Training plans / Half Marathon
14-Week Intermediate Half Marathon Training Plan
The complete schedule — every workout, every recovery week, the taper — generated by the same open-source engine that powers the RunPlan app.
Is this the right plan? Assumes a running habit, not a resume: 4 runs a week, starting around 3.3 hours with a 85-minute long run. Right if you run regularly and want structure toward a time goal.
Wrong level? Same race as a 14-week beginner plan or a 14-week advanced plan.
Half Marathon training paces
The workouts below carry zones (Z2, Z4…) instead of fixed paces, because pace is personal — it should come from a race you’ve run, not a table. Enter one and the whole plan gets paces:
- Easy & long runsZ1–Z26:11/km
- Steady & marathon paceZ35:38/km
- Threshold & tempoZ45:16/km
- Intervals & repetitionsZ54:57/km
At this fitness, a trained-for half marathon lands around 1:55:04 (5:27/km) — that is the race this plan is building you toward.
Prefilled with a typical result — enter your own race above.
Repetition paces, mile splits and equivalent times for every distance live in the full training pace calculator.
The full 14-week schedule
- Ladder Intervals (10 segments)~28 minWarm-up 5min · 0:45/1:30/2:15/3:00/3:45/4:30 @ Z4 (30s jog) · Cool-down 5min
- Long Run~85 min
- Medium-Long Run~60 min
- Easy Run~25 min
- Hill Repeats (8 x 60s)~40 minWarm-up 10min · 8 × 1:00 @ Z4 (90s jog) · Cool-down 10min
- Long Run~60 min
- Easy Run~30 min
- Easy Run~30 min
- Progression Run~47 minWarm-up 3min · 35:00 @ Z3 · 6:00 @ Z4 · Cool-down 3min
- Long Run~60 min
- Easy Run~25 min
- Hill Repeats (10 x 75s)~50 minWarm-up 10min · 10 × 1:15 @ Z4 (1:45 jog) · Cool-down 10min
- Long Run~60 min
- Easy + Strides (4 x 25s)~39 min35:00 @ Z2 · 4 × 0:25 @ Z5 (60s jog)
- Easy Run~55 min
- Intervals (8 segments)~36 minWarm-up 5min · 8 × 2:00 @ Z5 (90s jog) · Cool-down 5min
- Progressive Long Run~85 min63:45 @ Z2 · 21:15 @ Z3
- Medium-Long Run~60 min
- Easy Run~30 min
- Hill Repeats (12 x 90s)~62 minWarm-up 10min · 12 × 1:30 @ Z4 (2:00 jog) · Cool-down 10min
- Threshold Run (3 x 10min)~47 minWarm-up 10min · 3 × 10:00 @ Z4 (60s jog) · Cool-down 5min
- Long Run~60 min
- Easy Run~30 min
- Progression Run~47 minWarm-up 3min · 35:00 @ Z3 · 6:00 @ Z4 · Cool-down 3min
- Progressive Long Run~85 min63:45 @ Z2 · 21:15 @ Z3
- Medium-Long Run~60 min
- Easy + Strides (4 x 25s)~39 min35:00 @ Z2 · 4 × 0:25 @ Z5 (60s jog)
- Hill Repeats (12 x 90s)~62 minWarm-up 10min · 12 × 1:30 @ Z4 (2:00 jog) · Cool-down 10min
- Threshold Run (3 x 10min)~47 minWarm-up 10min · 3 × 10:00 @ Z4 (60s jog) · Cool-down 5min
- Progressive Long Run~100 min60:00 @ Z2 · 40:00 @ Z3
- Easy Run~55 min
- Ladder Intervals (12 segments)~61 minWarm-up 5min · 1:30/1:45/2:00/2:15/2:30/2:45/3:00/3:15/3:30/3:45/4:00/4:15 @ Z5 (90s jog) · Cool-down 5min
- Race Rehearsal (15min @ HMP)~85 min56:40 @ Z2 · 17:00 @ Z3 · 11:20 @ Z2
- Medium-Long Run~75 min
- Easy Run~30 min
- Time Trial (25min)~45 minWarm-up 10min · 25:00 @ Z4 · Cool-down 10min
- Race Rehearsal (15min @ HMP)~75 min50:00 @ Z2 · 15:00 @ Z3 · 10:00 @ Z2
- Easy + Strides (4 x 25s)~39 min35:00 @ Z2 · 4 × 0:25 @ Z5 (60s jog)
- Easy Run~55 min
- Intervals (4 segments)~25 minWarm-up 5min · 4 × 3:00 @ Z5 (60s jog) · Cool-down 5min
- Progressive Long Run~100 min60:00 @ Z2 · 40:00 @ Z3
- Medium-Long Run~85 min
- Easy Run~45 min
- Mile Repeats (4 x 1mi)~56 minWarm-up 10min · 4 × 6:00 @ Z4 (3:00 jog) · Cool-down 10min
- Race Rehearsal (15min @ HMP)~75 min50:00 @ Z2 · 15:00 @ Z3 · 10:00 @ Z2
