
What is a run faster plan?
The Run Faster plan is designed to help you unlock speed and efficiency, even when you’re not training for a specific race. Whether you’ve just finished an event, want to build back consistency, or simply feel ready to sharpen your pace, this plan gives you the structure and balance to keep progressing.
At its core, Run Faster is about smart, sustainable training habits. You’ll combine speed-focused workouts like intervals and tempo runs with long runs that strengthen endurance and easy runs that keep recovery on track. Together, this mix improves running economy, builds confidence at faster paces, and leaves you feeling stronger across every distance.
Unlike race-focused plans, Run Faster is built for year-round growth. You choose your training volume and mileage, and we guide you at a pace that matches your lifestyle. Optional Time Trials let you benchmark progress along the way, so you can measure improvements without race-day pressure.
By combining structured workouts with smart recovery, you’ll see tangible progress in both speed and stamina - and gain the confidence to take on whatever challenge comes next.

Why choose our run faster training plan?
Whatever your starting point or speed goal, we’ll give you everything you need to get faster and stronger.
Wie man anfängt
Runna takes the guesswork out of speed training. From your first interval to your fastest run yet, you’ll know exactly what to do and when to do it.
Wähle deinen Plan
Tell us your fitness level and goals, and we’ll design a plan that builds pace, power, and confidence - all tailored to your schedule.
Die App herunterladen
Download the app, log in, and you’ll have your training plan - complete with tips, and guidance - at your fingertips.
Lauf, lauf, lauf!
Simply tap ‘Go’ and follow along. Every run is laid out clearly, so you always know exactly what to do.
Dieses Ziel erreichen
Stick with your plan and you’ll unlock new gears - sharper speed, stronger strides, and the power to run beyond your limits.
Workouts erklärt
Your run faster plan includes a mix of sessions - each with a clear purpose. Here’s what they are and how they’ll help you build speed.
Tips for your run faster training plan
These expert-backed tips will help you train smarter, avoid injury, and stay motivated. From pacing and recovery to gear and mindset, discover just a small snippet of all the tips, nutrition and coaching advice you'll have at your fingertips with a Runna training plan.
Nutrition
Training harder to get faster puts new demands on your body, and what you eat plays a big role in how well you adapt. Fueling smart helps you recover quicker, hit high-quality sessions, and keep your energy steady across the week.
- Protein: Prioritize it daily to rebuild and strengthen muscles after speed sessions. Lean meat, fish, eggs, dairy, or plant-based sources work best.
- Carbohydrates: Your main fuel for faster running. Eat extra before interval or tempo workouts to perform at your best. Stick to complex carbs like oats, quinoa, rice, sweet potatoes, and fruit for sustained energy.
- Healthy fats: Avocado, nuts, seeds, and olive oil support recovery, joint health, and hormone balance - essential when intensity is high.
Pre-time trial nutrition
If you’re using a time trial to benchmark progress, fuel it like a short race:
- Eat a carb-rich meal 2–3 hours beforehand.
- Reduce fat, protein, and fiber to avoid sluggish digestion.
- Stick with foods you’ve already tested in training - no surprises on the day.
- A small carb snack closer to the effort can give you a final energy boost, but only if it’s something you know works for you.

Cross-training and strength training
To run faster, your body needs more than just speed sessions - it needs the strength and resilience to handle them. That’s where cross-training and strength work come in. Together, they support faster running by boosting power, improving efficiency, and reducing the risk of injury.
Cross-training: Activities like cycling, swimming, or rowing build aerobic fitness without the pounding of extra miles. They strengthen your heart and lungs, give your joints a break, and add variety that keeps training fresh. Used on recovery days, cross-training lets you stay active while still protecting your legs for the harder sessions that matter most.
Strength training: The engine room of speed. Building stronger glutes, hamstrings, calves, and core improves stride power, posture, and running economy - meaning you’ll run quicker with less wasted energy. Even 1–2 focused sessions per week can sharpen mechanics, reduce fatigue late in workouts, and give you the explosive strength to hit faster paces.
With Runna, strength and cross-training are seamlessly built into your plan, so every session complements your speed work instead of competing with it.

Pacing
Running faster isn’t about sprinting every session - it’s about learning how to control and distribute your effort so speed becomes sustainable. Pacing is the bridge between raw fitness and real performance.
The key is understanding intensity.
Hard sessions aren’t all-out sprints; they’re measured efforts designed to raise your ceiling without breaking you down. Intervals teach speed, tempos build stamina at higher intensities, and easy runs keep aerobic fitness on track - but it’s how you pace them that makes the difference.
Think of pacing as your rhythm: too quick early and you’ll burn out, too conservative and you’ll miss your potential. The sweet spot is starting controlled, settling into a strong but sustainable effort, and reserving just enough to finish hard.
Practicing this across training sessions builds the mental discipline to know when to hold back and when to push, so fast running feels natural, not forced.
With Runna, every workout comes with clear pace targets tailored to your fitness - so you’ll know exactly when to hold back, when to push, and how to finish strong.

Form
Your running form is a key part of unlocking speed. Running efficiently will:
- Minimize wasted energy so you can hold faster paces for longer.
- Reduce impact stress on muscles and joints during harder efforts.
- Lower injury risk, especially as you add more interval and tempo sessions.
Form matters at every distance, but in speed training it’s the difference between hitting your splits and fading late.
- Run tall with a strong posture and relaxed shoulders.
- Keep strides quick, light, and efficient rather than long and heavy.
- Drive your arms powerfully to match leg turnover.
- Stay relaxed through your face, hands, and jaw to conserve energy.
Focus on form during intervals, tempos, and the closing stages of longer runs, when fatigue makes it hardest to maintain. Over time, these small adjustments will turn into habits that make you faster and more resilient.
Remember: Think of form as your foundation for speed - efficiency today is what allows you to push harder tomorrow.

