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Ironman nutrition guide

Last updated June 2026 · ~7 min read

More long-course races fall apart from a fueling mistake than a fitness one. Run out of carbs and you "bonk"; drink wrong and your stomach shuts down. Here's how many carbs, how much sodium and how much fluid per hour — and how to turn that into a plan you can actually eat.

The golden rule of race fueling: nothing new on race day. Every gel, drink and bar in your plan should be something you've trained your gut on for weeks. The stomach is trainable — but only with practice.

Carbohydrate: your main fuel

Carbs are what you run out of. Your body stores only ~90 minutes of hard effort as glycogen, so you have to take more in:

Sodium and electrolytes

You lose sodium in sweat, and sodium is what lets you actually absorb the fluid you drink. Too little causes cramping, bloating and — in extreme cases with overdrinking — dangerous hyponatremia.

Fluid: drink to a plan

A simple race-day template

  1. Swim: nothing — just a gel ~10 min before the start.
  2. Bike: the workhorse. Hit your full carb, sodium and fluid targets here every single hour. Set a watch alarm so you never skip.
  3. Run: harder to digest, so lean on gels, cola and broth from aid stations. Keep sipping; walk aid stations to actually get it down.

Build your fueling numbers

Turn these per-hour targets into exact totals for your race length — total carbs, gels/servings, sodium and bottles to carry:

Frequently asked questions

How many carbs per hour should I eat during an Ironman?

60–90 g/hr for a full, up to 90–120 g/hr for a 70.3 if your gut is trained. Beginners should start near 60 g/hr and build up in training.

How much sodium do I need?

Roughly 500–1,000 mg per hour, more in heat or if you sweat heavily/saltily. Sodium drives fluid absorption and prevents cramping.

How much should I drink?

About 500–750 ml per hour as a starting point, adjusted for heat and size. Pair it with electrolytes and don't overdrink plain water.

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