Building Your Summer Base: The Right Way to Add Mileage
Summer is where strong marathon seasons are made. It is also where runners most often get hurt by adding too much, too fast. If you are training toward the Austin Marathon, your goal for the summer is simple: build a durable aerobic base that sets you up for confident marathon-specific workouts later.
This guide walks you through how to add mileage the right way, so you can stack consistent weeks, stay healthy, and show up in the fall ready to train.
What “base building” really means
Base building is a phase of training focused on:
- Consistency over intensity
- Easy aerobic running as the foundation
- Gradually improving tendon, muscle, and bone durability
- Building the habit of recovery, fueling, and sleep that marathon training requires
You do not need to run fast all summer. You need to run smart, frequently, and within your current capacity.
The biggest mistake: chasing mileage instead of consistency
Many runners think base building is about hitting a specific weekly number. In reality, the best base comes from stringing together weeks you can repeat.
A great weekly mileage target is one that you could complete again next week without feeling wrecked.
Ask yourself after each week:
- Did I finish the week feeling like I could do it again?
- Did any niggles show up (feet, Achilles, knees, hips)?
- Did I sleep well and recover between runs?
If the answer is “no,” your mileage is too aggressive, even if it looks fine on paper.
A simple rule for adding mileage safely
1) Increase gradually (and not every week)
A reliable approach is:
- Increase weekly mileage by 5 to 10 percent when things feel good
- Every 3rd or 4th week, take a cutback week (reduce volume by 10 to 25 percent)
Cutback weeks are not failures. They are how your body absorbs the work so you can keep progressing.
2) One “new stress” at a time
Mileage is a stress, and so are heat, hills, speed, and strength training. If you increase multiple stresses at once, injury risk rises quickly.
If you add mileage this week, keep these stable:
- pace (keep most runs easy)
- hills
- workout intensity
- strength training volume
What your weekly structure should look like
A sustainable base week usually includes:
- 3 to 6 runs per week depending on experience
- Most miles easy (conversational pace)
- One long run
- Optional: 1 light workout (like strides or a short tempo) only if you are handling the load well
The “80 to 90 percent easy” rule
For base building, aim for:
- 80 to 90 percent of your running at an easy effort
- 10 to 20 percent at moderate or faster efforts (if any)
Easy running builds aerobic capacity and durability with lower injury risk. It is the safest way to increase volume.
How to progress your long run (without overdoing it)
Your long run should support the week, not destroy it.
General guidelines:
- Long run is often 20 to 30 percent of weekly mileage
- Increase long-run distance slowly, especially if you are also increasing total weekly miles
A practical method:
- Add 1 to 2 miles to the long run every 1 to 2 weeks
- Use cutback weeks to shorten the long run as well
If you finish the long run so depleted that the next two days are compromised, your long run is too long for your current base.
Summer running in Austin: heat changes everything
Training through Texas summer heat adds stress, even at easy paces. If you try to keep pace goals from cooler months, you may accidentally turn easy runs into hard runs.
Heat-smart strategies
- Run early, or choose shaded routes
- Use effort, not pace, to guide easy runs
- Hydrate before and after, and consider electrolytes for longer runs
- Wear breathable clothing and light colors
- Shorten runs when heat and humidity spike
Important: In hot conditions, it is normal for pace to slow. You are still building your base if the effort stays easy.
Strength training: the injury-prevention accelerator
Adding mileage works best when your body is strong enough to handle it.
Aim for 2 short sessions per week focused on:
- glutes and hips (bridges, deadlifts, step-ups)
- calves and Achilles (calf raises, eccentric heel drops)
- core stability (planks, side planks, carries)
- single-leg balance (lunges, split squats)
Keep strength training consistent but not exhausting. You should leave the gym feeling better, not wiped out.
The warning signs you are adding too much, too soon
Pay attention to:
- soreness that does not improve after an easy day
- pain that changes your stride
- tightness that shows up at the same mile marker each run
- sudden drop in motivation or sleep quality
- elevated resting heart rate, unusual fatigue
If you notice these, pull back early. One small adjustment can prevent a multi-week setback.
A sample 4-week summer base progression (example)
This is a template. Adjust the numbers to match your current level.
Week 1 (baseline): Hold steady mileage, establish routine
Week 2 (build): +5 to 10 percent total miles
Week 3 (build): +5 to 8 percent total miles, or hold steady if heat is high
Week 4 (cutback): -10 to 25 percent total miles, keep frequency if possible
Repeat the cycle.
The goal by the end of summer
For Austin Marathon runners, a successful summer base means:
- you can run most days (if desired) without breaking down
- your long run feels controlled and repeatable
- your easy pace effort stays easy, even in the heat
- you are healthy, consistent, and ready for marathon-specific training
Consistency is the win. Everything else builds from that.
FAQ: Building a running base and adding mileage
How many miles should I run per week for a marathon base?
It depends on your history. A strong base is the highest weekly mileage you can repeat consistently while staying healthy. Many runners do well building into a steady range first, then increasing later with structured training.
Should I do speed work during base building?
Keep it minimal. Strides (short, relaxed accelerations) once or twice per week can help maintain leg turnover. Save heavy workouts for later phases.
Is the 10 percent rule always safe?
It is a guideline, not a guarantee. In summer heat or after time off, 10 percent can still be too much. When in doubt, increase less, or add mileage every other week.
What if I miss a week?
Resume at a conservative level. Do not try to “make up” mileage. Your body responds to consistent training, not repayment plans.
