🏋️ Built for Competing Athletes

The Compete
Travel Guide

Everything you need to travel smart, perform at your peak, and not wreck your training on race weekend. Nutrition, supplements, sleep, jet lag, and more.

⏰ Jet Lag 😴 Sleep 🥗 Nutrition 💊 Supplements 🏃 Training on the Road 💧 Hydration 📅 Race Week Timeline ✅ Packing Checklist

Crushing Jet Lag

Flying to Stockholm, Tokyo, or Sydney for a race? Time zones are one of the biggest performance killers that athletes ignore until it's too late. Here's how to manage them like a pro.

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Before You Fly

3–5 days out
  • Start shifting your sleep schedule 3 days before departure — 1 hour per day toward destination time
  • Use morning light exposure to accelerate the shift eastward
  • Avoid alcohol for 48h before a long-haul flight — it tanks sleep quality at altitude
  • Hydrate aggressively the 2 days before flying — plane air is brutal
  • Book window seat — you control the light and can lean to sleep
🏆 Pro TipUse the Timeshifter app (free tier available) — it builds a personalized jet lag plan based on your exact flight and race schedule.
🛫

On the Plane

In-flight protocol
  • Set your watch to destination time the moment you board — start thinking in that timezone
  • Drink 250ml of water every hour of flight — minimum. Skip the free alcohol.
  • If it's nighttime at your destination: wear eye mask, earplugs, take 0.5mg melatonin
  • If it's daytime at your destination: stay awake, use blue light, move around
  • Walk the aisle every 2h — reduces swelling and keeps muscles from stiffening
  • Compression socks on for any flight over 3h — non-negotiable
🏆 Pro TipFast during the flight if you can. Studies show 16h fasting resets your internal clock faster than any supplement.
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After Landing

First 24h at destination
  • Get outside in natural sunlight within 30 minutes of landing — this is the #1 circadian reset
  • Don't nap if it's before 2pm local time — push through to local bedtime
  • Take 1–3mg melatonin 30 min before your first local bedtime
  • Do a short 20–30 min easy run or walk — light movement accelerates adaptation
  • Eat your meals on local time immediately — your gut clock is also adjusting
🏆 Rule of ThumbAllow 1 day of adjustment for every hour of time zone difference. Plan your travel arrival accordingly.

Sleep Like You Train

Sleep is the most underrated performance variable. A bad night before race day can cost you 5–10% of your output. Here's how to protect it on the road.

Target Sleep — Race Week
Aim for MORE sleep 4–5 days before — you can bank it. The night before race day matters less than most athletes think.
Mon
8.5h
Tue
9h
Wed
8h
Thu
8.5h
Fri
7.5h
Sat ★
6.5h*
Sun
9.5h
★ Pre-race night sleep is often disrupted by nerves — this is normal and expected. The sleep you banked earlier covers it.
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Hotel Sleep Hacks

Optimize the unfamiliar
  • Bring your own travel pillow — hotel pillows are ergonomic nightmares
  • Request a room away from elevators and ice machines at check-in
  • Pack blackout eye mask — even blackout curtains have gaps
  • Set room temp to 65–68°F (18–20°C) — this is the proven optimal sleep temp
  • Use a white noise app if street noise is a factor
  • Keep your pre-sleep routine identical to home — same order, same time
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Pre-Race Night Protocol

The night before
  • No screens after 9pm — blue light suppresses melatonin by up to 50%
  • Last meal 3h before bed — racing on a full gut is miserable
  • Lay out every single piece of race kit the night before — decision fatigue kills sleep
  • Write a short "brain dump" list of everything you're worried about — offloads it from your working memory
  • Magnesium glycinate 400mg is your best sleep supplement here — not melatonin
🏆 Science noteOne bad night's sleep before a race has minimal impact on performance. Two bad nights does. Protect Wednesday and Thursday more than Friday.
🌙

Sleep Supplements

What actually works
  • Magnesium Glycinate — 300–400mg before bed. Reduces cortisol, improves sleep depth
  • Melatonin — 0.5–1mg only, for jet lag adjustment. Most people take 10x too much.
  • L-Theanine — 200mg. Calms race-brain without sedation
  • Tart Cherry Extract — natural melatonin precursor + anti-inflammatory
  • Ashwagandha — reduces cortisol chronically. Start 2 weeks before, not the night before.
⚠️ AvoidSleep aids like Benadryl or ZzzQuil destroy sleep quality — you wake up feeling worse and HRV tanks.

