
Complete Guide to the EDP Madrid Marathon 2027 — Course, Elevation, Logistics and How to Train for It
Complete Guide to the EDP Madrid Marathon 2027

Complete Guide to the EDP Madrid Marathon 2027
On 25 April 2027 Madrid hosts one of the five oldest marathons in Spain. The EDP brand, the 42.2 km through downtown and the 600 m of cumulative elevation gain make the Madrid Marathon the big spring race for runners chasing urban experience, atmosphere and an honest test rather than a fast time. This guide covers what the official site never quite spells out: what the course is really like, where most runners who go out hard fall apart, how to train for the hills, what time is realistic and how to put together the logistics for race weekend.
| Fact | Info |
|---|---|
| Date | 25 April 2027 |
| Distance | 42.195 km (marathon) |
| Elevation gain | ~600 m |
| City | Madrid (650 m altitude) |
| Start | Paseo del Prado |
| Start time | ~9:00 (confirm via official channels) |
| Organiser | AD MAPOMA / EDP Madrid Marathon |
| Registration | edpmaratondemadrid.es |
The EDP Madrid Marathon is the most historic international marathon in Spain, organised by AD MAPOMA since 1978. It pulls ~30,000 participants across the three distances (marathon, half marathon and 10K), draws runners from 60+ countries every year and combines a downtown party atmosphere with a course made tough by altitude (650 m) and cumulative elevation gain (~600 m). It's not a PB track; it's the "experience" marathon on the Spanish calendar.
Lead pack of the marathon coming past the Plaza de Cibeles fountain with the lead motorbike out front — the postcard that defines the Madrid race.
Madrid is not a flat marathon for hunting times. The city sits roughly 650 m above sea level on rolling terrain, and the course rewards anyone who runs honest pace through long false-flats over runners who go out fast. What you lose in fast geometry you gain in atmosphere: closed avenues with crowds on both sides all day long, a festive vibe along the route and a finish that drops you in the heart of the city. The altitude + elevation factor typically costs 5 to 10 minutes versus your time on a flat marathon like Valencia or Seville.
The EDP Madrid Marathon course is a single 42.195 km loop through the city centre with ~600 m of elevation gain. It starts next to Paseo del Prado, climbs through Cibeles and Gran Vía, drops down to Madrid Río, crosses the western part of the city, comes back through Casa de Campo and finishes near the start after four structural climbs spread across km 7–9, km 16–18, km 25–27 and km 30–32.
Official 3D map of the full EDP Madrid Marathon course (published by the organiser), with the central and western sections of the route clearly visible.
Recent editions have started right by Paseo del Prado, in front of the Prado Museum. The opening kilometres climb north past Plaza de Cibeles and head down Gran Vía — typically closed end to end for the race — before turning west towards the Royal Palace. From there the route drops down to Madrid Río along the western edge of the city, crosses Casa de Campo in a more natural, quieter section (km 18–25 roughly), comes back along the Manzanares and threads through the Salamanca neighbourhood and the perimeter of Retiro park before finishing on Paseo del Prado.
Asphalt is the dominant surface (with short cobble stretches near Plaza Mayor and the Royal Palace). Liquid aid stations with water and sports drink come roughly every 5 km, with solid aid stations (gels, fruit, bars) at km 21.1 and km 32. Crowd density peaks in Gran Vía, Plaza de España, the centre and the finish line — much thinner in the western zone / Casa de Campo, where you'll cover several kilometres without spectators.
Forget the "flat downtown" myth. Madrid climbs more than it looks. Total elevation gain is around ~600 m spread across four structural climbs:
Descents are moderate and gentle — they give you a bit of time back if your form holds — but don't expect freebies in the last 10 km. They're rolling with a slight net positive.
🚨 Where the race blows up
Course data for Strava / Garmin: the organiser publishes the official GPX a few weeks before race day on their website. To preview the final Retiro stretch midweek, look up the Strava segment "Subida Retiro Cibeles" — same profile you'll suffer on race day.
The Madrid Marathon has been run since 1978, making it one of the five oldest marathons in Spain (along with Barcelona, San Sebastián, Seville and Zaragoza). EDP has been the title sponsor since 2014 (the Rock'n'Roll Running Series format applied to the half and the 10K, not the marathon). Madrid's road running tradition predates the modern era by a long way; the race has changed sponsor and format several times, but the route and the late-April date remain its trademark.
