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WHAT DOES IT TAKE TO RUN A SUB-1:30 HALF MARATHON?

Published: 01/04/2026 | By: Freeman Williams

Running a sub-1:30 half marathon is one of those milestones that separates casual runners from committed athletes. It’s fast enough to demand respect, yet achievable enough that thousands chase it every year. Having gone from a 1:53 half marathon in 2023 to 1:15 in 2025, Freeman Williams has lived through that progression firsthand – and the jump to sub-1:30 is arguably the most impactful. In this piece, our running ambassador explains why.

At its core, a 1:30 half marathon requires you to hold roughly 4:15 per kilometre for 21.1 km. 4:13–4:14 per km is roughly equivalent. That’s not just about fitness – it’s about durability, discipline, and structure.

The first shift comes in consistency. When I was running 1:53, training was sporadic – good weeks followed by missed ones. To break 1:30, you need to stack weeks, months. That typically means running 3–5 times per week, with a focus on building total volume gradually. Mileage is the foundation; without it, the rest doesn’t stick.

A realistic weekly structure might include two easy runs, a long run, and a threshold or speed session. Each has a role. Easy runs build aerobic capacity and should feel genuinely relaxed. If you’re pushing every run (we’ve all been there), you’re missing the point. Most runners plateau because they run their easy days too hard and their hard days too inconsistently.

The long run is where sub-1:30 ambitions are built. This isn’t just about distance – it’s about teaching your body to sustain effort. Progressively building your long run to 16–20K is key, and once you’re comfortable there, adding segments at race pace makes a huge difference. For example, finishing the last 5K of a long run at goal pace is a powerful way to simulate race fatigue.

Then comes threshold running – the true cornerstone of half marathon performance. This session directly moves the needle. Threshold work trains your body to clear and reuse lactate more efficiently, effectively raising the speed you can hold before fatigue sets in. For a sub-1:30 goal, this is critical – because the race itself sits right on that edge.

Speed work complements this by improving running economy and leg turnover. You don’t need to smash all-out intervals, but structured sessions like 6 × 800 m or 5 × 1 km at a pace faster than race pace will help make 4:15 per km feel more controlled. Think of it as raising your ceiling so your race pace becomes your comfort zone.

But training is only part of the equation. Recovery is where adaptation happens. Sleep, nutrition, and managing stress are just as important as the sessions themselves. When I started taking recovery seriously, that’s when my performances really shifted. You can’t out-train poor recovery. This requires attention to detail across the board!

Another key factor is pacing discipline. One of the biggest mistakes runners make when chasing sub-1:30 is going out too fast (again, guilty…). The adrenaline of race day can easily pull you into 4:00 per km territory early on – but that always comes back to bite later. A controlled start, locking into goal pace, and staying patient through the middle section is what sets up a strong finish.

Fuelling also plays a role, even at this distance. Practising with gels or carbohydrates during long runs ensures you don’t hit the wall late in the race. It’s not just about energy – it’s about maintaining pace when fatigue sets in.

And please, for the love of God, do not use new gels or fuelling strategies on race day. That’s a mistake no one needs to make.

Race week itself is where you sharpen everything. Reducing mileage, prioritising sleep, and keeping runs short but purposeful helps you arrive fresh without losing rhythm. Even something as simple as laying out your kit the night before – shoes you’ve already broken in, socks you trust, and fuel you’ve practised with – can remove unnecessary stress and let you focus purely on execution when the gun goes.

Perhaps the most underrated element, though, is mindset. Breaking 1:30 requires belief before it shows up on paper. There’s a point in every training cycle where the goal feels slightly out of reach – that’s normal. Progress isn’t linear. What matters is trusting the process and showing up anyway.

Looking back, the jump from 1:53 to sub-1:30 wasn’t about one breakthrough moment. It was about hundreds of small, consistent decisions – choosing the easy run when I didn’t feel like it, sticking to the plan when progress felt slow, and gradually building a stronger, more resilient version of myself.

That’s what a sub-1:30 half marathon represents. Not just a time, but a level of commitment and self-respect to myself and my goals.

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