Fueling to Compete

Traveling breaks your nutrition routine. Hotels don't have your usual food. Race cities have unfamiliar options. Here's how to fuel properly no matter where you land.

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Travel Day Nutrition

Airports, planes & transit

Airport food will sabotage your gut. Plan for it or suffer the consequences the next morning.

  • Pack your own snacks: rice cakes, nut butter packets, jerky, protein bars you've tested before
  • Never try a new food on travel day or race week — gut unpredictability is real
  • Avoid cruciferous vegetables day before and day of flying — gas at altitude is brutal
  • Prioritize protein and complex carbs, minimize processed airport food
  • Take a digestive enzyme with every meal on travel day
🏆 Best Airport HackFind a Chipotle, Sweetgreen, or similar build-your-own bowl near your gate. Predictable macros, whole food ingredients, easy on the gut.
🍝

Carb Loading Protocol

48h before race start

Carb loading works. But most athletes do it wrong — too much, too late, wrong foods.

  • Start 48h out, not the night before — glycogen storage takes time
  • Target 8–10g carbs per kg bodyweight over the 48h window
  • Stick to foods you KNOW your gut tolerates — pasta, white rice, bread, oats
  • Reduce fiber and fat during this window — slow digestion = stomach issues on course
  • Reduce training intensity alongside the carb increase to let muscles absorb
🏆 Race Morning3–4h before start: 1–1.5g carbs/kg. Easy to digest. White rice, banana, white toast with jam. No surprises.
Race Week Food Guide
What to eat, limit, and avoid during race week
Food Race Week? Night Before? Race Morning? Why
White rice / pasta✓ YES✓ YES✓ YESEasily digestible carbs, low fiber
Banana✓ YES✓ YES✓ YESPotassium, quick carbs, no gut issues
Chicken / lean protein✓ YES⚡ LIMIT✗ AVOIDSlow to digest, skip race morning
Broccoli / cabbage⚡ LIMIT✗ AVOID✗ AVOIDHigh fiber = gas = problem on course
Eggs✓ YES✓ YES⚡ LIMITGreat protein, easy to find at hotels
Spicy food⚡ LIMIT✗ AVOID✗ AVOIDGI distress risk, especially when traveling
Alcohol✗ AVOID✗ AVOID✗ AVOIDDisrupts sleep, dehydrates, impairs recovery
Coffee / caffeine✓ YES⚡ CUT BY 2PM✓ YES90min before race start for max effect
New / exotic food⚡ CAUTION✗ AVOID✗ AVOIDUnknown gut response — too risky
Oats / granola✓ YES✓ YES✓ YESSteady carbs, pack individual oat packets

The Supplement Stack

These are the evidence-backed supplements that make a measurable difference for competition travel. Not influencer fluff — actual science.