Winner of the most recent edition crossing the finish line — iconic image to anchor the roll of honour section.
Race and roll-of-honour data (recent editions):
| Fact | Value |
|---|---|
| First Madrid marathon edition | 1978 |
| Editions held | 48 (as of 2026) |
| Current distances | Marathon · Half marathon · 10K |
| Participants (all distances, recent editions) | ~30,000 |
| Countries represented | 60+ |
| Men's elite record | 2:08:18 (Reuben Kerio, KEN, 2019) |
| Women's elite record | 2:24:37 (Siranesh Yirga, ETH, 2022) |
Verified winners and times for the 5 most recent editions:
| Year | 🥇 Men | Country | Time | 🥇 Women | Country | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | Mike Chematot | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:08:46 | Kena Girma | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:26:00 |
| 2025 | Derara Hurisa | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:09:11 | Maritu Ketema | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:25:55 |
| 2024 | Miktu Tafa | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:08:57 | Naom Jebet | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:26:20 |
| 2023 | Geofrey Kusuro | 🇺🇬 UGA | 2:10:29 | Doreen Chesang | 🇺🇬 UGA | 2:26:31 |
| 2022 | Abdela Godana | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:08:44 | Siranesh Yirga | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:24:37 |
Data verified against the public archive at Madrid Marathon (Wikipedia EN).
Registration for the EDP Madrid Marathon 2027 opens summer/autumn 2026 with tiered pricing (early-bird → standard → final spots). The marathon sells out before the half; by March of race year, only Marketplace bibs remain. The RFEA federation licence is +€5 on top of the bib.
Aerial view of the massive pack mid-flow through central Madrid — reinforces the "thousands every year, slots disappear" message.
Reference numbers from the 2026 closing window:
Assuming Madrid always has last-minute bibs is a mistake: runners who wait until March end up on the Marketplace or shut out entirely.
The EDP Madrid Marathon uses a tiered pricing system — the bib price goes up every time a tier closes. If you can afford it and you know you're running, register in the first tier: the saving vs the final spots is €20–30 per marathon bib.
| Tier | Approx. open | Approx. close | Marathon | Half | 10K |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🟢 Early-bird | Sept 2026 | Dec 2026 | €65–70 | €38–42 | €20–22 |
| 🟡 Standard | Jan 2027 | Feb 2027 | €80–90 | €48–55 | €25–28 |
| 🔴 Final spots | Mar 2027 | Until close | €95–100 | €58–65 | €30–35 |
Indicative prices based on the 2026 structure. Always confirm on the official registration page — amounts and tiers are updated there.
| Included in price | NOT included (optional extra) |
|---|---|
| ✅ Bib with timing chip | ❌ RFEA federation licence (+€5 marathon) |
| ✅ Technical finisher tee | ❌ Official professional photo (~€15–20) |
| ✅ Finisher medal | ❌ Saturday pasta party (sometimes extra) |
| ✅ On-course aid stations | ❌ Premium bag check service |
| ✅ Post-finish bag (fruit, bars, sports drink) | ❌ Cancellation insurance |
| ✅ Digital diploma with certified time |
What you need to factor in beyond the bib price:
Family members and runners at the expo (IFEMA), with stands or the bib pickup counter visible.
Bib pickup happens at the Runner Expo, normally held the two days before the race (Friday and Saturday) at IFEMA Madrid. Bibs are not handed out on race day: you have to pick yours up in person before the expo closes on Saturday, historically around 21:00.
You'll need:
Family and friends can pick up for you with a signed authorisation and a copy of your ID. The race kit usually includes the technical finisher tee, the bib with chip, a bag tag and a course map. Finisher medals are handed out in the post-finish zone after you cross the line.
The most practical way to reach the EDP Madrid Marathon start is by metro: stations Banco de España (line 2), Estación del Arte (line 1) and Sevilla (line 2) are less than 5 minutes on foot from Paseo del Prado. The metro starts running at 06:00, and in some recent editions it's been free for runners with a bib. The Low Emission Zone (LEZ) restricts the centre to non-resident older vehicles.