- Easy + Strides (4 x 25s)~54 min50:00 @ Z2 · 4 × 0:25 @ Z5 (60s jog)
- Easy Run~55 min
- Mile Repeats (3 x 1mi)~39 minWarm-up 10min · 3 × 5:00 @ Z4 (90s jog) · Cool-down 10min
- Long Run~60 min
- Easy Run~25 min
- Easy + Strides (4 x 25s)~39 min35:00 @ Z2 · 4 × 0:25 @ Z5 (60s jog)
- Progression Run~47 minWarm-up 3min · 35:00 @ Z3 · 6:00 @ Z4 · Cool-down 3min
- Easy Run~45 min
- Easy Run~25 min
How this half marathon plan is built
Weekly running time starts around 2 hours and peaks at 4.4 in week 8, with 5 recovery weeks spaced through the build. The longest single run is 100 minutes, in week 8 — then the taper brings you to the start line fresh.
This plan is generated by RunPlan's open-source training engine, which encodes the classic coaching canon: Jack Daniels' pacing and intensity distribution, Pete Pfitzinger's long-run progressions, and Hal Higdon's instinct for plans a normal person can finish. The structure is periodized — base, sharpening, peak, taper — with deload weeks on a regular cadence and weekly load ramps kept inside safe bounds. The intermediate version assumes a running habit: one to two quality sessions a week, a proper long-run build, and race-specific work in the peak phase. For the half marathon, threshold work and a steady long-run build share the load — the race rewards a big engine and the discipline to hold it.
You can read the actual generator on GitHub — this exact schedule is its output, not an editor’s spreadsheet. The deeper story is in how the plans actually work.
What you’ll be running
- Easy runs20
- Long runs15
- Intervals & hills8
- Tempo & threshold5
- Race rehearsals & time trials4
- Other quality2
Common questions
How many days a week does this half marathon plan require?
4 runs per week for 14 weeks — 54 workouts in total. The biggest week is week 8 at about 4.4 hours of running.
What is the longest run in this half marathon plan?
100 minutes, in week 8. The long run builds gradually and is cut back on recovery weeks — you never jump to the peak, you arrive at it.
How many hours a week does it take?
Between about 2 and 4.4 hours of running, depending on the week — the plan ramps up through the build and drops sharply in the taper and on the 5 built-in recovery weeks.
Can I download this plan as a PDF or add it to my calendar?
Yes, free: print or save the full schedule as a PDF, download it as a .ics calendar file anchored to your start date, or export a CSV — the buttons are right above the schedule. The app runs the same plan from your Apple Watch, with your paces and haptic cues.
What paces should I run these workouts at?
Enter a recent race result in the paces block on this page — every zone in the plan gets a pace, plus a projected half marathon time. Deriving paces from a result you have actually run (Daniels' VDOT method) beats copying a table; the app does the same automatically and re-derives them as you get fitter.
Is this plan really free?
Yes. This page shows the real plan, generated by the same open-source engine the RunPlan app uses. The app itself is also free — no subscription, no locked weeks — and runs every workout from your Apple Watch with live intervals and pace targets.
What if I miss a week?
Do not try to make missed volume up — that is how injuries happen. Rejoin the plan where the calendar says you are, and treat the first week back as easier than written. Recovery weeks are built in on a regular cadence, which absorbs most real-life interruptions.