What should I eat the night before a marathon?

The night-before-marathon meal sits in an unusual research space. There is robust evidence on carbohydrate loading and glycogen storage. There is comparatively thin evidence on the specific composition, timing, and cultural variants of pre-race dinners. This piece will sit between the two, summarise what the science actually shows, and translate it into a defensible plan for an Indian marathon morning.

The argument proceeds in four parts: what carbohydrate loading does in the published evidence, what to eat, what to avoid, and how to integrate the meal into the wider race-week strategy.

What the research says about carbohydrate loading

The modern carbohydrate loading protocol emerged from a 1967 study by Bergstrom and colleagues in Sweden and has been refined steadily since. The current evidence base supports a clear set of practical conclusions.

The target intake

A 2011 review in the Journal of Sports Sciences and the IOC consensus statements on athletic nutrition recommend a carbohydrate intake of 8-12 grams per kilogram of body weight per day for 1-3 days before a race of 90 minutes or longer. For a 65 kg runner, that is 520-780 grams of carbohydrate per day - a substantial increase from a typical daily intake.

The mechanism

Elevated muscle glycogen stores allow a runner to sustain a higher percentage of VO2 max for longer before bonking. A 2003 study in the European Journal of Applied Physiology by Burke and colleagues confirmed that loaded glycogen stores can be roughly 50-100 percent higher than baseline after 1-3 days of high-carbohydrate intake combined with reduced training load (the taper). This is the physiological foundation of the night-before meal.

What carbohydrate loading does not do

It does not provide energy directly during the race - that comes from glycogen breakdown and ingested carbohydrate during the run. It does not benefit shorter races substantially; the evidence for races under 90 minutes is weaker. It does not require depletion phases - the older 'depletion-then-load' protocols are not necessary and are not recommended by current consensus.

What to eat the night before a marathon

The composition is more flexible than the popular literature suggests. The constraints come from tolerance, not theory.

The carbohydrate base

The night-before meal should provide approximately 150-200 grams of carbohydrate for a typical Indian runner of 60-75 kg, integrated into the day's total of 8-12 g/kg. The form of carbohydrate is largely flexible - rice, roti, pasta, bread, poha, idli, dosa all qualify. The literature does not consistently favour one source over another for the night-before specifically; tolerance and familiarity are the dominant practical considerations.

Moderate protein

20-30 grams of lean protein - dal, paneer, eggs, chicken, fish - supports overnight muscle protein synthesis and the broader recovery from final training sessions. The published evidence does not support large pre-race protein loads, which can delay gastric emptying and increase the risk of GI symptoms during the race.

Low fibre, low fat, low spice

The single most consistent finding in pre-race nutrition literature is that high-fibre, high-fat, and heavily spiced foods increase the risk of GI distress during the race. The IAAF (now World Athletics) nutrition guidance specifically recommends reducing fibre intake in the 24-36 hours before a long endurance event. This means scaling back salads, raw vegetables, lentils with high fibre, and rich curries the night before.

Familiar food, not new food

The strongest single rule in the sports nutrition literature on pre-race meals: do not introduce new foods in race week. The risk of an unexpected GI response on race morning outweighs any theoretical nutritional benefit of a novel meal. If you have never eaten quinoa before, race-eve is not the moment.

Practical menus for the Indian runner

The following options each meet the carbohydrate, protein, and tolerance criteria above. Choose the one that most resembles your normal evening.

The rice-based plate

1.5-2 cups of plain steamed rice, a moderate portion of dal (split, well-cooked, not chana or rajma which are higher in fibre), a small portion of grilled or pan-cooked paneer or chicken, a few slices of cucumber, a glass of plain water. Skip the achar, the heavy gravy, and the deep-fried sides.

The roti-based plate

4-5 plain rotis or chapatis, a vegetable subzi (low-spice, low-oil), a portion of dal, a small bowl of curd. Avoid stuffed parathas, deep-fried bhaturas, and high-fat creamy preparations.

The pasta-based plate

1.5 cups of cooked pasta with a light tomato or olive oil sauce, a small portion of grilled chicken or paneer, soft bread on the side. This is the meal most international marathons cater specifically, and it works for runners who tolerate Western food well.

The South Indian variant

3-4 idlis with a thin sambar (not the rich Brahmin-style version with high-fat coconut), or 2 plain dosas with a small bowl of tomato chutney. Avoid masala dosa with potato filling on race-eve - the higher fat content and oil delay gastric emptying.

What to avoid and why

The evidence-based list is shorter than internet folklore suggests.