⚠️ Affiliate Disclosure: Some links below earn HyroxDeals.com a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend supplements with strong research backing. Always consult your doctor before starting any new supplement protocol.
⚡ Performance & Race Day
🏆 Tier 1
Creatine Monohydrate
Daily — 5g with any meal
The most researched performance supplement on earth. Increases power output, muscle endurance, and cognitive function. Non-negotiable for Hyrox athletes. Takes 3–4 weeks of daily use to saturate — don't start the week of the race.
Protocol: 5g daily, every day, regardless of training. Don't cycle it.
Shop Creatine →
🏆 Tier 1
Caffeine
90 min before race start
3–6mg per kg bodyweight. Reduces perceived exertion, increases power output, and delays fatigue. Paired with L-Theanine (200mg) to remove the jittery edge. The most legal, reliable performance enhancer available.
Protocol: 200–400mg caffeine + 200mg L-Theanine, 90 min before start.
Shop Caffeine + Theanine →
⚡ Tier 2
Beta-Alanine
Daily — 3.2g/day split doses
Buffers lactic acid buildup in muscles, extending high-intensity endurance. The tingling (paresthesia) is harmless. Best taken consistently for 4+ weeks before race day. Strong evidence for repeated efforts like Hyrox stations.
Protocol: 1.6g twice daily with meals. Build for 4+ weeks before race.
Shop Beta-Alanine →
⚡ Tier 2
Beetroot / Nitrates
2–3h before race
Boosts nitric oxide, improving blood flow and oxygen efficiency. Particularly effective at altitude. Beetroot shots or powder are the practical form. Avoid with caffeine? No — the combination is actually synergistic.
Protocol: 500mg nitrates (2 beetroot shots) 2–3h before race. Start 3 days out.
Shop Beetroot Shots →
🔄 Recovery & Travel
🛡️ Essential
Magnesium Glycinate
Nightly — 300–400mg before bed
Most athletes are deficient. Critical for muscle recovery, sleep quality, and reducing cortisol. Glycinate form is the most bioavailable and least likely to cause GI issues. This is the single highest-ROI recovery supplement for traveling athletes.
Protocol: 300–400mg 30 min before bed, every night of race week.
Shop Magnesium →
🛡️ Essential
Vitamin D3 + K2
Daily — with breakfast
Immune function, bone health, hormone optimization — D3 deficiency tanks performance and recovery. K2 ensures the calcium goes to bones, not arteries. Critical for athletes who train indoors, fly frequently, or compete in winter locations.
Protocol: 2,000–5,000 IU D3 + 100mcg K2 daily with fat-containing meal.
Shop D3 + K2 →
✈️ Travel
Vitamin C + Zinc
Travel days + race week
Airports are petri dishes. Race expos are worse. Immune suppression from high training loads + travel stress is real. Vitamin C (1g) + Zinc (15mg) is a simple, cheap, well-supported stack to reduce your risk of arriving sick.
Protocol: 1g Vitamin C + 15mg Zinc on travel days and 3 days post-race.
Shop Immune Stack →
✈️ Travel
Electrolytes
Travel day + race morning
Plane air is 10–15% humidity. You lose more sodium, potassium, and magnesium than you realize just sitting on a 10h flight. Electrolyte packets (LMNT, Liquid IV) are easy to pack and make a measurable difference in how you feel on arrival.
Protocol: 1 packet on every 3+ hour flight. 1 packet race morning with breakfast.
Shop Electrolytes →
🌙 Sleep
Melatonin (Low Dose)
Jet lag only — 0.5–1mg
Use ONLY for jet lag adjustment, not as a regular sleep aid. Most products contain 5–10x too much. The research supports 0.5–1mg — anything more causes next-day grogginess. Take 30 min before your target destination bedtime.
Protocol: 0.5mg only. 30 min before local bedtime for 3 nights post-arrival.
Shop Low-Dose Melatonin →
🔄 Recovery
Tart Cherry Extract
Post-race recovery
One of the most effective natural anti-inflammatories for exercise recovery. Reduces DOMS by up to 24% in studies. Start 5 days before race, take post-race for 3 days. Also a natural melatonin precursor — doubles as mild sleep support.
Protocol: 480mg extract (or 30ml concentrate) twice daily. 5 days pre through 3 days post-race.
Shop Tart Cherry →
🥩 Protein on the Road
📦 Travel Essential
Whey Protein
Post-workout / as needed
Pack individual sachets — not the full tub. Hotels don't have shakers. Protein targets are hardest to hit on travel days when you're stuck in airports or with limited food options. Sachets solve this cleanly.
Protocol: 25–40g post-training or as a meal gap filler. Pack 6–8 individual sachets.
Shop Protein Packets →
🌱 Vegan Option
Plant Protein Blend
Post-workout / travel days
Pea + rice protein blend hits the same amino profile as whey without dairy. Important for athletes who experience GI issues with dairy (very common when traveling). Same leucine threshold to trigger muscle protein synthesis.
Protocol: 30–40g post-training. Look for products with 2.5g+ leucine per serving.
Shop Plant Protein →

Training on the Road

You don't need your home gym. You need to stay sharp, keep the engine warm, and not arrive at the start line carrying accumulated fatigue from trying to train too hard during race week.

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Race Week Training

Taper right
  • Reduce volume by 40–50% the week of the race — fitness is already built
  • Keep intensity: 1–2 short, sharp sessions with race-pace efforts to stay neurologically primed
  • Don't test new movements or heavy lifts — injury risk with nothing to gain
  • Walk the race venue the day before — counts as active recovery and lowers race-day anxiety
  • Complete rest 48h before race start
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Hotel Gym Workout

Minimal equipment

When your hotel gym has two dumbbells and a treadmill from 2009:

  • 20 min easy run at 60–65% max HR — blood flow, not fitness building
  • Bodyweight circuit: push-ups, squats, lunges, plank — 3 rounds, light effort
  • Resistance bands pack flat and replace half a gym — bring them
  • Skip rope if the ceiling is high enough — best travel cardio tool
  • Mobility and stretching routine — your body will thank you after 10h of travel
🏆 Mindset shiftRace week hotel workouts are maintenance, not gains. The goal is to feel alive, not to be tired.
🧘

