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What to Eat Before a Long Bike Ride

The tank you finish on is filled before you clip in. Here's how to eat the night before, the real breakfast, and the top-up so you're not chasing a deficit at km 40.

By the CyclingClub.cc team·
What to Eat Before a Long Bike Ride

You can do everything right on the bike and still blow up because of what you did — or didn't — eat in the twelve hours before you clipped in. The bonk at km 120 usually isn't a km-120 problem. It's a breakfast problem, or a night-before problem, wearing a disguise.

Here's the mental model: your legs run mostly on stored carbohydrate — glycogen packed into the muscles and liver. You start with a tank of a fixed size, top it up as you go, and if it was half-full at the gun you're already behind. What you eat during the ride matters enormously — we covered that in how many carbs per hour — but you can't out-eat a bad start. This is the before bookend. Get it right and the first two hours feel like nothing.

The night before: fill the tank while you sleep

For a genuinely long day — a hilly four-hour Sunday, a gran fondo, a century — the biggest lever is your total carbohydrate across the whole day before, not one heroic plate at 9pm.

The sports-nutrition literature is unglamorous but clear: to arrive with well-stocked glycogen, riders are advised to lift carbohydrate intake to roughly 10 g per kg of body weight across the 24–36 hours before a long event. For a 70 kg rider that's around 700 g of carbs over the day — a lot, and you feel it. You don't need to hit that number for a normal training ride. But for an event you've circled on the calendar, it means every meal leans carb-heavy: extra rice, pasta, potatoes, bread, fruit.

Two things club riders always get wrong:

  • Load across the day, not at dinner. A wall of pasta the night before mostly buys you a bloated, badly-slept night. Spread the carbs through lunch, afternoon snacks and a moderate dinner instead.
  • Go easy on fibre and fat at that last dinner. A giant bowl of high-fibre veg or a rich creamy sauce sits in your gut and greets you again at the first climb. Save the big salad for a rest day.

The target: you wake up not hungry, and your first pee is pale. That's a tank close to full.

Drag the carbs you take per hour — and how hard you ride. The faint line is the unfuelled drain. Fuelling slows yours, so the bonk slides later. Ride easy and modest fuelling holds you to the finish; ride hard and even 120 g/hr only delays it — you burn carbohydrate faster than any gut can absorb.
  • Glycogen stores
  • Without fuelling
  • The bonk
  • With fuelling
  • Hours riding
  • Carbs per hour
  • 0
  • 120 g
  • Empty before the finish — you bonk
  • Fuelled to the finish
  • Ride intensity
  • Easy
  • Hard

The real breakfast: 3–4 hours out

This is the meal people either skip or mistime. The evidence-based target for the pre-ride meal is 1–4 g of carbohydrate per kg of body weight, eaten in the 1–4 hours before longer, harder efforts. For most club riders on a normal Sunday, aim at the lower-middle of that range — roughly 1–3 g/kg — and give it time to clear.

Why the 3–4 hour gap? It lets the food digest, tops up liver glycogen (which drains overnight — that's why you wake up a little hollow), and settles your gut before the hard bit. Eat a big breakfast 45 minutes before a punchy start and you'll spend the first climb burping it back up.

Here's what those grams actually look like on a plate:

Pre-ride breakfast carbs by rider weight (aiming for ~1–3 g/kg)
Body weight1 g/kg (light spin)2 g/kg (standard long ride)3 g/kg (event / big day)
60 kg~60 g carbs~120 g carbs~180 g carbs
70 kg~70 g carbs~140 g carbs~210 g carbs
80 kg~80 g carbs~160 g carbs~240 g carbs

To calibrate: a bowl of oats (~50 g dry) with a banana and a spoon of honey lands near 90–100 g of carbs. Two slices of toast with jam plus a banana is roughly the same. So the 2 g/kg column is "a proper bowl of porridge plus a banana and a coffee" — not a competitive-eating challenge.

What to actually eat

Keep it boring: carb-forward, low-fibre, moderate-protein, low-fat. The things that have worked for thousands of riders on thousands of mornings:

  • Porridge / oats with banana, honey or maple, a little milk. The house classic for a reason.
  • White toast or a bagel with jam, honey, or a thin scrape of nut butter.
  • Rice — yes, plain white rice with a little sugar or a fried egg. Common in the pro peloton because it's gentle and dense.
  • Pancakes with syrup and fruit.
  • A banana and a couple of dates if you genuinely can't stomach a full meal that early.

Notice what's not there: no big fry-up, no croissant swimming in butter, no protein-shake-only "breakfast," no bowl of bran. Fat and fibre are the enemies of a calm gut on the start line.

The 4-hour plan as a clock. A bottle every hour, a gel about every 40 minutes, one real-food item at halfway — small inputs on a timer, not three big hits. Set an alert and feed whether you feel like it or not.
  • Bottle — every hour
  • Gel — every ~40 min
  • Real food — at halfway
  • Hours
  • Carbs per hour
  • Gut's limit
Pre-ride carbs by how long before you roll out
Time before the rideCarbs
3–4 hr before100 g
2 hr before60 g
1 hr before30 g
15 min before15 g

The 30–60 minute top-up

Between the real breakfast and rolling out, have a small, fast top-up: a banana, a gel, an energy bar, or a bidon with carb mix — something in the 20–40 g range. This isn't about filling the tank; it's about holding blood sugar steady so you don't roll to the meeting point on fumes, and it wakes your gut up so the first on-bike gel goes down easy.

