On Sunday July 5, 2026, the 40th edition of the Maratona dles Dolomites rolls out — Italy's most prestigious cycling Gran Fondo and, for many, the most beautiful in the world. 138 km and 4,230 m of total climbing across seven Dolomite passes (Campolongo, Pordoi, Sella, Gardena, Campolongo again, Giau and Falzarego/Valparola), with a pre-dawn start in La Villa and finish in Corvara, in the heart of Alta Badia. 9,000 lottery winners out of approximately 35,000 international applicants will ride completely closed roads through the UNESCO World Heritage Dolomites. This guide covers what neither the official site nor the finishers' blogs lay out in full: how the day really breaks down, what to eat, how to train for 24 weeks for an event you can't simulate on flat roads, and what really happens when you hit Passo Giau with the tank empty after four passes already in your legs.
What the Maratona really is, why it's the most coveted Gran Fondo in Europe, and how to honestly decide if it's for you today.
The Maratona dles Dolomites is not a professional race nor a light tourist challenge — it's an amateur Gran Fondo of the highest level with roads completely closed to traffic all morning Sunday, UNESCO World Heritage Dolomite scenery and a level of attention to detail you only understand when you live the Costa philosophy: the Costa family has organised it for 40 years from their Hotel La Perla in Corvara, with the motto "Eroica fatica, eroica bellezza" (heroic effort, heroic beauty). Each year it raises over €100,000 for charity.
Is it for you?
The Maratona assumes you arrive with:
2+ seasons of regular cycling (8–12 h/week sustained).
Ability to do 4–5 h rides with 2,500–3,000 m of climbing without breaking down.
An estimated FTP of at least 2.8–3.0 W/kg if you want to finish the Maratona inside the cutoff comfortably. With 2.5 W/kg you'll finish, but it'll be tight.
A road bike in good condition (workshop-checked, gears well-adjusted, brakes sharp — there's 4,000 m of descending).
Mental stability: rolling out at 06:30 with 8 °C at the start, hitting the Giau with 22 °C heat, and lasting 7–8 h in the saddle isn't for everyone.
If you've been riding for three months or never done a long pass, the Maratona isn't your event yet — pick the Sellaronda route (55 km), perfect for first-timers, or wait another year.
06:30 CET, start from La Villa town centre. Five corrals by registration order. The first 3 km are flat through the valley toward Corvara. Warm up beforehand — cold legs + 8 °C + adrenaline is a recipe for starting badly.
5.8 km at 6.1 % average. The first notch of the day and everyone's eager — DON'T GET INTO IT. Climb at solid Z2 (~70 % FTP), breathe through the nose if you can. Summit at 1,875 m. Technical 6 km descent toward Arabba.
9.2 km at 6.9 % average up to 2,239 m. The Pordoi is the iconic "Giro d'Italia pass" — Coppi tribute at the top. 33 numbered switchbacks from Arabba. Stay in Z2 (not Z3 yet). Once over, long descent (10 km) toward the Sella.
5.5 km at 7.9 % average up to the highest point of the race: 2,244 m. Brutal views of the Sassolungo group. Here you'll start to feel the cumulative climbing — stay conservative. Panoramic summit.
5.8 km at 4.5 % average — the gentlest of the high passes. Summit at 2,121 m. Fast and technical descent toward Corvara — respect the corners, there have been serious crashes here.
After the Campolongo descent, Medio riders turn toward Corvara and finish at 106 km. You take the detour toward the Giau. This is where the real Maratona begins.
9.9 km at 9.3 % average. Summit at 2,236 m. One of the toughest amateur cycling climbs in Europe. No respite — constant 9–11 % ramps with no flat section. Your race is decided here:
If you've managed the first 4 climbs well (Z2, ~70 % FTP), you arrive with reserves and climb at tempo (low Z3, 75–80 % FTP). You'll do it in 60–80 minutes.
If you've ridden the early passes in high Z3 or Z4, you arrive empty. You'll walk a section (no shame — 30 % of riders walk parts of the Giau).
Eat 80–100 g of carbs in the hour before the Giau — start eating climbing the second Campolongo, not halfway up the Giau.
Winning strategy: first 4 passes at 70 % FTP, hit the Giau with legs and climb at tempo. Not the other way round.
