On , the takes place — the world's oldest ultramarathon and the largest ultra by participation on the planet. in an year (climbing from sea level to PMB at ~700 m), with a and a medal tier system that has become a rite of passage for global ultrarunning. The gun firing at 17:30 with the official's back turned to the field is probably the most iconic image in ultra running. This guide covers what neither the official site nor finisher blogs lay out in full: how the race breaks between Inchanga and Polly Shortts, what medal you can realistically aim for given your marathon time, and why Comrades demands a qualifying marathon.
The essentials in one table: dates, Up Run format, ~87.7 km, ~22,000–25,000 bibs and prices for international entrants.
Comrades Marathon 2026 is the 101st edition of the race: an 87.7 km event between Durban (coast) and Pietermaritzburg (inland, ~700 m altitude). 2026 is an Up Run year — direction alternates each year with the Down Run, and the climb is the more demanding version in terms of total elevation gain.
Data
Information
Date
Sunday June 14, 2026
Distance
~87.7 km
Direction
Up Run (Durban → Pietermaritzburg)
Start
Durban City Hall, in front of the council building
What Comrades actually is, why it's considered the world's oldest ultramarathon and how to honestly decide if this race is for you.
Comrades Marathon is an ultramarathon on tarmac road between the two largest cities of KwaZulu-Natal, in eastern South Africa. It's not trail. It's not mountain. It's road with constant elevation change, with a profile that climbs and drops over the five great hills (Big Five Hills) that define the race. What makes Comrades unique isn't the terrain — it's the history, the South African running culture, and the tiered medal system that recognises every finisher according to their time.
The race alternates direction each year: in even years like 2026 it runs Up (from coast inland, gaining ~700 m net altitude); in odd years it runs Down (in reverse, technical descent that hammers quads). The Up Run is slower but more uniform; the Down Run is faster on the clock but ends with many finishers walking lame.
Comrades is not for ultra debutants. The race assumes you arrive with:
Sub-5:00 marathon within 6 months of race day (mandatory qualifying time).
At least 18 months of consistent running, minimum 50–60 km/week.
Capacity to be on your feet for 9–12 hours (feet, back, knees, mind).
Mental tolerance for the "long lonely middle" — kilometres 40–70 with sparse crowds, moderate heat and few visual landmarks.
Realistic budget: between bib, flights, double-city accommodation and kit, count on €3,000–5,000 from Europe.
If you've been running less than 18 months or never finished a marathon, Comrades isn't your race yet. Come back in 2 years with more kilometres in your legs and a couple of fast half-marathons to sustain the qualifying pace.
📷 Photo placeholder · Culture
The field singing "Shosholoza" minutes before the start — Comrades' iconic moment.
The Up Run is 87.7 km of road racing with five major climbs; the elevation and the pain are concentrated between km 25 and 82.
The Up Run starts from Durban City Hall (sea level) and finishes at Scottsville Racecourse in Pietermaritzburg (~700 m). Net elevation gain is ~750 m, but with rolling profile total climbing exceeds 1,500 m. The route is fully tarmac, on open road closed to traffic, with aid stations every 1.5–2 km and medical support every 5–8 km.
The Big Five Hills are the five climbs that structure the race and that every finisher knows by heart:
Hill
Km
Length
Gain
Notes
Cowies Hill
17–25
~2.8 km
+180 m
The first warning. If you run it all, you're going too fast.
Field's Hill
25–35
~3 km
+220 m
Steepest of Up Run. Walk the 8%+ sections, no debate.
Botha's Hill
35–48
~6 km
+200 m
Long and gradual. Most middle-section gain accumulates here.
Inchanga
48–62
~4 km net
+250 m
Longest climb. You cross halfway through it.
Polly Shortts
80–82
~2 km
+130 m
The final hammer. Near-vertical for legs with 80 km in them.
After Polly Shortts there are ~5 km of downhill and flat to Scottsville Racecourse, where the finish sits inside the racecourse oval. The finish gantry closes at exactly 17:30 and the gun firing is probably the most iconic image in global ultrarunning.
📷 Photo placeholder · Polly Shortts
The final climb of Polly Shortts at 14:00 with runners walking single-file up the gradient.
Comrades was created in 1921 as a tribute to fallen WWI comrades; 2026 is the 101st edition.