Plaza Mayor or a recognisable central metro entrance (Banco de España, Sevilla) — visual reference for first-time visitors to Madrid.
Madrid has one of Europe's densest metro networks. On race morning the metro starts running at 06:00. Plan to be in your corral 45–60 minutes before the gun: the marathon goes off in waves and the porta-loo queues spike in the last 30 minutes.
For the expo, the closest metro stations to IFEMA are Feria de Madrid (line 8) and Mar de Cristal (lines 4 / 8). From the centre it's about a 25-minute door-to-door trip.
Driving in is not recommended. Most downtown streets are closed from early morning until afternoon, and central Madrid sits inside the Low Emission Zone (LEZ) that restricts non-resident older vehicles. If you must drive, park near a peripheral metro station and ride in.
For a marathon runner, staying within 15 minutes' walk of the start isn't a luxury — it's logistics. The marathon spits you out at the finish around 12:00–14:30 depending on goal — you head back to the hotel sweaty, hungry, with cramps creeping in. The difference between sleeping well with an early breakfast and walking 5 minutes to the corral versus catching a metro at 7:30 with two transfers can cost you 1–2 minutes on the clock and double that in mental stress.
Puerta del Sol or a wide shot of the Sol–Gran Vía axis showing hotel density and proximity to the start area.
| Hotel | Cat. | €/night* | To start | Runner perk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iberostar Las Letras Gran Vía | 4* | €140–200 | 1.2 km · 15 min | Early breakfast for groups |
| The Principal Madrid | 5* boutique | €220–340 | 1.0 km · 12 min | Bathtub, strong AC |
| NH Collection Madrid Gran Vía | 4* | €160–220 | 1.3 km · 16 min | Late checkout common |
| Hotel Vincci Vía 66 | 4* | €110–150 | 1.4 km · 17 min | Central, mid-range |
| Riu Plaza España | 4* | €130–180 | 1.5 km · 18 min | Gym for mobility |
| Hotel | Cat. | €/night* | To start | Runner perk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NH Atocha | 4* | €120–170 | 600 m · 8 min | Early breakfast if requested 24h ahead |
| Hotel Mediodía | 3* | €80–110 | 700 m · 9 min | Right by Atocha, unbeatable location |
| Petit Palace Atocha | 4* | €130–180 | 750 m · 9 min | Modern, AC OK |
| Vincci Soho | 4* | €120–160 | 800 m · 10 min | Between Sol and Atocha, balanced |
| Only YOU Atocha | 5* boutique | €220–320 | 500 m · 6 min | Top-tier boutique with bathtub |
| Hotel | Cat. | €/night* | To start | Runner perk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hotel Wellington | 5* | €250–380 | 1.8 km · 22 min | Big rooms, bathtub, strong AC |
| Único Madrid | 5* boutique | €340–500 | 2.0 km · 25 min | Luxury, perfect for celebrating |
| Heritage Madrid | 5* | €280–400 | 2.1 km · 26 min | Late checkout negotiable |
| NH Collection Madrid Suecia | 5* | €200–280 | 1.5 km · 18 min | Modern, gym |
| Hotel Orfila | 5* | €280–420 | 2.2 km · 27 min | Discreet, inner garden for breakfast |
*Indicative race weekend rate (last Sunday of April). Varies with booking lead time, availability and current promotions.
Madrid weather in late April averages 9 °C low and 21 °C high with sunny conditions about 70 % of days, per AEMET historical data. Rain is uncommon (one wet edition every 5 years), but the heat is variable: temperature can swing from 12 °C at the start to 28 °C by midday, and the altitude (650 m) shaves an extra 1–2 % off VO2max.
Finishers from a recent edition holding their medals on a sunny day — the typical pattern of late-April race weekend in Madrid.
The variable to watch is the heat. For the marathon, the difference vs the half is critical: you're crossing the line between 11:30 and 14:30 depending on goal — exactly when sun and temperature peak. A 9:00 start gives you 1.5–2 hours of cool conditions, but km 25 onwards can find you running in 22–25 °C in the shade and more in exposed zones (Casa de Campo, Madrid Río, Salamanca).
Game plan by forecast:
Carry your own water if you're running slow and the forecast is over 22 °C — on-course aid is sufficient but not generous, and the back of the pack arrives at later stations after several hours. Wind tends to be light — under 15 km/h on most days. Madrid is not a windy city.