After the Giau comes the Falzarego — 11.5 km at 5.8 % average to 2,105 m, with a final detour up to Valparola (2,192 m). Sounds gentle after the Giau and indeed it is, but with 100+ km in the legs and 3,500 m+ accumulated, the final ramps weigh. Solid Z2. Summit with views of the Tofane.
20 km of technical descent with flat sections. Watch the corners — serious crashes nearly every year on this descent. Finish in Corvara with applause tunnel. Medal, pasta party, photo. You cry or you don't, depending on you.
40 years of tradition, the Costa family, the Cunico records (4:33) and why this is THE Gran Fondo of Italian amateurs.
The Maratona was born in 1987 as a small idea by Michil Costa — at the time a hotelier at Hotel La Perla — to celebrate amateur cycling through his Alta Badia homeland. The first edition had around 165 riders. Forty years later, the event has become the most coveted Gran Fondo in Europe, with four applications per slot.
Maratona route records (138 km):
Men: ~4 h 33 min (Roberto Cunico, ITA, 2014). Historic record few amateurs ever come close to.
Women: ~5 h 25 min.
Numbers that put things in perspective — a "fast" amateur typically runs 5:30–6:00 h. The average finisher is between 7 and 8 hours.
Costa philosophy: the family keeps the event anti-commercial, without big banners, with obsessive attention to sustainability (refillable bottles, eco-friendly internal transport, charity fundraising). It's one of the few major Gran Fondos that feels more ceremony than mass event.
Probability of success: ~25 % (35,000 applications for 8,500 slots)
How:maratona.it → register, choose route (you can pick 2 priorities), pay €15 deposit (non-refundable, secures your participation if drawn).
If drawn: you'll be notified by email + your name appears on the website. You have 7 days to confirm and pay the rest (~€140–170 total).
If NOT drawn: alternatives:
Charity slot (€350–500): guaranteed entry via partner foundations (Race4Hope, Cassa Rurale Alta Badia Foundation, etc.). Limited but accessible if you act fast.
Hotel package slots: some official Alta Badia hotels (Hotel La Perla, Hotel Capella, Sassongher) have a quota of slots offered as package (hotel + bib). Pricey but reliable.
Cycling tour operators (InGamba, Cinghiale, etc.): packages of €2,500–4,500 with bib included, accommodation, transfers and guide. If you want guarantee and service, this is what you book.
Try again next year. If you've paid the deposit this year and weren't drawn, the next year you have priority ("loyalty point" system).
The fastest drive option from Northern Europe. Direct Easyjet and other low-cost flights from London, Frankfurt, Amsterdam. Recommended if coming from Northern Europe. Car rental ~€200–400 / 4 days.
Best for arrivals from Spain, France, Portugal. Vueling and Ryanair have direct routes Barcelona/Madrid → Verona. Car rental and drive up the A22 to Bressanone, then 1 h on mountain roads to Corvara.
Big airport with international (including transatlantic) connections. Further but a good option if coming from outside Europe. Rent car in Munich and drop down the A22 via Innsbruck.
Fly to Verona or Munich → train to Bolzano (Italy) → SAD bus line to Corvara (1.5 h, €5–8). Convenient if you're NOT bringing your own bike (you'd use Alta Badia rental).
Note: with your own bike, mountain buses have limited bike capacity — confirm in advance with SAD.
Bring your own bike: ideal but costly (€80–150 each way by air + bike case). If you fly to Innsbruck/Verona and drive, no extra cost.
Rent locally: Carpisa Sport (Corvara), Ciclo Solleva (San Cassiano), Pedevilla (Corvara). Carbon Cervélo/Specialized/Pinarello bikes from €60–80/day. Reserve 3 months ahead. Bring your own saddle and pedals (cleat-fit).
The zero-stress option. You walk out from the hotel, finish and shower 200 m from the line.
Hotel La Perla (5*, ⭐ recommended): the Costas' hotel, organiser of the event. Unique atmosphere, packages with bib, massage included. €450–700/night. The "all-inclusive" choice.
Hotel Sassongher (4*): historic, views of the Sella. €280–450/night.
Hotel Capella (4*): elegant, central location. €280–400/night.
Hotel Ladinia (3*): comfortable and affordable. €150–230/night.
If travelling with family or group, apartments in Pedraces (3 km) start at €120–200/night for 4 people. AirBnB and Booking have good supply, but book 6+ months ahead — Alta Badia fills up.
