TL;DR
- A taper reduces training stress, but your HRV trend does not always rise smoothly.
- It is common to see: fatigue lingering, sleep changing, and metrics moving in unexpected ways.
- Use a baseline and combine signals: HRV trend, resting heart rate trend, and how you feel.
- If RHR is elevated and HRV is suppressed during taper, you may still be carrying load, getting sick, or under sleeping.
- Century AI will make this easier by turning Apple Health signals into a daily taper recommendation.
The taper problem: you are training less, but you do not feel amazing yet
Most runners expect taper week to feel like a magic upgrade.
Sometimes it does.
But often the taper feels like:
- heavy legs
- weird sleep
- more stress because race day is close
- metrics that do not match expectations
This is where HRV can help, but only if you interpret it correctly.
What HRV is actually telling you
HRV is a proxy for autonomic nervous system balance.
In plain English:
- when stress is high, HRV tends to be lower
- when recovery is good, HRV tends to be higher
The catch is that HRV is sensitive to many things, not just training:
- sleep quality
- mental stress
- alcohol
- dehydration
- illness
So your taper HRV story is a blend of training and life.
What a normal taper can look like in your data
A typical taper reduces volume and intensity.
In the data, you might see:
Pattern A: the clean rebound
- RHR trend drops slightly
- HRV trend rises
- you feel better each day
This is the dream scenario.
Pattern B: the delayed rebound
- first few taper days look the same as peak week
- HRV stays flat or even dips
- then you rebound later
This is common, especially after a hard block.
Pattern C: the anxious taper
- training stress drops
- but sleep worsens due to nerves
- HRV does not improve
The fix is rarely more training. It is usually sleep and routine.
A simple taper decision rule (HRV + resting heart rate)
Use this daily, starting 10 to 14 days out.
Step 1: establish a baseline
Use the last 28 days, excluding your biggest outlier days.
You are comparing to you, not to elite runners.
Step 2: combine HRV and RHR
Think traffic lights:
Green: HRV near baseline and RHR near baseline
- keep the taper plan
- keep one sharp session, but do not chase pace
Yellow: HRV down or RHR up, but you feel fine
- keep the workout, but reduce total time
- keep intensity short
Example: 4 x 2 minutes at marathon pace instead of 8 x 2.
Red: HRV down and RHR up, or you feel clearly worse
- switch the session to easy running or rest
- prioritize sleep
- watch for illness
A race is not won in taper week. It is lost by forcing one more hard day.
What about a sudden HRV drop during taper?
A sudden drop can happen for boring reasons:
- bad sleep
- alcohol
- travel
- a big work deadline
Treat it as a prompt to ask:
- did I sleep enough?
- am I eating enough carbs?
- am I hydrated?
- am I getting sick?
If the drop persists and RHR climbs, take it seriously.
Carb loading and HRV: why the numbers can change
Carb loading changes:
- hydration
- glycogen and water storage
- gut load
- sleep
Your scale weight may jump.
Your HRV may move.
Do not try to optimize HRV during carb load. Optimize performance.
The goal is:
- glycogen full
- sleep decent
- legs fresh
Race week checklist (simple, not perfect)
Sleep
- keep wake time consistent
- add 30 to 60 minutes in bed
- reduce screens late
Training
- keep runs easy
- include 1 to 2 short reminders of pace
- do not turn workouts into tests
Stress
- plan logistics early
- prepare gear 2 days before
- avoid new supplements
Data
- look at trends, not the number today
- use RHR and HRV together
- trust how you feel
Good resources to understand HRV and training load
Marco Altini has some of the clearest explanations of HRV in endurance training.
Disclaimer: These videos are external resources. They are not medical advice, and they are not affiliated with Century.
Where Century fits
A taper is a decision problem.
Most runners need help answering:
- should I do the session today?
- should I cut it short?
- should I rest?
Century AI will use Apple Health signals to:
- learn your baseline during normal training
- detect when you are carrying load during taper
- suggest a simple daily call: push, maintain, recover
If you are training for a marathon, this is exactly the moment you want clarity.
Quick taper template (10 days out)
Use this as a simple plan:
- Day -10 to -7: reduce volume 15 to 25%, keep one quality session
- Day -6 to -4: reduce volume 30 to 40%, keep strides
- Day -3 to -1: easy runs, short strides, prioritize sleep
Then adjust using the traffic light rule in this article.