The recommended block to prepare for the EDP Madrid Marathon is 16 weeks with peak volume in weeks 11–13 (between 50 km and 130+ km/week depending on goal), one weekly long run and a 3-week taper. The key for Madrid: train on rolling terrain and put at least two long runs with 250+ m of cumulative gain in the bank to acclimatise to the structural climbs on course.
Runner crossing a finish line or training on rolling Madrid terrain — aspirational image to anchor the 16-week plan.
Approach Madrid as a marathon with a ~600 m elevation budget, not as a flat marathon. Pick your goal and use the table — these are peak-week volumes (weeks 11–13), not averages across the full block.
| Goal | Average pace | Peak weekly volume | Peak long run |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5h00 | 7:06 min/km | 35–45 km | 25–28 km |
| 4h30 | 6:24 min/km | 45–55 km | 28–30 km |
| 4h00 | 5:41 min/km | 55–70 km | 30–32 km |
| 3h30 | 4:58 min/km | 70–85 km | 32–35 km |
| 3h00 | 4:16 min/km | 90–110 km | 32–36 km |
| ≤2h45 | 3:54 min/km | 110–130+ km | 32–38 km |
How to read the table and build the cycle:
Three sessions worth their weight in gold for Madrid:
Taper is three weeks, not two. Week 14 at 80 %, week 15 at 60 %, week 16 at 40 % keeping race pace in short pickups. The two peak long runs (in weeks 11 and 12) are what fill the cup.
Don't know what realistic target time you have for Madrid? Cross your best recent half marathon with the "Madrid marathon" factor (which discounts elevation and altitude):
| Your best recent half | Flat marathon equivalent | Realistic Madrid |
|---|---|---|
| 1:25 | sub-3:00 flat | 3:05–3:10 |
| 1:35 | sub-3:20 flat | 3:25–3:35 |
| 1:45 | sub-3:42 flat | 3:48–3:58 |
| 1:55 | sub-4:05 flat | 4:12–4:22 |
| 2:05 | sub-4:25 flat | 4:33–4:45 |
| 2:15 | sub-4:48 flat | 4:55–5:08 |
How to read it: the "flat" column is the unadjusted Riegel conversion (your half × ~2.11). Madrid loses an extra 3–5 % to the climbs + altitude combo — that's what gives you the realistic range. If you've banked rolling-terrain long runs and your form holds, target the low end. If your last hour usually falls apart, target the high end.
Once you have your target time, this calculator gives you the required average pace (in min/km and min/mi) and cumulative splits at 5K, 10K, 15K, half marathon, 30K and finish. Change the target in the field below and the table updates instantly:
| Punto | Tiempo acumulado | Parcial |
|---|---|---|
| 5 km | 24:53 | 24:53 |
| 10 km | 49:46 | 24:53 |
| 15 km | 1:14:39 | 24:53 |
| Media (21,1 km) | 1:45:00 | 30:21 |
| 30 km | 2:29:18 | 44:18 |
| Meta | 3:30:00 | 1:00:42 |
Splits asumen ritmo constante. En carreras con desnivel real (Madrid Marathon) — banca 5–8 s/km en bajadas y pierde el mismo margen en subidas; el ritmo medio se mantiene.
The calculator above gives you the pace. But a real race plan answers more questions: what strategy do I go out with? How many gels do I carry? When do I take the caffeine? What do I do if at km 21 I'm 30 seconds above target?
Configure your goal, strategy and fuelling plan. The planner generates a personalised plan by segment (with paces, HR zones, mental cues and fuelling minute by minute), a race-morning checklist, and a Plan B for the unexpected. Download it as a PDF to take with you on race day.
PDF A4, optimizado para imprimir y llevar el día de carrera.
You're at the corral. You've done the 16-week plan. What separates a good build from a good time is what you do over the next 4–5 hours.
