2026-05-23 · 4 min read
Granfondo 100K training plan (with vert)
A granfondo isn't "a long ride with a number plate." It's 4-6 hours on the bike, usually with 3,300-8,200 ft of cumulative vert, and a group pace that drags you forward in the first two hours. If you hit mile 43 with no fuel, it's because of something that happened three months earlier in your plan. Here's the framework.
The premises
The 12 weeks
### Phase 1 · Base (weeks 1-5)
Build aerobic base with growing volume and very little intensity.
### Phase 2 · Specific (weeks 6-9)
Now you add FTP and sweet-spot work, holding volume high.
### Phase 3 · Peak (weeks 10-11)
A "rehearsal race" — a shorter granfondo (60-80 km) or a solo event.
### Phase 4 · Taper (week 12)
Intensity distribution (typical build phase)
| Zone | Time/week | % |
|---|---|---|
| Z1 (recovery) | 30-60 min | 8% |
| Z2 (aerobic) | 5-6 h | 65-70% |
| Sweet-spot (high Z3) | 60-90 min | 12-15% |
| Z4 (threshold) | 30 min | 5-7% |
| Z5+ (VO2max) | 10-20 min | 2-4% |
If you have a power meter, the zones are exact. Without one, navigate by HR and RPE — the numbers shift but the logic still holds.
The fueling math
The most common rookie mistake is undertraining the gut. Your body is NOT used to processing 60+ g of carbs per hour under exercise. This is trained.
Required practice on long rides:
Common mistakes
1. Trying to stay with the front group the first 12 mi. They'll push 250 W and you'll be toast by mile 31. Ride at YOUR pace (IF 0.75 max) for the first 19 mi.
2. Zero climbing in the plan. If the race has 5,000 ft D+, you can't arrive having only ridden flat.
3. Skipping the pure Z2 day. That's where aerobic base is built. Without Z2, your efficiency stalls.
4. Tapering too late. The taper is 2 weeks minimum. If you only cut the last one, you arrive with tired legs.
Vetta and the granfondo
[Vetta Trainer](/signup)'s engine periodizes cycling from day 1. You mark your goal "granfondo 100K, date X", connect Strava, and it builds weeks with sweet-spot and FTP intervals respecting your safe ramp. If you have measured FTP, it prescribes in watts; if not, maps to HR. Default philosophy is Coggan, but you can switch to polarized or sweet-spot.