The runner’s guide to sleep: Preparing for and recovering from the NYC Marathon

Contributed by Bree Wilhite, PhD, MPH (Marathoner and 3x Boston Marathon Qualifier)

You’ve survived the long runs, the speed work, the 5 AM wake-ups. Your training plan is tapered, your playlist is ready, and your race-day outfit has been tested more times than you’d like to admit. But there’s one performance factor that deserves as much attention as your pace and mileage: sleep.

How you sleep in the days before and after your 26.2 miles can make the difference between achieving your goals vs. hitting the dreaded wall. Here’s your complete sleep and recovery strategy for race week.

Key takeaways

  1. The night before the race matters less than you think: 60-70% of athletes sleep poorly pre-race without affecting performance. Your sleep in the days leading up to the race are more important.
  2. Science-backed strategies can optimize pre-race sleep: Warm showers (104-109°F), box breathing, and earplugs can help you fall asleep.
  3. Recovery sleep post-marathon is more important than training sleep: Aim for 9+ hours for 3-4 days post-race while monitoring your sleeping heart rate and heart rate variability to indicate your recovery progress.

Let go of perfect sleep the night before

If you don’t sleep well the night before the race, you’re in good company—60-70% of competitive athletes experience poor sleep before major events (ref). Here’s the reassuring truth: it won’t hurt your performance.

  • The sleep that matters most happened 2-3 nights ago. Research shows that poor sleep the night before competition doesn’t predict performance outcomes when athletes have maintained adequate sleep in preceding days (ref). Your body needs 48-72 hours to replenish glycogen stores and complete hormonal rebalancing (ref)—one restless night doesn’t disrupt these processes.
  • Morning races have an additional advantage. Research shows that aerobic exercise performance in the morning is largely unaffected by sleep deprivation the night before, unlike evening performance which shows greater impairment (ref). 

Wind down strategically:

  • Avoid eating within 2-3 hours of bedtime. Late meals increase core body temperature and disrupt the natural temperature drop needed for sleep onset (ref). Studies show eating close to bedtime reduces sleep efficiency and increases nighttime awakenings (ref).
  • Take a warm shower (104-109°F) 30 min to 1 hour before sleep. Research shows this accelerates your core temperature drop by 1-2°F, which can help you fall asleep 10-15 minutes faster and increase deep sleep (ref).
  • Use earplugs in your hotel room. Research shows earplugs reduce nighttime arousals by 30% in unfamiliar environments – critical when you’re sleeping somewhere new with unpredictable noise (ref).
  • Practice slow breathing or box breathing. Controlled breathing (4-6 breaths per minute, or box breathing: 4 seconds in, 4 hold, 4 out, 4 hold) activates your parasympathetic nervous system and reduces cortisol (ref). Studies show 10-20 minutes of slow breathing before bed helps you fall asleep faster and improves sleep quality (ref).

If you’re still awake or wake up in the night: Quiet rest still provides recovery benefits. After 20 minutes of restlessness, get up briefly—read, stretch, or meditate—then return when drowsy. This prevents your brain from linking your bed with stress and acknowledges these are normal race jitters, not ongoing insomnia.

Maximize alertness on race morning

Even if you didn’t sleep perfectly, you can optimize your morning routine to feel alert and ready. Here’s your secret weapon: pre-race adrenaline. Race morning cortisol levels spike 50-80% higher than normal days, effectively overriding fatigue signals from poor sleep (ref). This natural stress response enhances glucose availability, cardiovascular function, and pain tolerance—exactly what you need for 26.2 miles ahead.

To harness this response and prime your body for peak performance:

  • Wake up at your usual pre-training time. If you typically wake up 2-3 hours before your training runs, maintain that same window before the race. This is especially important if you’re dealing with jet lag or racing in a different time zone—your body will perform best on its familiar rhythm rather than an arbitrary clock time (ref). For a 7 AM race start, this might mean a 4 AM wake-up, but if that’s what your body is trained for, stick with it.
  • Eat your pre-race meal 2-4 hours before the start. This allows time for digestion and reduces GI distress during the race (ref). Aim for 1-4 grams of carbs per kg body weight with moderate protein and low fat/fiber.
  • Get bright light immediately. Open curtains, turn on all the lights, or step outside if possible. Light exposure powerfully signals to your brain that it’s time to be alert (ref).
  • Move your body. After months of training runs, your body associates movement with alertness. A short, easy warm-up walk or very light jog helps shift your system into “awake and ready” mode (ref).
  • Time your caffeine strategically. If you use it, consume caffeine 60-90 minutes before the race starts, when it peaks in your system (ref). But always stick to your training routine—if you didn’t normally use caffeine before runs, race day is not the time to experiment.