The Madrid race plan has to combine conservative pacing in km 1–10 (early climbs + crowding), goal pace between km 10–25, and either push or hang on from km 25 to 42 depending on how you arrive at the climb at km 30–32. Each goal time (sub-2:45 to finish) has its own splits pattern.
| Goal | Target splits | Madrid-specific tactical note |
|---|---|---|
| sub-2:45 | 3:54 min/km | Bank 5 sec/km on the descents (km 4, km 19, km 38). Hold on effort at km 7–9, km 16–18, km 30–32; lose 5–8 sec/km max. |
| sub-3:00 | 4:16 min/km | Cross half at 1:30:30. Hold km 30–32 at 4:22; attack km 35 if your legs are still there. |
| sub-3:30 | 4:58 min/km | No hurry km 1–8 (climb + crowding). Cross half at 1:45:30. Walk 15 sec at every aid station. |
| sub-4:00 | 5:41 min/km | The classic mistake is going out at 5:30. Hold 5:45 for the first 10 km. Walk 20 sec at every aid station. |
| sub-4:30 | 6:24 min/km | Very even splits: 6:20–6:30 throughout. Walk-run from km 30 if you need it. |
| sub-5:00 | 7:06 min/km | Plan B walk-run from km 1: run 8 / walk 1. Gives you margin to finish in good shape. |
| Finish | 7:00–7:30 | No watch. Enjoy the closed Gran Vía, the crowd signs and arriving at Paseo del Prado. |
This is where the marathon is decided. Three anchors:
The marathon nutrition strategy pivots on 60–100 g of carbs per hour depending on goal, with 5–8 gels spread every 25–30 minutes from km 8 onwards. Carb loading the 3 days before should be 8–10 g/kg/day, and Saturday dinner should be light and familiar (pasta or rice). Extra sodium if the forecast goes above 20 °C.
Volunteer at an EDP Madrid Marathon aid station handing out sports drink.
Saturday dinner is light, familiar and on the early side (eat before 21:00). Pasta or white rice with grilled chicken or fish, bread, fruit. Zero experiments.
Race-morning breakfast depends on whether you wake up hungry. Safe bet: toast with honey/jam + banana + coffee (if you usually have it). 80–100 g of carbs, eaten 3 hours before the gun. If your stomach closes up with nerves, swap to a sports drink with 80 g of carbs.
What the organisers put on course:
Carb plan by goal:
| Goal | Carbs / hour | Gels to carry | When to take them |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5h00 | 30–45 g/h | 3–4 gels | km 8, km 18, km 28, km 36 |
| 4h00 | 45–60 g/h | 5 gels | km 8, km 16, km 22, km 30, km 36 |
| 3h30 | 60–75 g/h | 6 gels | km 6, km 12, km 18, km 24, km 30, km 36 |
| 3h00 | 75–90 g/h | 7 gels + flask | km 5, every 5 km until km 35 |
| ≤2h45 | 90–100 g/h | 8 gels + flask | km 4, every 4–5 km |
Three errors you see every year at the Madrid Marathon:
Hydration and sodium by forecast:
Post-finish recovery — the first hour matters more than in the half:
The best shoes for the EDP Madrid Marathon are carbon-plated race shoes for sub-3:30, carbon plate or super-trainer between 3:30–4:00 (Saucony Endorphin Speed, Hoka Mach X), and a protective daily trainer for over 4:00 (Nike Pegasus, ASICS Cumulus, Brooks Ghost). What's critical isn't the brand but that they're already broken in and don't have more than 250–350 km on them.
Tight shot of race shoes on the Madrid Marathon start line — multiple brands visible.
Unlike the half, in the marathon the muscular endurance factor weighs more than weight. An ultralight carbon plate can save you 4 % energy but leaves your quads pulped from km 30 onward. For non-elite runners, a carbon plate with good protection (Vaporfly 4, Adios Pro Evo, Metaspeed Sky) or a protective super-trainer beats the lightest option.
Recommendations by goal:
| Goal | Category | Common models |
|---|---|---|
| ≤2h45 | Light "race" carbon plate | Nike Alphafly 3 · adidas Adios Pro Evo · ASICS Metaspeed Sky · Saucony Endorphin Elite |
| 2h45–3h30 | Protective carbon plate | Nike Vaporfly 4 · adidas Adios Pro 4 · ASICS Metaspeed Sky · Saucony Endorphin Pro |
| 3h30–4h00 | Carbon plate or super-trainer | Saucony Endorphin Speed · Hoka Mach X · Puma Deviate Nitro Elite · ASICS Magic Speed |
| 4h00+ | Protective daily trainer | Nike Pegasus · ASICS Cumulus / Nimbus · Brooks Ghost · Hoka Clifton |
Check this before you leave the house:
Roughly 600 m of elevation gain over 42.2 km, spread across four structural climbs (km 7–9, km 16–18, km 25–27, km 30–32). It's a moderate elevation profile for an international marathon: enough to be 5–10 minutes slower than Valencia or Berlin, but not enough to call it "mountain." Treat it as 42 km of rolling road, not flat asphalt.
