist for Your First 70.3
You don’t need the most expensive gear. You need gear you’ve trained in and trust. Here’s the complete list.
6. Race Day Pacing Strategy β How Not to Blow Up
The number one mistake first-time 70.3 athletes make: going out too hard. The excitement of race day, the crowd, the adrenaline β it all conspires to make you feel faster than you are. Resist it. Every minute you bank by going too hard on the bike costs you three minutes on the run.
The Swim
Start conservatively. In a mass start, seed yourself toward the outside or back to avoid the washing machine effect. Your goal: exit the water feeling like you used 70β75% of your effort. A 2β3 minute slower swim that leaves you fresh is infinitely better than a PR swim that destroys your bike and run.
The Bike
This is where your race is won or lost. Ride at perceived Zone 3 β comfortably hard. Use your power meter or HR as a ceiling, not a floor. The first 20 miles should feel almost too easy. Miles 20β40 are your meat. Miles 40β56 you can push slightly harder if you have fuel and feel good. Never go into Zone 4 on the bike in a 70.3.
The Run
Miles 1β3: Slower than you think. Your legs will feel strange off the bike β this is normal. Miles 3β9: Find your stride and settle into Zone 3β4. Miles 9β13.1: Everything you have left. Negative-split your run and you’ve executed a perfect race.
π― Target pacing formula: Add your swim + T1 + T2 to your target bike and run times. For a 5:30 finish: ~40min swim Β· 5min transitions Β· ~2h45 bike Β· ~2h run. Build your plan from training benchmarks.
7. Mental Preparation β The Fourth Discipline
Physical fitness gets you to the start line. Mental fitness gets you to the finish line. Here are the tools that work when things get hard β and they will get hard.
Visualization
Three times per week during your final 4 weeks, spend 10 minutes with eyes closed walking through your race. Swim start. T1. Bike. T2. Run. Finish. Include the uncomfortable moments β and see yourself moving through them. Athletes who visualize consistently report higher race-day confidence and faster transitions.
Race-Day Mantras
Pick 2β3 short, personal phrases and use them in hard training sessions so they’re wired in by race day. Examples: “Strong and smooth.” “This is what I trained for.” “One mile at a time.” When your brain starts negotiating on mile 10 of the run, your mantra cuts through the noise.
The Dark Patch
Every 70.3 has a dark patch β usually miles 7β10 of the run. This is the moment the voice says “you should stop.” Know it’s coming. Name it. “That’s the dark patch.” Remind yourself it always passes. The athletes who finish are not the ones who never struggle β they’re the ones who kept moving through the struggle.
Crossing a 70.3 finish line changes you. Not because you proved something to anyone else β but because you showed yourself what’s possible when you commit and do the work.
β besttriathletes.com
8. Frequently Asked Questions
How many hours per week does this plan require?
It starts at 5β6 hours in Week 1 and peaks at 10β12 hours in Weeks 15β17. Most working athletes with families manage the base and build phases with morning sessions. The peak weeks require larger time blocks β plan your calendar 4 weeks in advance for Weeks 15β18.
What if I miss a week or get sick?
Don’t try to make up missed training. If you miss 1β3 days, resume the current week. If you miss an entire week, restart that week before moving on. If you miss 2+ weeks, drop back one phase. Fitness lost to illness returns faster than fitness lost to overtraining. When in doubt, rest.
Can I do this plan if I’ve never raced a triathlon?
Yes, but consider doing a sprint triathlon in the first 8 weeks just to experience race-day logistics. Transitions, open water swim starts, and fueling on the bike are skills that take practice. A low-stakes sprint triathlon removes unknowns from your A-race day.
Should I do a bike fit before starting this plan?
Absolutely, and as early as possible β ideally before Week 1. Spending 20 weeks in the wrong position causes overuse injuries that are entirely preventable. A proper fit also improves aerodynamics and power transfer. It is the best investment you’ll make in this race.
Do I need a power meter or heart rate monitor?
Heart rate monitor: highly recommended (chest strap, not wrist optical). Power meter: helpful but not essential. At minimum, use a cycling computer with speed. RPE (perceived effort) is surprisingly accurate once you’ve calibrated it in Zone 2 training over several weeks.
What pace should I swim, bike, and run in my 70.3?
Base your pacing off training benchmarks: your comfortable 1,900m pool time for swimming, your average power or HR for 2h+ training rides for biking, and a pace roughly 30β45 seconds per mile slower than your fresh half marathon pace for running. Always start each leg conservatively and build.
How do I handle taper madness?
“Taper madness” is real β you’ll feel sluggish, heavy, and convinced you’ve lost all your fitness. You haven’t. It’s your body adapting, not declining. Trust the science. The freshness you feel on race morning is the taper working. Don’t add extra sessions. Stay off your feet. Sleep. Eat well. The hay is in the barn.