Recovery Tools to Pack

Portable recovery kit
  • Lacrosse ball — fits in any pocket. Best self-myofascial release tool.
  • Mini foam roller — travel size fits in a carry-on
  • Resistance bands — 3 band set covers activation, rehab, and warmup
  • Compression socks — for flights AND post-race recovery
  • Cold shower protocol — free, always available, works better than most gadgets
Shop Travel Recovery Kit →

Hydration Protocol

A 2% drop in hydration causes a measurable decline in performance. Flying, hotel air conditioning, and unfamiliar climates all accelerate dehydration faster than most athletes realize.

💧

Daily Hydration Targets

Non-negotiable numbers
  • Normal training days: 35–45ml per kg bodyweight
  • Travel days: add 500ml per 3h of flying
  • Hot climate races: add 500–750ml above baseline
  • Race morning: 500–600ml on waking, stop 90 min before start
  • Color check: urine should be pale yellow. Clear = overhydrated. Dark = already behind.
  • Start every morning with 500ml water before coffee — dehydration from sleep is real
🏆 Travel HackBuy a large water bottle immediately after clearing airport security. Keep it in your hand until boarding. Most athletes arrive at their destination already dehydrated.

Electrolyte Strategy

Not just water
  • Pure water alone isn't enough for heavy training — you need sodium, potassium, magnesium
  • LMNT and Liquid IV are the two best travel-format electrolyte packets
  • Race week: 1 electrolyte serving per training session + 1 with dinner
  • Race morning: 1 serving with breakfast, nothing within 60 min of start
  • Hot race climates (Bangkok, Dubai, Cape Town summer): 2x electrolytes race week
  • Avoid hyponatremia — drinking too much pure water without sodium can be dangerous
Shop Electrolyte Packets →

Race Week Playbook

Day-by-day guide from departure to post-race recovery. Follow this and you'll arrive prepared, not stressed.

7 Days Out — Preparation
Confirm hotel, flights, race registration. Pack list finalized. Start loading creatine and beta-alanine if not already. Begin sleep banking (+30–60 min per night). Grocery run for race week staples.
  • Start shifting sleep schedule toward destination timezone
  • Book airport transfer and race venue transport
  • Check race-day weather and pack accordingly
Travel Day — Execution
Race kit in carry-on only. Pack own snacks. Hydrate aggressively. Compression socks on. Electrolyte packet on every 3h flight segment.
  • Set watch to destination time at takeoff
  • Walk aisle every 2 hours
  • Take melatonin if flying overnight
  • Avoid alcohol and processed airport food
Arrival Day — Reset
Sunlight immediately. Easy 20 min walk or jog. Eat on local time. No napping before 2pm. Hotel room setup: temperature, blackout mask, protein in fridge.
  • Locate race venue — know your route
  • Find your pre-race meal restaurant (test it tonight)
  • 1mg melatonin at local bedtime
2 Days Before — Prep Mode
Packet pickup. Short sharp workout — race pace efforts, 20 min max. Start carb loading. Confirm race start time, bib number, bag drop logistics.
  • Lay out race kit and verify everything is there
  • Start beetroot shots protocol (continue through race day)
  • Lights out by 10pm
Day Before — Quiet Day
Active rest only. Walk the venue if possible. Final carb load meal at lunch. Light dinner by 6pm. Brain dump journaling. Race kit staged and ready.
  • No new food, no alcohol, no heroics
  • Magnesium glycinate + L-Theanine before bed
  • Alarm set — and a backup
🏁 Race Day
Wake 3–4h before start. 500ml water immediately. Pre-race meal (tested foods only). Caffeine 90 min before start. Warm up protocol 20 min before.
  • Arrive at venue 60+ min early
  • Electrolytes with breakfast, not at start line
  • Trust the training. Execute the plan.
Post-Race — Recovery Begins Now
Protein + carbs within 30 min of finishing. Electrolytes. Gentle walk. Cold shower or ice bath if available. Tart cherry extract starts.
  • Sleep 9+ hours tonight — non-negotiable
  • Don't celebrate with alcohol — it destroys the recovery window
  • Reflect on what to adjust for next race

Don't Forget Anything

Interactive checklist. Check items off as you pack. Never show up without something critical again.