Goa Ultra: Training Plan

Goa is not a holiday for an ultra runner. It is a test dressed in sunshine. The Konkan coast looks easy on Instagram. On race day, the headlands punish you, the sand robs your stride, and the December sun comes in sideways off the Arabian Sea. You do not show up to the Goa Ultra in December and hope. You build for it from June.

Six months out. Build the spine.

An ultra is built on a base. Not heroics. Base. Between June and August, you log easy kilometres in monsoon humidity. Aerobic. Conversational. Boring on purpose. Forty to sixty kilometres a week. One long run on the weekend that creeps from 18 km up to 28 km by August. This is not glamorous work. Most ultras are won and lost in the months no one watches.

You will sweat litres in a Bengaluru, Mumbai, or Pune monsoon. That is the point. Heat-humidity training in July is currency you spend in December. Read our heat and monsoon guide before you write a single session. Your sodium losses are not theoretical. They are the reason runners blow up at 35 km.

What the weekly skeleton looks like

Five runs. One long. One quality. Three easy. One full rest day. One strength session if you can hold it. Forget the rest. Most plans fail because they ask too much of the wrong day. Easy must be easy. Long must be long. Quality must hurt. Confuse the three and you cook yourself by week eight.

Four months out. Specificity wins.

Now you start running like a Goa Ultra runner. That means terrain. The Konkan coast is not Cubbon Park. You need beach sand sessions. Find a stretch and run it slow. Run it ugly. Add headland-style climbs in the form of overpasses, bridges, ghat sections, or hill repeats. Twelve to fifteen short climbs at threshold effort. Repeat weekly.

Long runs stretch out. Twenty-eight kilometres. Thirty-two. Thirty-six. Once a month you go to forty. Run them at a pace that lets you talk in half-sentences. Pace is not a trophy. Pace is a payment. Over-pay in training and you will under-pay on race day. Pull your projected splits into our pace and effort calculators before every long session.

Fueling the long run

Practise eating while running. Forty grams of carbohydrate an hour for the first eight weeks. Build to sixty. Some runners push ninety. Do not introduce a new gel on race week. Do not test salt tablets on race morning. Whatever you carry in Goa, you must have carried in Hyderabad in August. The gut is a muscle. Train it.

Two months out. Sharpen the blade.

October and November are when you stop adding kilometres and start adding edges. Tempo runs. Long efforts at marathon pace plus thirty seconds. Back-to-back long weekends. Saturday twenty-eight kilometres. Sunday eighteen kilometres on tired legs. This is how you teach your body that the second half of the ultra is not a surprise.

Strength matters here. Single-leg work. Calf raises. Hip stability. The Goa coast eats unprepared posterior chains for breakfast. Strong legs do not bonk. Weak legs do. Twice a week is enough. Twenty minutes. Keep it close to the run sessions so your body learns to recover.

Mental rehearsal is training

Run the race in your head before you run it on your feet. Visualise the 30 km mark. The one where your watch beeps and your soul leaves your body. Plan a response. A song. A mantra. A face. Decide it now in your living room. You will not have the bandwidth to decide it at 30 km in Goa heat.

Race week. Strip everything down.

Two weeks out you taper. Volume drops by thirty percent. Then fifty. Then you sit on your hands. Eat well. Sleep more. Do not lift heavy. Do not do anything you have not done in the last four months. Most runners crash a taper by trying to make up for missed sessions. You cannot cram for an ultra. What is in is in. What is not, is not.

The night before. Lay out kit. Hydration vest. Two soft flasks. Salt. Six to eight gels. A buff. Vaseline. Sunglasses. Cap. Headlamp if you are starting before dawn. Phone in a waterproof. Charge your watch. Read our archive of race-week notes if you need a final check.

The first 10 km of the Goa Ultra

You will feel fresh. You are not. Run the first 10 km thirty seconds per km slower than you think you should. The headlands and the heat will collect what they are owed. Pay them early. An ultra is a long apology for an aggressive start. Save the talking for kilometre 35.

The plan that does not fit on a page

Every body is different. Every schedule is different. Every base is different. A plan written for someone else is a plan written against you. Use our STRIDD plan generator to build something that fits your week, your terrain, your race goal. Or start with our standard ultramarathon plan template and adapt it from there.

The Goa Ultra will not negotiate with your fitness. It does not care about your last race. It cares about today. Train like that is true, because it is.

A word on shoes and feet

The coast is hard on shoes. Salt water. Soft sand. Hard tarmac. Rotate two pairs through your training block. Race in the pair you have run at least 150 km in. Anything less and you are testing on race day. Anything more and the foam is gone. Carry spare socks in your drop bag. Wet feet over 50 km make blisters. Blisters make DNFs.

Tape your toes before the start if you have a history of blisters. Apply body glide generously between toes, around the heel, and anywhere a strap touches skin. Reapply at the halfway aid station if you can. Small habits that save big races.

The Konkan coast has its own weather mood. December mornings are mild. By 10 am, the sun is honest about its intentions. Adjust your start strategy. The runner who banks effort in the first three hours has currency for the heat. The runner who chases pace early pays it back twice over by kilometre 35. Plan your race like the day will be longer than your watch suggests, and you will be ready for whatever the coast gives you.

Frequently asked questions

How many months should I train for the Goa Ultra?

Plan for six months of structured training before December race day. The first three months build aerobic base in monsoon humidity, the next two add specificity through sand running, hill repeats and long efforts, and the last month tapers. If you are new to ultras, give yourself nine months instead of six.

What weekly mileage do I need to peak at?

Most finishers peak between 70 and 90 km a week during the final eight weeks before the race. The bigger number is the long run, which should reach 36 to 40 km at least once a month. Mileage matters less than consistency. Missed weeks cost more than light weeks.

How do I train for Goa's coastal heat from inland cities?

Train during the hottest part of your local day at least once a week from September onward. Practise hydration with electrolyte mixes, not plain water. Read the STRIDD heat and monsoon guide for sodium and pacing adjustments. Heat acclimation needs about two weeks of consistent exposure to take effect.

What should I eat during the Goa Ultra?

Aim for 60 to 90 grams of carbohydrate per hour from a mix of gels, chews, and real food like banana or boiled potato. Add 500 to 700 mg of sodium per hour through electrolyte drinks or salt capsules. Never introduce a new fuel on race day. Everything must be rehearsed in long runs.

Can I run the Goa Ultra as my first ultramarathon?

Yes, if you have completed at least one marathon in the last twelve months and can comfortably run 25 to 30 km long runs. The coastal terrain is forgiving compared to mountain ultras, but the heat and sand make it deceptively hard. Use the STRIDD plan generator to match the plan to your current base.

How do I handle the headlands and beach sections?

Walk the steeper headland climbs deliberately and run the descents in control. On beach stretches, shorten your stride and run on firmer wet sand closer to the waterline. Practise both in training. Saving five minutes in the first 10 km by powering through these sections often costs an hour by the finish.