The Comrades Marathon was created in 1921 by Vic Clapham, a WWI veteran, as a tribute to his fallen comrades in the East African campaign. Clapham, who had marched more than 2,700 km on foot during the war, wanted a race that tested human endurance the same way. The first edition had 34 entrants and 16 finishers. A century later, Comrades is the most participated race in global ultrarunning.
The race alternates direction each year since 1923 — Up Run in even years (2024, 2026, 2028) and Down Run in odd years (2025, 2027). There were interruptions for WWII (1941–1945), apartheid era (the race opened to black runners from 1975 onwards), the COVID pandemic (cancelled in 2020 and 2021) and occasional security issues. The 100th edition was held in 2025 with a historic Down Run and record entries.
Current records:
Men's Up Run: 5:24:49 — Edward Mothibi (RSA, 2019)
Men's Down Run: 5:18:19 — David Gatebe (RSA, 2016)
Women's Up Run: 6:09:24 — Gerda Steyn (RSA, 2023)
Women's Down Run: 5:44:54 — Gerda Steyn (RSA, 2023)
The roll of honour is dominated by South Africans: Bruce Fordyce won 9 editions between 1981 and 1990, Russian Leonid Shvetsov was the first foreigner to break a course record in 2008, and South African Gerda Steyn has been the dominant athlete of the past decade.
📷 Photo placeholder · History
Archive photo of Vic Clapham with the first 1921 edition (public domain).
Registration opens in September 2025; closes when the ~25,000 bibs are filled. Mandatory sub-5:00 qualifying marathon required.
Registration is managed at comrades.com and opens typically in September of the previous year (September 2025 for Comrades 2026). For 2026, an entry cap of ~25,000 bibs is anticipated, which historically fills within a few weeks — though rarely within hours like UTMB.
Mandatory qualifying time: every entrant must show a certified marathon below 5 hours within the 6 months prior to Comrades (between August 1 of the previous year and a day before registration close). The marathon must be sanctioned by the South African federation or by an IAAF/World Athletics affiliate. Races like London Marathon, Berlin, Sevilla, Madrid, Valencia, NYCM, and Boston all qualify.
Prices 2026 (approximate, confirm on official site):
South African residents (SA): ZAR 1,800–2,500 (~$100–140)
International: ZAR 4,000–6,000 (~$220–330)
Entry includes: bib with chip, official t-shirt, runner bag, pasta party, finisher medal, medical support and aid stations.
Bib pickup is NOT done on race day. It happens at the Comrades Expo at the Durban International Convention Centre (ICC) on the Friday and Saturday before the race. You need:
Passport or identity document.
Printed registration confirmation.
Proof of qualifying marathon (printed official result or screenshot).
The Expo opens typically 09:00–19:00 Friday and 09:00–17:00 Saturday. No race-day pickup possible.
Comrades is famous for its medal scaling by finish time. Each band has a historical name:
Medal
Time
Notes
Gold
Top 10 men / Top 10 women
World elite only.
Wally Hayward
sub-6:00:00
Honouring the 5-time champion. ~0.3% of finishers.
Silver
sub-7:30:00
Boundary between elite and amateur. ~3%.
Bill Rowan
sub-9:00:00
Honour of the first 1921 winner. ~17%.
Robert Mtshali
sub-10:00:00
First black runner to run Comrades in 1935 (not officially recognised then). ~14%.
Bronze
sub-11:00:00
The "realistic target" for most serious European runners. ~26%.
Vic Clapham
sub-12:00:00
The cutoff medal. ~25%. The vast majority of the back of the pack.
Important: after exactly 12:00:00, no medal is awarded and the finish does not count officially. The gun firing at 17:30 marks the absolute close with the official turning his back to the trailing pack — no one is accepted crossing one second later.
📷 Photo placeholder · Medals
The 7 medals of the Comrades system aligned (Gold, Wally Hayward, Silver, Bill Rowan, Robert Mtshali, Bronze, Vic Clapham).
Fly to Durban (King Shaka International, DUR) via Joburg. Renting a car is not essential — the organisation provides buses between both cities.
Durban has its own international airport: King Shaka International Airport (DUR), 35 km north of central Durban. Most European flights require connection at Johannesburg (JNB) or via Doha (Qatar Airways) or Dubai (Emirates). Transfer from airport to central Durban takes 30–45 min by taxi (~ZAR 350–500, ~$25) or by Uber (cheaper and very reliable in South Africa).
Visa: South Africa allows tourist stays up to 90 days visa-free for most EU passports (Spain included), UK, USA, Australia and Canada. Required: passport with at least 2 blank pages and 30 days validity past departure. Yellow fever vaccine recommended only if you arrive from an endemic country (does not apply from Europe direct).