If your start is early and brutal — a club run that goes hard from km zero, or a race — this top-up matters more than the size of breakfast. Keep it simple and familiar. Your first proper on-bike feed still comes 30–45 minutes in, as normal.

Same carbs, three delivery formats. At an easy pace anything digests — solids even spare your gels. Push toward threshold and the gut loses blood flow: solid food sits heavy, while a drink and a gel — which deliver carbohydrate about equally — keep emptying. Drag the intensity: this ranks gut comfort, not how much carb each delivers.
  • Drink
  • Gel
  • Solid
  • fast · hydrates
  • fast · portable
  • slow · filling
  • Gut comfort
  • Intensity
  • Easy
  • Threshold
  • Easy pace — anything goes, solids spare your gels
  • Tempo — gels and drink, go easy on solids
  • Threshold — drink or gel; solids sit heavy

Coffee: yes, and it's not just ritual

The espresso before a ride earns its place. Caffeine is one of the few genuinely well-supported performance aids in endurance sport — it lowers how hard a given effort feels and sharpens the pointy end of the ride. A coffee 45–60 minutes before rolling out is plenty for most riders.

Two cautions. First, caffeine is a mild gut stimulant — know your body and give yourself a bathroom window before the group forms up, not at km 15 in the middle of a paceline. Second, don't debut a triple-shot pre-workout on event morning. Which brings us to the golden rule.

Drag the carbs you take per hour. Both doors fill together to 60 g/hr; then glucose saturates — its cap goes warm and the surplus is wasted — while fructose keeps the mixed bar climbing to about 120.
  • SGLT1 · glucose
  • GLUT5 · fructose
  • Glucose only
  • Glucose + fructose
  • g/hr absorbed
  • Carbs per hour
  • 0
  • 120 g
  • Both doors keep up
  • Glucose maxed — fructose adds the rest
  • Both maxed — the rest is wasted
  • Fructose mix
  • Glucose only
  • 1:0.8 mix

The mistakes that quietly wreck a good day

Nothing new on race day. Not the gel brand, not the breakfast, not the pre-workout. If you haven't rehearsed it on a training ride, it doesn't touch your start line.

The recurring offenders, in the order riders keep making them:

  • Trying new food on the big day. The one rule that saves the most Sundays. Your event breakfast should be a meal you've eaten before a dozen hard rides. Test everything in training first.
  • Eating too late. A full breakfast 30 minutes before a hard start sits like a brick. Give real food 2–4 hours; use the small top-up for the final hour.
  • Too much fibre. High-fibre cereal, big raw salads, lots of veg the night before — great for daily health, rough for race-morning guts. Dial it down in the 24 hours before.
  • Too much fat. The fry-up, the buttery pastry, the big cheese omelette. Fat slows digestion and leaves you heavy on the first climb.
  • Skipping breakfast to "burn fat." Fasted riding has a place for easy Zone 2 days, but not before a long or hard group ride. You'll just get dropped and call it a bad day.
  • Under-drinking the night before. Turn up already down a bottle and no breakfast fixes it. Sip through the evening; aim for a pale first pee.

Bottom line: the day-before checklist

If you organise the club run, this is worth putting in the ride description — half the bunch will thank you at the coffee stop. It's a natural companion to the logistics in the group-ride playbook.

  1. Day before: lean carb-heavy across all meals; moderate, low-fat, low-fibre dinner; sip water through the evening.
  2. 3–4 hours out: real breakfast, ~1–3 g/kg of carbs — porridge, toast, rice, pancakes. Low fat, low fibre.
  3. 45–60 min out: coffee, plus a small 20–40 g top-up (banana, gel, bar). Hit the bathroom before the group forms.
  4. On the bike: first feed at 30–45 minutes, then settle into your hourly carb plan.
  5. Golden rule: nothing new on the big day. Rehearse it all in training.

Do this and the bonk at km 120 stops being your story. You'll still have to turn the pedals — but you'll be turning them on a full tank, and that's the difference between finishing strong and just finishing.

FAQ

How many carbs should I actually eat for breakfast before a long ride?

Aim for roughly 1–3 g of carbs per kg of body weight, eaten 3–4 hours before you roll out. A 70 kg rider lands around 140 g for a standard long ride — that's a proper bowl of porridge with a banana and honey, or two slices of toast with jam plus a banana. Give it time to clear before the hard bit starts.

Do I really need to carb-load the day before, or is that just for races?

For a genuinely long day — a hilly four-hour Sunday, a fondo, a century — yes. The target is around 10 g/kg across the 24–36 hours before, spread across all your meals rather than one big plate at dinner. For a normal training spin, don't bother; save it for the days you've circled on the calendar.

What should I eat in the last hour before the group ride starts?

Something small and fast: a banana, a gel, a bar, or a carb-mix bidon, in the 20–40 g range. It's not about topping up the tank — it's holding your blood sugar steady and waking your gut up so the first on-bike gel goes down easily. If the start is hard from km zero, this top-up matters more than breakfast size.

Is it safe to try a new energy bar or breakfast on event morning?

No — that's the mistake that wrecks the most Sundays. Your event breakfast should be a meal you've already eaten before a dozen hard training rides, same for gels, bars, and pre-workout. Test everything on ordinary rides first, so nothing on the big day is a surprise to your gut.

fuellingnutritionendurancelong ridesbreakfastcarbohydrate

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