Recovery starts as soon as you cross the finish line

Immediately post-race:

  • Refuel within 30-60 minutes: 1.0-1.2 grams of carbs per kg body weight plus 0.25-0.3 grams of protein per kg (ref). For a 70 kg (154 lb) runner, that’s 70-85 grams of carbs and 18-21 grams of protein. An example would be a large bagel with peanut butter and a protein shake.
  • Rehydrate systematically: Replace 1.25-1.5 liters per kg body mass lost (ref). (The best way to figure out how much water (i.e. sweat) you lost is to weigh yourself before and after the race!) Adding electrolytes (500-700 mg sodium per liter) and drinking steadily throughout the day will maximize water absorption to rehydrate you.
  • Keep moving gently throughout the day: Walk 10-20 minutes every few hours to enhance blood flow, which helps reduce muscle soreness by bringing good nutrients to your muscles and removing waste (ref).
  • Use contrast water therapy: Alternate 3-4 minutes warm water with 1 minute of ice. Repeat this 3-4 times, ending in warm water. Current research shows that cycling between warm and ice reduces inflammation better than ice alone, while maintaining blood flow for repair (ref).
  • Consider magnesium glycinate (300-400 mg): Marathon running depletes magnesium, which is essential for muscle relaxation and sleep quality. Glycinate is the most bioavailable form and least likely to cause GI issues (ref).

Post-race night’s sleep: Post-race adrenaline and inflammation can interfere with sleep despite exhaustion—this is normal. Keep your room cool (60-67°F), elevate legs before bed, and if you need pain relief, take acetaminophen (Tylenol) 2-3 hours before sleep rather than ibuprofen, which can disrupt sleep quality and muscle repair (ref).

Sleep more than you think you need the week after the race

You might need extra sleep during your recovery week. After a marathon, your body is repairing muscle damage and your immune system is temporarily suppressed. Most of this recovery happens during deep sleep.

  • Aim for 9+ hours for at least 3-4 days post-race. If you can nap, nap.
  • Monitor your metrics. Elevated resting heart rate and lower heart rate variability signal your body is still recovering. This is when sleep matters most.
  • Keep your sleep environment cool. Post-race inflammation makes you run hot at night. Cool temperatures (60-67°F) support recovery and deep sleep. If you’re sleeping on the Pod, turn your Night Phase temperature down one level.
  • Keep active recovery truly easy. Gentle movement helps recovery, but intensity matters. Stay in Zone 1-2 (50-65% max HR) or use the “talk test”—you should be able to hold a comfortable conversation throughout the exercise. If you’re breathing too hard to talk easily, you’re working too hard for recovery.

Marathon emotions can continue to impact sleep, even after the muscle soreness fades

Marathon running is as mental as it is physical. After the race, you might feel euphoria, relief, or a post-race letdown – all of which can affect sleep.

If you’re lying awake replaying the race:

  • Journal before bed. Write down your highlights, challenges, and lessons to clear your mind.
  • Celebrate smartly. Consider skipping alcohol – it disrupts the recovery sleep your body needs. Save the toast for a few days later. If you do have some drinks, be sure to pair it with water and avoid drinks within a few hours of bedtime.
  • Set your next goal. Post-race blues are real. Having something to look forward to – even just “sleeping in for a week” – helps calm racing thoughts.

Your next race starts with this recovery

How you recover sets the foundation for your next training cycle. Sleep is your secret weapon—not just for race day performance but for the entire journey.

So tonight, whether you’re nervously preparing for the start line or celebrating your finish, remember: the best thing you can do for your running isn’t another mile or another workout.

It’s getting really, really good sleep.

Sweet dreams, and strong running.

Ready to optimize your training and recovery? Learn how Eight Sleep helps athletes perform and recover at eightsleep.com/athletes