High passes (Pordoi, Sella, Gardena, Giau, Falzarego):4–8 °C at sunrise on the summits.
Layer up. Short-sleeved jersey + thermal vest + arm warmers + leg warmers + light gloves. As the sun rises and you climb, off come leg warmers and arm warmers. Don't start in just short sleeves and no vest — the first Campolongo descent at 50 km/h in shadow stings.
Goal: build aerobic engine and muscular foundation. Volume, low intensity.
Typical week: 8–10 h total. Monday rest. Tuesday 1 h Z2. Wednesday 1.5 h with 4×8' Z3. Thursday 1 h Z2. Friday rest. Saturday 3–4 h Z2. Sunday 2 h Z2 + cadence work.
Z2 = 60–70 % FTP (you can talk in short sentences).
If you live in flat terrain, smart trainer or simulator saves you. Zwift, Wahoo SYSTM or TrainerRoad work well.
Strength gym 2×/week: squats, deadlifts, core. Crucial to maintain posture for 7+ hours on the bike.
Goal: simulate the Maratona — 5–6 h with 3,000+ m of climbing.
Typical week: 12–14 h.
Saturday ride 5–6 h with 3,000+ m of climbing. If you don't have mountains, plan a weekend in the Pyrenees / Sierra de Madrid / Alpujarras and do a 5-pass day.
Start testing nutrition — gels, bars, bottles with sports drink + salt. 80–100 g carbs/h.
Sunday 3 h in Z2 with tired legs from Saturday — simulates the "next day" mental load.
Technical test: a long technical descent (10+ km) to get used to braking and corners.
Calculate your target time and plan your splits at each of the 7 passes.
🎯 Calculadora de ritmo y splitsEscribe tu tiempo objetivo para Maratona dles Dolomites
Ritmo medio requerido3:16 min/km
Equivalente en millas5:15 min/mi
Punto
Tiempo acumulado
Parcial
5 km
16:18
16:18
10 km
32:37
16:18
15 km
48:55
16:18
Media (21,1 km)
1:08:48
19:53
30 km
1:37:50
29:02
Meta
7:30:00
5:52:10
Splits asumen ritmo constante. En carreras con desnivel real (Maratona dles Dolomites) — banca 5–8 s/km en bajadas y pierde el mismo margen en subidas; el ritmo medio se mantiene.
Realistic time bands for the Maratona (138 km, 4,230 m+):
Band
% of finishers
Rider profile
Sub-5 h
~3 %
Elite/sub-elite. FTP 4.5+ W/kg. Only target if you race masters.
Falzarego in solid Z2 — 3,500 m+ already in legs, don't push.
Final descent to Corvara: caution. 4,000 m+ accumulated braking heats up. If you hear squeaking or feel softness in the lever: stop 30 seconds, let cool.
Finish: medal, beer, pasta party. You've done the Maratona.
Road bike, not gravel or MTB. Carbon ideal but aluminium works.
Gearing suited for 9–10 % gradient: minimum 34-tooth small chainring (compact) + 32 or 34-tooth large cog at the back. With 11-28, the last 4 km of the Giau will be pure suffering.
Wheels: carbon ideal, but reliable aluminium also fine. Disc brakes recommended for long, wet descents.
Workshop service the week before: gears well-adjusted, new brake pads, correct tyre pressure (5–6 bar road).
Entry to the Maratona dles Dolomites is by lottery (sorteo). It works like this: in November 2025 registration opens at maratona.it, you pay a €15 deposit (non-refundable), pick up to 2 priority routes. In January 2026 the draw happens and chosen names are published. Odds are ~1 in 4 (35,000 applications for 8,500 slots). If not drawn, you can opt for charity slots (€350–500), packages with official hotels or wait for next year with priority. If drawn, you have 7 days to confirm.
Sellaronda (55 km, 1,780 m+, 4 passes):first mountain Gran Fondo. If you've never done a long pass and train 4–6 h/week, it's perfect. The route covers the iconic Sella Ring.
Medio (106 km, 3,090 m+, 5 passes):intermediate step. If you have 1–2 seasons on the bike, have done a 4+ h ride and train 8–10 h/week. Sub-7 h comfortably.