Recent editions close the marathon at 6 hours from the last corral, which works out to roughly 8:30 min/km. Walking is allowed; the course has staggered partial closures (streets reopen to traffic after the last runner has come through each zone). If you're going for a finish-without-time-limit, ask the organiser ahead of time — some editions allow up to 7 h on the sidewalk.
No. Pickup is restricted to the runner expo on Friday and Saturday at IFEMA. Bibs are not handed out on race day under any circumstances, so plan your travel to include at least one trip to the expo.
There's a bag check zone at the start. Tag your bag with the printed sticker that comes in the kit, drop it 30–45 minutes before the start and pick it up in the same zone after the finish. Staff is present but ID isn't checked, so don't leave valuables in there.
Yes, headphones are allowed at the EDP Madrid Marathon. That said, the on-course atmosphere is one of the race's draws — bands, the crowd on Gran Vía, the PA at the finish — so many runners prefer to run without headphones. The loneliest stretch (Casa de Campo, km 18–25) is where music can actually help if it keeps you focused.
Madrid sits at 650 m above sea level. That's moderate altitude — enough to drop your VO2max by 1–2 % if you come from sea level and arrive less than 48 hours out. For a marathon that typically translates to 1–3 minutes off your projected flat time. Arriving 3–5 days early helps with partial acclimatisation; arriving 2 weeks early is optimal if your goal is aggressive.
The metro is the most practical option. The Banco de España, Estación del Arte and Sevilla stations are 5 minutes on foot from the start area on Paseo del Prado. Trains start running at 06:00, and in some recent editions they've been free for runners with a bib.
For sub-3:30, a protective carbon plate (Nike Vaporfly, Adidas Adios Pro, ASICS Metaspeed Sky). For 3:30–4:00, a carbon plate or a super-trainer (Saucony Endorphin Speed, Hoka Mach X). For over 4:00, a protective daily trainer (Nike Pegasus, ASICS Cumulus, Brooks Ghost). What matters most isn't the brand — it's that they're already broken in and don't have more than 250–350 km on them.
Madrid is the most festive (downtown closed, atmosphere, massive crowd on Gran Vía) and the slowest because of the elevation + altitude. Valencia is flat and at sea level — Spain's fastest marathon (record <2:03). Seville is flat and runs in winter — the best option if you want a PB without heat stress. Madrid is for running the experience, not for chasing a specific time.
Yes, if you walk in without a time goal. The atmosphere, organisation, aid stations and central finish make the experience memorable. No, if your goal is a specific time — the elevation + altitude penalise anyone chasing a PB. If it's your first marathon and you want a time, pick Valencia (December) or Seville (February) as your debut, and save Madrid for your second or third marathon, when you value experience over the clock.
The EDP Madrid Marathon is the best Spanish urban marathon in April for atmosphere, but it's not the fastest. If you're after a pure PB, Valencia or Seville are significantly faster; if you want atmosphere with massive crowds, Madrid or Barcelona are your best bet.
All of these are marathons (42.195 km), so the choice comes down to month, elevation and what you're looking for:
| Race | Month | Elevation | Best for | Atmosphere |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EDP Madrid (this guide) | April | ~600 m | Atmosphere · experience | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Valencia Marathon | December | <50 m | Pure PB · record | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Zurich Seville Marathon | February | <30 m | Winter PB | ⭐⭐⭐ |
| Zurich Barcelona Marathon | March | ~150 m | PB with atmosphere | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Behobia–San Sebastián* | November | ~150 m | Northern atmosphere | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
*Behobia–San Sebastián is 20 km, not a full marathon, but competes for the same "urban experience" profile in Spain.
Did this guide help? If you're running Madrid 2027, save the event in SportPlan to get registration window alerts, expo reminders and, afterwards, log your result.
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