Most efficient routes from Spain and continental Europe:
Madrid → Doha → Durban (DUR) with Qatar Airways. One stop, ~16–18 h total, €1,000–1,300 roundtrip.
Madrid → Dubai → Joburg → Durban with Emirates + South African. Two stops, ~20 h, €900–1,200.
Madrid → Joburg with Iberia/Lufthansa + domestic SAA to Durban. ~14 h total, €1,100–1,500.
Booking 6 months ahead drops fares by ~25%.
Once in Durban, you don't need a rental car for the race — CMA provides official buses:
Saturday: free transport Expo ↔ main Durban hotels.
Sunday early: departure from Durban at 02:30–03:30 to deliver runners to the start line.
Sunday afternoon:free buses from Pietermaritzburg back to Durban for all finishers from km 87.7.
If your support crew wants to spectate on the course, renting a car for race day (~ZAR 700/day, ~$40) and parking at intermediate points (Hilton, Drummond, Camperdown) makes it possible to see the runner 2–3 times. Book the car well ahead.
📷 Photo placeholder · Logistics
Official Comrades buses at the start line at 04:30 in the morning.
Three options depending on your budget and logistics: Durban (start), Pietermaritzburg (finish), or Hilton (in between).
The most common strategy for international runners is to base in Durban (more hotel inventory, easier for arriving Friday and being relaxed Saturday), race Sunday, and bus back to Durban via the organisation's transport to recover Monday-Tuesday before flying home. Pietermaritzburg has more limited hotel inventory and fills first.
June 14 = austral winter in KwaZulu-Natal. Cool morning, mild afternoon, intense sun, no rain and high UV.
June is dry winter in South Africa, and particularly in KwaZulu-Natal the weather on Comrades day is one of the most stable in the global ultra calendar. Historically:
Start (05:30, Durban coast): 5–10 °C, humidity 65–80%, no wind.
Midday (13:00, ~Inchanga): 14–18 °C, humidity 40–55%, intense direct sun.
Afternoon (16:00–17:30, PMB): 12–18 °C, humidity 35–50%, sun dropping fast.
Rain probability:<5% — June is the driest month of the year in KZN.
UV: very high (index 8–10) between 11:00 and 14:00. SPF 50 sunscreen mandatory.
The big climate lesson at Comrades: don't underestimate the sun. Although the absolute temperatures are moderate for European runners, the austral sun at the inland altitude is very aggressive and dehydration is the most frequent cause of DNF. Drink 350–500 ml/h from km 0, cover head and neck, and reapply sunscreen every 3 hours.
Metric
Historical June Durban-PMB value
Avg start temp
8 °C
Avg finish temp
14 °C
Daytime max
18–22 °C
Rain probability
~5%
Midday UV avg
9 (very high)
Start humidity
75%
📷 Photo placeholder · Weather
Clear sky and crisp temperature at 05:00 at Durban City Hall.
24 weeks of progression from a solid marathon (sub-4:30) to a sub-11:00 Comrades finish (Bronze).
Comrades requires specific periodisation starting ~6 months out. If you don't yet have a sub-5:00 marathon, start there: run Sevilla in February or Madrid/Valencia in April, then use the remaining 14 weeks to build ultra endurance. The plan assumes 4–5 sessions/week and an athlete with at least 18 months of base.
Overall structure:
Weeks 1–4: Aerobic base. 50–60 km/week, one long run 18–22 km, easy paces.
Weeks 5–8: Endurance build. 65–75 km/week, long run climbing to 28–32 km, one quality session/week.
Weeks 9–14: Volume peak. 80–95 km/week, long run of 35–42 km every 14 days, back-to-back long runs alternating weekends.
Weeks 15–20: Ultra specificity. Long runs of 4–5 hours, mixed sessions (3 h running + 1 h fast walking), Big Five simulation with hill repeats of 800–1,200 m.
Weeks 21–22: Final peak. One run of 50–55 km at ultra pace (35–45 sec/km slower than marathon pace) with simulated aid.
Weeks 23–24: Tapering. Volume to 60%, intensity to 80%, short sessions and active recovery.
The key is back-to-back longs — in the 6 peak weeks, do a weekend doublé (Saturday long + Sunday medium-long) every 14 days to teach the body to run on tired legs, similar to Comrades in its final stretch.
