Race Readiness

Race Readiness for Runners

Training is only part of it. Racendo's race readiness covers logistics, documents, checklist progress, course knowledge, pacing and race-day setup — so you see the whole preparation picture in one place.

Garmin and similar platforms own the physiological readiness layer. Racendo focuses on the broader race-preparation picture: logistics, documents, checklist, course, pacing and travel.

Training context is only one part

Racendo reads what you've actually done so it can sanity-check pacing — but readiness is more than weekly mileage.

Check logistics and documents

Confirmation email saved? Bib pickup info on the race? Hotel booked? Racendo flags what's missing per race.

Know the course before you arrive

Course saved, elevation read, key sections noted, GPX on your watch — readiness covers it.

See missing checklist items before race week

Race-week checklist progress feeds directly into the readiness score, so nothing waits until the morning.

Pacing plan and Race Day Mode ready

Goal time set, splits built, fuel plan locked, Race Day Mode timeline prepared — readiness is one screen.

Turn insights into the next action

Each readiness check ends with a single concrete next step — not a wall of red badges.

Readiness questions runners ask

Am I ready for my race?
Racendo answers by checking training context, logistics, documents, checklist progress, course knowledge, pacing plan and race-day setup — the whole readiness picture, not just physiology.
What does race readiness include?
Training context, logistics (travel, hotel, expo, bib pickup), saved documents, race-week checklist, course details, pacing plan and Race Day Mode setup. Plan all of this in the race planning app.
When should I start checking readiness?
Four weeks out, weekly. Race week, every couple of days. Race morning, switch to Race Day Mode.