Recovery
Speed gains don’t come from the workouts alone - they come from how well your body adapts afterward. Recovery is what allows you to handle harder sessions, stay consistent, and keep building pace without injury.
Key areas to focus on:
- Sleep: Aim for 7–9 hours. This is when your body rebuilds muscle fibers, balances hormones, and locks in the benefits of speed training.
- Mobility work: Yoga, Pilates, or dynamic stretching improve flexibility and keep your stride smooth after tough interval or tempo sessions.
- Massage & tools: Foam rolling, massage guns, or sports massage can release tight spots and help you bounce back quicker between hard efforts.
- Nutrition & hydration: Carbs replenish glycogen so you’re ready for the next session, while protein repairs muscle damage. Stay hydrated throughout the day, not just after training.
- Active recovery: Light movement like walking, swimming, or cycling boosts circulation, clears fatigue, and keeps your legs fresh.
- Flexibility: Listen to your body. If fatigue lingers, swap or skip a session. Protecting consistency over weeks is more important than forcing one workout.

Gear
The right gear won’t make you faster on its own, but small changes in comfort and efficiency add up when your goal is speed.
- Shoes: Your most important tool. Choose a well-cushioned pair for daily mileage to protect your legs, and consider a lightweight, responsive shoe (or carbon-plated “super shoe”) for faster workouts or time trials. Always break them in before testing them at speed.
- Clothing: Technical fabrics wick sweat, reduce chafing, and regulate temperature during harder sessions. The less you’re distracted, the more focus you can put into hitting your paces.
- Watch or GPS tracker: When working on speed, data matters. A GPS watch or running app lets you track intervals, splits, and overall progress, helping you pace sessions correctly. Runna syncs seamlessly with Garmin, Apple Watch, COROS, and Strava.
- Accessories: A lightweight belt or armband keeps essentials close without breaking rhythm. On hot days or longer runs, hydration gear helps you stay sharp.
- Sun protection: A high-SPF sunscreen, hat, or sunglasses makes speed sessions in bright conditions more comfortable and sustainable.
Golden rule: test everything in training. Comfort, support, and confidence in your gear let you focus fully on speed - not distractions.

Als vorgestellt in
Geschichten von Runnas
FAQ: All you need to know about running faster
Halbmarathon-Distanz: Wie lang ist ein Halbmarathon?
Ein Halbmarathon ist 21,0975 Kilometer oder 13,1 Meilen lang, also genau die Hälfte der Strecke eines Marathons.
Wie lange brauche ich, um mich auf einen Halbmarathon vorzubereiten?
Die Zeit, die du für die Vorbereitung auf einen Halbmarathon brauchst, hängt von deinem aktuellen Fitnessniveau und deiner bisherigen Lauferfahrung ab. Allerdings ist für die meisten Läufer:innen ein 12- bis 16- oder 20-wöchiger Halbmarathon-Trainingsplan geeignet. Generell gilt: Je mehr Zeit du für die Vorbereitung hast, desto besser wird deine Leistung.
Welchen Halbmarathon-Trainingsplan soll ich wählen?
Wähle einen Trainingsplan, der auf deinem aktuellen Fitnessniveau, deinem Zeitplan, deinem Ziel und dem Datum deines nächsten Rennens basiert. Runna bietet persönliche Halbmarathon-Trainingspläne für Läufer:innen aller Leistungsniveaus.
Welche Halbmarathon-Zielzeit sollte ich anstreben?
Deine Halbmarathon-Zielzeit hängt von deinem Training und deiner Erfahrung ab. Wenn du Anfänger bist, ist es schon eine fantastische Leistung, deinen ersten Halbmarathon zu beenden. Wenn du ein erfahrener Läufer bist und schon ein paar Halbmarathons hinter dir hast, kannst du deine persönliche Bestleistung immer noch verbessern.
Halbmarathon-Training und Verletzungen: Was sollte ich tun, wenn ich mich von einer Verletzung erhole?
Sprich mit deinem Arzt, bevor du mit deinem Training beginnst. Sobald du von ihm grünes Licht bekommst, beginne damit, dein Tempo und die Distanz langsam zu erhöhen und deine Laufeinheiten zu variieren. Ein individueller Halbmarathon-Trainingsplan kann dir helfen, Kraft und Ausdauer aufzubauen, ohne weitere Verletzungen zu riskieren.
Ich habe nur 10 Wochen Zeit, mich vorzubereiten. Was soll ich tun?
Wenn du nur 10 Wochen Zeit hast, setze dir ein realistisches Ziel und stelle sicher, dass du deine Laufeinheiten absolvierst. Steigere die Distanz deiner Läufe schrittweise, aber vergiss nicht die einfachen Trainingseinheiten und die Regeneration.
Ein persönlicher Trainingsplan kann dir helfen, das Beste aus deiner begrenzten Zeit zu machen und jede Trainingseinheit an deine Ziele anzupassen.
Halbmarathon und allgemeine Fitness: Muss ich Krafttraining machen, um einen Halbmarathon zu laufen?
Streng genommen nicht, aber es ist immer eine gute Idee, Krafttraining in dein Halbmarathon-Trainingsprogramm einzubauen, um deine Leistung zu verbessern und dich vor Verletzungen zu schützen.
Inspiration

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