The most reliable empirical rule for predicting your Comrades finish from a marathon:
Comrades time ≈ Marathon time × 2.4 to 2.7
(The multiplier rises the slower the athlete — a sub-3:00 marathoner multiplies by 2.3, a sub-5:00 multiplies by 2.7.)
Current marathon
Up Run Comrades estimate
Expected medal
Sub-3:00
6:50–7:25
Silver / Bill Rowan
3:00–3:30
7:30–8:30
Bill Rowan
3:30–4:00
8:30–9:30
Bill Rowan / Robert Mtshali
4:00–4:30
9:30–10:30
Robert Mtshali / Bronze
4:30–5:00
10:30–11:30
Bronze / Vic Clapham
Just sub-5:00
11:00–11:55
Vic Clapham (cutting it close)
If your marathon is between 4:30 and 5:00, your realistic Comrades 2026 target is Vic Clapham (sub-12) and you must run very conservatively. If your marathon is sub-4:00 you can comfortably aim at Bronze (sub-11).
📷 Photo placeholder · Training
4-hour long run on a nearby hilly trail simulating Big Five climbs.
Enter your goal and get per-hill paces for the Up Run with margin built in for the final climb to Polly Shortts.
For Comrades, calculating pace "per flat kilometre" doesn't work — you must adjust for each Big Five Hill's difficulty. This calculator produces differentiated paces for flat sections, climbs and descents.
🎯 Calculadora de ritmo y splitsEscribe tu tiempo objetivo para Comrades Marathon
Ritmo medio requerido7:32 min/km
Equivalente en millas12:07 min/mi
Punto
Tiempo acumulado
Parcial
5 km
37:38
37:38
10 km
1:15:15
37:38
15 km
1:52:53
37:38
Media (21,1 km)
2:38:46
45:53
30 km
3:45:46
1:07:00
Meta
11:00:00
7:14:14
Splits asumen ritmo constante. En carreras con desnivel real (Comrades Marathon) — banca 5–8 s/km en bajadas y pierde el mismo margen en subidas; el ritmo medio se mantiene.
How to use it:
Enter your total target (sub-9 / sub-10 / sub-11 / sub-12).
The tool returns differentiated paces for the 5 key segments of the Up Run: Durban to Cowies (km 0–17), Cowies to Field's (km 17–35), Field's through Botha's-Inchanga (km 35–62), Inchanga to Polly Shortts (km 62–80), and final (km 80–87.7).
Compare the paces with your training long runs — if your target splits are faster than what you ran in the week 22 simulation, reduce your ambition.
Strategy by medal band with specific tactical notes for each Big Five Hill.
The absolute rule of Comrades Up Run is: walk every Big Five Hill above 5% gradient, even if you feel strong. Anyone who tries to run them all blows up around Inchanga. Here's the tactical plan by target band:
Target
Key strategy
Cowies (km 17–25)
Field's (km 25–35)
Botha's (km 35–48)
Inchanga (km 48–62)
Polly Shortts (km 80–82)
Top 10 (Gold)
Dependent on RSA elite pack
Run fully
Run 90%
Run fully
Half run
Run
Sub-6 (Wally Hayward)
Open 4:05/km, hold
Run
Walk 200 m
Run
Walk 400 m
Walk 200 m
Sub-7:30 (Silver)
Avg pace 5:05/km
Run
Walk 8% sections
Run 80%
Walk 30%
Walk
Sub-9 (Bill Rowan)
Avg pace 6:00/km
Walk 8% sections
Walk 30%
Run-walk
Run-walk
Walk
Sub-10 (Robert Mtshali)
Avg pace 6:50/km
Walk 8%+
Walk half
Run-walk
Walk 60%
Walk
Sub-11 (Bronze)
Avg pace 7:30/km
Walk all gradients
Walk 70%
Walk half
Walk 80%
Walk fully
Sub-12 (Vic Clapham)
Avg pace 8:00/km
Walk all
Walk fully
Run-walk very conservative
Walk fully
Walk fully very slowly
Three tactical golden rules:
Open contained the first 17 km. Before Cowies Hill, you must NOT run more than 30 sec/km faster than goal pace. Start adrenaline and the slight descent lead to errors.
The Inchanga-Polly Shortts stretch (km 62–82) is decided by the head, not the legs. Bring a mantra and use it. Most last-hour DNFs happen between these points.
