The Best Way to Keep a Running Race Journal
June 13, 2026 · by Radu
Five years from now, you’ll want to remember the exact moment you broke 4:00 in the marathon. The weather. The crowd at mile 22. What you ate the night before. Whether your watch matched your chip time.
You won’t.
Not unless you write it down. Specific race memories fade faster than runners expect. Within two years, finish times blur together. Within five, entire races can disappear from memory. The races that meant the most to you when you ran them become hazy outlines of accomplishments you can no longer recall in detail.
A running race journal solves this problem. It preserves the details, captures the emotions, and creates a record of your running life that compounds in value over decades. Done well, it becomes one of the most rewarding habits a serious runner can develop.
Here’s the best way to keep a running race journal—what to include, how to organize it, and the habits that make it sustainable.
📓 Build your race journal in one place
RunningLog combines race journaling with structured tracking—dates, times, goals, notes, and progression in one searchable system.
What a Race Journal Actually Is
A running race journal isn’t just a list of finish times. It’s a structured record of each race that combines factual data with the experience itself—what happened, how it felt, and what you learned.
The best race journals balance two elements: data (times, places, conditions) and story (memories, emotions, lessons). Pure data becomes a spreadsheet. Pure story becomes hard to reference. The combination creates something useful for both analysis and memory.
What to Include for Every Race
A complete race journal entry covers five categories. You don’t need to write a novel for each race—even brief notes in each category create a valuable record.
1. The Basics
- Race name and date
- Location
- Distance
- Official finish time (chip time)
- Place overall and in age group
- Status (completed, DNF, DNS, DQ)
2. Performance Context
- Goals you set going in (A/B/C if you use that framework)
- Whether you achieved your goals
- Was it a personal record?
- How this time compares to similar past races
3. Conditions
- Weather at start and finish
- Course profile (flat, rolling, hilly, downhill)
- Field size and feel
- Anything unusual about race day
4. The Race Itself
- How you felt physically
- Pacing strategy and execution
- Fueling: what worked, what didn’t
- Notable miles or moments
- Where you struggled and how you pushed through
- The finish line moment
5. Lessons Learned
- What worked well that you’d repeat
- What you’d do differently next time
- Insights about training, pacing, or strategy
- How this race informs future goals
The 48-Hour Rule
Write your race journal entry within 48 hours of finishing. This single rule matters more than any other.
Why 48 hours? Within two days, you remember the details vividly. Beyond two days, memory starts compressing the experience. The specific weather feeling at mile 8, the conversation with the runner next to you at mile 15, the exact emotion crossing the finish—these fade fast.
Practical implementation: Write your entry the evening after the race or the next morning. Don’t wait for a perfect block of time. Even brief notes capture what would otherwise be lost.
Where to Keep Your Race Journal
The best place is the one you’ll actually use consistently. Each option has trade-offs:
Paper Notebooks
Pros: Tactile, focused, no screens, no battery, lasts decades
Cons: Hard to search, can be lost, not accessible from phone, no data analysis
Digital Journals (Notes Apps, Word Docs)
Pros: Searchable, backup-able, accessible across devices, easy to edit
Cons: Less structured, easy to abandon, format inconsistencies
Spreadsheets
Pros: Sortable, sum-able, queryable, customizable
Cons: Poor for narrative content, awkward on mobile, maintenance burden grows
Dedicated Race Tracking Apps
Pros: Purpose-built fields, automatic PR tracking, mobile-first, cloud backup, integration with Strava
Cons: Dependence on the service continuing to exist
The right answer for most runners is a combination: a structured tracking system (app or spreadsheet) for the data and quick notes, plus longer-form journaling (notes app or notebook) for races that warrant deeper reflection.
The Habits That Make It Sustainable
Most runners start race journals enthusiastically and abandon them within a year. Sustainable journaling requires specific habits.
Make It Quick
Set a default time investment—say, 10 minutes per race entry. Brief notes that get written beat detailed novels that never get finished. You can always expand important entries later.
Use Templates
Create a template covering the five categories above. Filling in a structured template is far easier than facing a blank page. Templates also ensure consistency, making your journal useful for comparison and analysis over years.
Make It Mobile
Your race journal should be accessible from your phone. You’re not at your desk in the post-race haze—you’re at a hotel, in a car, at brunch with running friends. Mobile accessibility is what makes journaling actually happen.
Review Periodically
At least once a year, read through your race journal. This serves multiple purposes: reinforcing memories, spotting patterns, generating motivation for the year ahead, and reminding you why you love running.
Year-end reviews are particularly valuable. Spending an hour in December reading every race entry from the year provides perspective that improves how you race going forward.
What to Avoid
Over-Engineering the System
Don’t design a 40-field tracking system you’ll never maintain. Start simple. Add complexity only when you find yourself wanting specific data you don’t have.
Letting Perfect Be the Enemy of Done
An imperfect entry written within 48 hours beats a perfect entry that takes three months to write. If you have only 5 minutes, write 5 minutes worth.
Comparing to Other Runners’ Journals
Some runners share elaborate race recaps on social media. Others keep simple notes. Both are valid. Your journal serves you, not anyone else.
Skipping Races That Disappointed You
The DNF. The race you blew up at mile 18. The marathon where you missed your goal by 12 minutes. Write these up too. The races that didn’t go well often contain the most valuable lessons.
The Long-Term Payoff
The value of a race journal compounds over time. After one year, it’s a useful reference. After three years, it reveals patterns invisible in any single race. After ten years, it becomes one of the most meaningful records of your athletic life.
Twenty years from now, you might be telling your grandchildren about your running. The specific times will matter less than the stories—the marathon you ran in pouring rain, the half where you finally broke through, the race weekend that changed how you thought about training, the friends you met along the way.
Those stories don’t survive on memory alone. They survive in journals.
Getting Started Today
If you haven’t been journaling your races, start now—with the next race on your calendar. Don’t try to backfill years of history first. Just commit to journaling the next race within 48 hours of finishing.
For races already in your past, you can recover what’s recoverable: emails, Strava activities, race photos, finisher medals. Add what you can. Accept imperfection for the past, and commit to completeness going forward.
The best running race journal is the one you actually keep. Pick a format. Use a simple template. Write within 48 hours. Review annually. Build the habit.
Decades from now, you’ll be glad you did.
Ready to start your race journal in a system built specifically for runners? RunningLog combines structured race tracking with journaling space—all the data and all the stories in one place.
How do you journal your races? Share your approach on Instagram or Threads!
Written by Radu
Radu combines his own racing experience with a passion for growth to inspire other runners. With a half-marathon PR of 1:26 and multiple podium finishes, he shares fresh perspectives on training and planning to help make every runner’s journey more rewarding.