Alcohol

The published evidence is clear that alcohol intake in the 24-48 hours before exercise impairs glycogen storage, disrupts sleep architecture, and increases dehydration risk. Skip alcohol on race-eve. The TMM-finish-line beer waits.

Heavy fats and deep-fried foods

Delays gastric emptying. Increases the chance of food still sitting in the stomach at the start line. Pakoras, samosas, biryani at heavy-ghee restaurants - skip them.

Excess fibre

Raw salads, chana, rajma, large portions of leafy greens. Scale back, not eliminate. Fibre is good for life; it is poorly timed for race-eve.

Untested supplements

Race week is not the time to try a new BCAA, a new beetroot juice protocol, or a new electrolyte mix. The IOC consensus statement specifies that any supplement intended for race-day use must be trialled extensively in training first.

Timing, hydration, and the full day-before plan

The night-before meal is one component of a wider 24-hour strategy.

Meal timing

Eat dinner approximately 12-14 hours before the race start. For a 5:00 a.m. Tata Mumbai Marathon start, that means 3:00-5:00 p.m. dinner the previous evening. Earlier is better than later. Eating dinner at 10 p.m. before a 5 a.m. start increases the chance of unfinished digestion at the gun.

Pre-bed top-up

A small carbohydrate-rich snack 2-3 hours before bed - a banana, a slice of toast with jam, a small bowl of oatmeal - is supported in the carbohydrate loading literature. Aim for 30-50 grams of additional carbohydrate. This is not mandatory but useful for runners who eat dinner early.

Hydration

The literature on pre-race hydration consistently recommends gradual fluid intake across the 24 hours before the race rather than acute loading. Aim for pale-yellow urine the evening before and the morning of. Stop drinking 60-90 minutes before sleep to reduce overnight bathroom trips. Add a pinch of salt or a sports drink at dinner if you sweat heavily in training.

Integration with the rest of race week

The night-before is part of a continuum, not an isolated event. Day-before carbohydrate loading runs for 36-72 hours total, with the highest intake on the day immediately before the race. Combine with the rest of the strategy in our nutrition pages and the day-of fuel guide. Build the race week itself with our plan generator and lock in target paces using the calculators. Visit the Running Lab for the deeper reads on glycogen physiology and race-day strategy.

Frequently asked questions

What should I eat the night before a marathon?

A meal providing 150-200 grams of carbohydrate, 20-30 grams of lean protein, low fibre, low fat, and no new foods. Plain rice and dal with paneer or chicken, plain rotis with a light subzi, or pasta with a tomato sauce all work. Stick to food you eat regularly and tolerate well. Avoid alcohol, deep-fried foods, heavy gravies, and raw salads.

How many carbs should I eat before a marathon?

Current sports nutrition consensus (IOC, ACSM) recommends 8-12 grams of carbohydrate per kilogram of body weight per day for 1-3 days before a race over 90 minutes. For a 65 kg runner, that is 520-780 g per day. The night-before dinner typically contributes 150-200 grams, with the rest spread through breakfast, lunch, snacks, and a small pre-bed top-up.

Is pasta the best food the night before a race?

Pasta is one good option but not uniquely best. The carbohydrate is what matters, and rice, roti, bread, poha, and other staples deliver it equally well. The international preference for pasta in pre-marathon dinners is partly cultural and partly logistical - it is easy to standardise across race expo dinners. For Indian runners, the most tolerated familiar carbohydrate is the better choice.

What time should I eat dinner before a marathon?

Eat approximately 12-14 hours before the race start. For a 5:00 a.m. start, that means 3:00-5:00 p.m. the previous afternoon. Earlier than that is fine but you may need a larger pre-bed top-up snack. Later than 7:00 p.m. dinner before a 5:00 a.m. start increases the risk of incomplete digestion at the gun and GI discomfort during the race.

Can I drink alcohol the night before a marathon?

The published evidence advises against it. Alcohol impairs muscle glycogen storage, disrupts sleep architecture, and increases dehydration risk - three of the most important pre-race variables. Even one or two drinks measurably reduces next-day glycogen levels and sleep quality. The performance cost is real. Save the beer for the finish line.

What foods should I avoid the night before a race?

High-fat foods (deep-fried, heavy gravies, cream-based sauces) because they delay gastric emptying; high-fibre foods (raw salads, chana, rajma) because they can trigger GI distress mid-race; heavily spiced foods because individual tolerance varies and race morning is not the time to test it; alcohol because it impairs glycogen storage; and any food you have not eaten regularly in the last month.