Maratona (138 km, 4,230 m+, 7 passes):the queen challenge. If you have 2+ seasons, have done several 5+ h rides with 3,000 m+ and train 10–12 h/week. If in doubt, don't — do the Medio.
A road bike, carbon or aluminium, in good condition with compact chainring (34) + 11-32 or 11-34 cassette. The last 4 km of the Giau (constant 9–11 %) demand a big big rear cog — an 11-28 will make you suffer. Disc brakes are recommended (better control on technical and wet descents). If you're renting, Carpisa Sport (Corvara), Ciclo Solleva (San Cassiano) or Pedevilla have Cervélo / Specialized / Pinarello from €60–80/day. Always bring your own saddle and pedals.
These are the two reference European Gran Fondos. Key differences:
L'Étape du Tour (France, July): 145 km, ~4,500 m+ (varies by chosen Tour stage). Spectacular route but more exposed to sun and heat (Maritime Alps in July = 35 °C in valleys). 16,000 bibs.
Maratona (Italy, July): 138 km, 4,230 m+, 7 passes. Cooler (Dolomites are higher = fresher air). 9,000 bibs (more intimate). Roads completely closed all day (in L'Étape they reopen earlier). Costa philosophy = better attention to detail.
Verdict: if you can only do one, the Maratona wins for scenery, organisation and atmosphere.
Yes, in Alta Badia there are 5–6 shops with professional carbon fleets. Carpisa Sport (Corvara) and Ciclo Solleva (San Cassiano) are the two largest. Cervélo R5, Specialized Tarmac, Pinarello Dogma — from €60–80/day (4-day package: ~€220–300). Reserve 3 months ahead, July fills up. Bring your own saddle and pedals (saves adaptation). Verify size with the shop's bike fitter.
Yes, totally. The Maratona pasta party in Corvara is legendary — real Italian pasta (not the generic marathon kind), Tyrolean folk music live, beer and wine, festive atmosphere with all finishers. Included in bib. Starts ~14:00 and lasts until 18:00. Recommended plan: cross finish line → shower at hotel → return to pasta party in clean clothes. Don't skip it — it's part of the Costa experience.
Afternoon storms are classic in July in the Dolomites. Golden rules:
If thunder: stop, descend to shelter, call organisation (number on bib). Sweep buses pick up.
If raining without thunder: carry on, but brake with extreme care (slick asphalt + hot brakes + technical corners = crash). Descents at max 30 km/h.
If a storm catches you up high (Giau or Falzarego): the organisation has shelter buses on each summit. Stop, take cover, wait 20–30 min. The storm usually passes.
Anti-storm: attack the morning hard (controlled Z2, yes, but no long stops). Fast riders pass Falzarego before 14:00 — slow ones face higher risk.
Sellaronda as first: YES. 55 km and 4 passes at a comfortable pace is perfect. You'll experience the Dolomites without breaking yourself.
Medio (106 km) as first: YES if you have 1–2 seasons and have done 4 h rides.
Maratona (138 km) as first mountain Gran Fondo:NOT RECOMMENDED. You need to have done other long events (200 km flat or 100 km with 2,500 m+) before tackling 138/4,230 with 7 passes. High risk of not finishing (cutoff at 16:30) or injuring yourself.
Maratona vs L'Étape du Tour vs Quebrantahuesos vs La Marmotte vs Tour des Stations.
Event
Distance
Elevation
Country
Character
Field
Maratona dles Dolomites
138 km
4,230 m+
Italy
Closed roads, UNESCO scenery, Costa philosophy
9,000
L'Étape du Tour
145 km
4,500 m+
France (Alps)
Real Tour stage, intense vibe
16,000
La Marmotte
174 km
5,000 m+
France (Alps)
Longer, harder, legendary
7,500
Quebrantahuesos
200 km
3,500 m+
Spain (Pyrenees)
More distance, fewer passes, heat
9,500
Tour des Stations
232 km
8,800 m+
Switzerland (Valais)
"Tour from hell", masochists only
1,500
Cape Epic
600 km/8 days
15,000 m+
South Africa (MTB!)
Stage MTB, different sport
1,200
Verdict: the Maratona is the most balanced — good distance, demanding climbing without being extreme, UNESCO scenery, best organisation on the European calendar. The one that gives most value per euro and experience. If you had to do ONE Gran Fondo of your life, it'd be this.
Last updated: 2026-05-08. If you find outdated information, contact us.
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