Reserve 5% for the final kilometre. After Polly Shortts there's 5 km of descent into Scottsville. Anyone who finishes with energy runs the last 1,500 m at 5K pace — and saves 2–3 minutes off the final time.
📷 Photo placeholder · Strategy
Runner power-walking with improvised support up Polly Shortts at 14:30.
9–11 hour fueling strategy: generous CMA aid + personal supplements via support bag.
Comrades has excellent and very frequent aid — stations every 1.5–2 km with water, Coca-Cola, Energade (South African sports drink, similar to Gatorade), fruit, banana, orange, salted boiled potato, Marie biscuits, and in the late stations hot tea. You don't need to carry much from the start — but you do need to supplement aid stations with your own habitual gels.
Sample fueling plan (Bronze sub-11 target):
Pre-race (4:30–5:00): breakfast 600–800 kcal, 90–120 g carbs, 20 g protein. Oats with banana, honey, coffee.
Km 0–25 (Cowies): 1 gel every 35 min + water or Energade at each aid. No solid yet.
Km 25–48 (Field's-Botha's): alternate gel/solid. Begin taking aid station banana.
Km 48–62 (Inchanga):Solid required — salted aid potato is gold. Energade always.
Km 62–82 (Inchanga-Polly Shortts): 1 gel every 30 min + Coca-Cola at aid (sugar and caffeine). Banana if your stomach holds.
Km 82–87.7 (Polly Shortts to finish): liquid sugar. Coca-Cola, Energade, last caffeine gel. No solid.
Hydration: target 350–500 ml/h depending on temperature. Alternate plain water and salt drink (Energade or your own salt sachets). Too much plain water without salt risks hyponatremia after km 60 — manifests as confusion, swelling, massive cramps.
Race hour
Carbohydrates/h target
Liquid/h
Hour 1–4
50–60 g
350–450 ml
Hour 4–8
70–90 g
450–500 ml
Hour 8–12
60–80 g (whatever stomach tolerates)
350–500 ml
CMA support bag: the organisation allows you to drop one small bag at an intermediate point (typically Drummond or Camperdown). Use it for spare socks, extra gels, anti-inflammatory if you take one, and sunscreen.
Tarmac, intense sun and 9–12 hours on feet — Comrades gear is 95% a normal marathon kit with added details.
Comrades is road, not trail. Gear isn't demanding, but there are typical errors made by European newcomers who arrive with inadequate footwear or untested apparel for the distance. Never debut anything on race day — every item (shoes, socks, shorts, shirt, belt) must have rolled at least 200 km in training.
Essential:
Maximum-cushioned road shoes, model equivalent to Saucony Endorphin Speed, Nike Vaporfly Next% or Hoka Mach. Well rolled (200+ km), with no excessive wear (heel intact, drop intact).
Anti-friction technical socks — not cotton. Model tested in at least 2 long runs. Carry spares in support bag.
Shorts with side pocket (at least 4 gels) and Vaseline/applicator at the waist.
Light-coloured short-sleeve technical shirt. Reflective for the dark start if you carry an extra long sleeve.
Visor or light cap + sunglasses (high UV). The austral sun hits harder than the European one.
Gel belt or minimal waist pack. No backpack — aid every 2 km is enough.
Recommended:
Thin thermal long sleeve or arm warmers for the start (5–8 °C in Durban at 5 AM). Discard from km 5–8.
SPF 50+ sunscreen applied before starting and reapplied if your support can in km 35–40.
Anti-friction (Bodyglide or Vaseline) on thighs, armpits, feet and chest area. Mandatory for 9–12 hours.
Real questions that arise when planning Comrades — qualifying time, medals, double-city logistics, comparison with UTMB.
Why is the 12-hour cutoff so strict and why does the official fire with their back turned?
The 12-hour cutoff is non-negotiable because it defines a "Comrades finisher": anyone crossing one second later doesn't appear in the official list and doesn't receive a Vic Clapham medal. The gun firing at 17:30 with the official's back to the field is a tradition since the 1970s — it symbolises that the close is absolute and no one changes it, neither a mayor nor the runner themselves. It's one of the most iconic images in ultrarunning and reflects the South African running culture of "the cutoff is the cutoff."
What are the medal categories exactly and how is each decided?
The system has 7 levels: Gold (top 10 of each gender), Wally Hayward (sub-6h), Silver (sub-7:30), Bill Rowan (sub-9h), Robert Mtshali (sub-10h), Bronze (sub-11h) and Vic Clapham (sub-12h). Level is determined by official chip time — every runner crosses the same timing mats and the result is managed by CMA with professional timing systems. After exactly 12:00:00, no medal is awarded and the result doesn't count.
