Pre-Race Nutrition Timing Calculator | Coach Saltmarsh
⚡ Free Performance Nutrition Tool

Pre-Race Nutrition Timing
Calculator

Tell me when you race. I’ll tell you exactly what to eat, and when, so you reach the starting line fueled and ready.

Fueling Is a Strategy, Not an Afterthought

After 25 years working with high school runners, I’ve watched talented athletes show up to the starting line already losing. Not because their training was wrong. Because their stomach was empty. Pre-race nutrition is race preparation. It’s not optional.

The science is clear: your muscles run on glycogen. Glycogen comes from carbohydrates you eat in the 12–36 hours before competition. But timing matters just as much as food choice. Eat the right things at the wrong time and you’ll spend your race fighting your gut instead of the course. This tool removes the guesswork.

Enter your race time, distance, and body weight. The calculator builds a personalized nutrition timeline, from dinner the night before to the final minutes on the starting line, with specific foods, portion guidance, and what to avoid.

USATF Level 2 Certified 25 Years Coaching Endurance Athletes 31 State Champions

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your race distance and start time as accurately as possible.
  2. Add your body weight This is used to calculate personal carbohydrate targets at each window.
  3. Hit Calculate Then print or screenshot your plan and follow it on race day.
Your Race Info

Your Race Day Plan

Common Questions

Your body takes 2–4 hours to fully digest a solid meal and convert it into accessible glycogen. A meal eaten too close to race time sits in your stomach robbing blood flow from your legs and often causing cramping, nausea, or side stitches. A meal eaten too early means your glycogen reserves peak and begin declining before the gun fires. The timing windows in this calculator are built around gastric emptying rates and glycogen synthesis research, not guesswork or convention. Getting the timing right is as important as getting the food right.
The night before is your most important fueling opportunity. A high-carbohydrate dinner (pasta, rice, bread, potatoes) with a moderate serving of lean protein and very little fat or fiber is the proven approach. Aim for roughly 2–3 grams of carbohydrates per kilogram of body weight at dinner. Avoid anything new, heavy, or high in fat. Hydrate well through the evening.
You’re not alone! Many runners struggle with pre-race appetite, especially early in the morning. Two strategies work here. First, practice race-morning eating in training. Eat a small snack 2 hours before a hard workout and repeat it until your gut adapts. Second, shift more fuel to the night before. If you load glycogen stores well at dinner, a small snack in the morning is enough to get you to the line.
Yes! Significantly. An 800m runner needs a gut that’s empty and comfortable, not loaded with glycogen. At that intensity and duration, the race is fueled largely by phosphocreatine and anaerobic glycolysis. Shorter events need lighter pre-race meals. A 5K or 8K XC race draws a bit more on aerobic glycolysis, you need accessible glycogen on board. A half-marathon or marathon requires serious carbohydrate loading over 24–48 hours. The calculator adjusts portion guidance based on your race distance.
For races under 60 minutes, all high school events, you don’t need gels during the race. However, a small, easily digestible carbohydrate source 20–30 minutes before the start (a sports gel, gummy chews, or a banana) can top off blood glucose without stressing your digestive system. Stick to a 4–6% carbohydrate concentration for sports drinks. Anything higher slows gastric emptying and increases GI risk.
The “never on race day” list: high-fat foods (fried food, bacon, cream sauces) slow gastric emptying dramatically. High-fiber foods (raw vegetables, bran cereals, beans) can trigger GI distress under race stress. Unfamiliar foods never try anything new on race day, ever. Excessive caffeine causes jitteriness and GI upset in younger runners. Carbonated drinks often cause bloating. When in doubt: boring, familiar, carbohydrate-focused.
Drink 500–600 ml (16–20 oz) of water 2–3 hours before the race to allow time for excretion of excess fluid. Then 200–300 ml (8–10 oz) about 20 minutes before the start. Do not chug large amounts of water immediately before racing, it causes sloshing, bloating, and can dilute blood sodium. The goal is to start the race well-hydrated from the day before, not to compensate with a last-minute flood.
Nutrition timing guidance is based on published sports dietetics research including work by Burke, Jeukendrup, and the IOC consensus on pre-exercise nutrition.
Results are personalized estimates. For a fully individualized plan, consult a registered sports dietitian.

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