Is Up Run very different from Down Run?
Yes. Up Run (Durban → PMB) is slower but more uniform — you climb ~750 m net but the wear is more evenly distributed. Down Run (PMB → Durban) is faster on the clock but destroys quads due to the long 60 km descent. Down Run tends to have 5–7% more DNFs by injury (muscle tear, acute fasciitis). If it's your first Comrades, Up Run is preferable — physical damage is more distributed and predictable.
I need a qualifying marathon — which one and when?
You need a certified marathon under 5:00:00 run between August 1 of the prior year (Aug 1 2025 for Comrades 2026) and registration close (~May 2026). Valid European marathons include: Sevilla (February), Valencia (December), Madrid (April), Berlin (September 2025), London (April), NYCM (November 2025). Any marathon sanctioned by the national athletics federation or IAAF/World Athletics qualifies. Upload the certificate or screenshot of your official result during registration and you're validated within 48 hours.
Is Comrades viable as a first ultra?
Possible, but risky. If your marathon is sub-4:00 and you've trained consistently for at least 18 months, yes — aiming for Bronze (sub-11) or Vic Clapham (sub-12). If your marathon is sub-4:30 or slower, your margin against the cutoff is tight and your first ultra ideally should be a shorter one (50K European) to validate psychophysical tolerance. Don't go straight to Comrades without at least one 50–55 km training run under your belt.
How does it compare with UTMB?
They're two different worlds: UTMB is 170 km of mountain trail with 10,000 m+ elevation, at altitude and changing weather; Comrades is 87.7 km of tarmac with 1,500 m elevation in stable climate. UTMB is longer, more technical, more injury-prone. Comrades is shorter but faster (you sustain a higher pace for longer). Athletes who finish both typically describe UTMB as "technical hell" and Comrades as "mental hell because of the cutoff." If you come from mountain trail, Comrades will feel more physically manageable; if you only come from tarmac, UTMB will feel almost impossible.
Do I need a visa to enter South Africa?
No, for tourist stays up to 90 days if you have a Spanish, EU, UK, USA, Canadian or Australian passport. You only need a passport with 2 blank pages and at least 30 days validity past departure. South African customs may ask for proof of return ticket and hotel booking. No yellow fever vaccine required from Europe direct. Nothing stops you from honestly declaring you're coming to run Comrades — the immigration officials are accustomed to it.
Can I run-walk during the entire race?
Yes, and in fact it's the optimal strategy for most sub-10 targets. The popular rule is 9 minutes run / 1 minute walk for Bronze target, or 5 run / 1 walk for Vic Clapham. The organisation fully respects it — there's no penalty or different ranking for those who walk part. The key is to walk steep gradients (>5%) and maintain low aerobic pace on flat — exactly the opposite of those who start running everything and end up walking the last 25 km from total exhaustion.
How Comrades stacks against the world's other big ultras in distance, difficulty and prestige.
Race
Distance
Elevation D+
Cutoff
Difficulty
When to choose
Comrades Marathon
87.7 km
~1,500 m
12 h
High (tarmac + cutoff)
Your first big ultra, rite of passage, South African culture.
Western States 100
161 km
~5,500 m
30 h
Very high (heat + altitude)
Experienced ultra-runner, lottery entry, Sierra Nevada CA.
UTMB
171 km
~10,000 m
46 h
Extreme (mountain trail)
Trail runner with technical experience, European mountains.
Marathon des Sables
~250 km
~3,500 m
7 days
Extreme (self-sufficient)
Adventurer with ultra experience and heat tolerance.
Two Oceans Ultra
56 km
~700 m
7 h
Medium (Comrades prep)
Test before Comrades — same RSA culture, shorter distance.
Spartathlon
246 km
~1,200 m
36 h
Very high (long tarmac)
Mentally strong runner, Athens-Sparta, hard qualifier.
Comrades stands out for historical prestige, scale (largest ultra in the world by participation) and South African medal-tier culture. If you want your first "big" ultra with full mega-organisation logistical backing and low probability of adverse weather, Comrades is the logical choice over UTMB (more technical) or Western States (lottery + difficulty).
If you combine Two Oceans (~56 km in April) + Comrades (~87.7 km in June), you get the classic "Comrades double" — a complete South African season that many European runners do with a single trip to South Africa.