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Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris 2027 Complete Guide — Course, Champs-Élysées and How to Train For It | SportPlan
Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris 2027 Complete Guide — Course, Champs-Élysées and How to Train For It
Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris 2027 Complete Guide — Course, Champs-Élysées and How to Train For It
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45 min de lecture·runningmaraton

Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris 2027 Complete Guide — Course, Champs-Élysées and How to Train For It

Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris 2027 Complete Guide

Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris 2027 Complete Guide

Sur cette page

Key factsAbout the raceCourseHistory and roll of honourRegistration and pricingGetting there and parkingWhere to stayWeather and forecastHow to train — 16-week planSplits calculatorCustom race planRace planNutritionGearFAQComparison with other marathons

Articles liés

By Ramon Curto · Updated 2026-05-06
📖 14 min read 📝 ~3,300 words 🎯 Skim friendly

On April 11, 2027 Paris runs continental Europe's biggest marathon: ~57,000 finishers launching as one block from the Champs-Élysées — the most iconic starting line on the calendar — with the Arc de Triomphe at your back and the Place de la Concorde opening up below. ASO organizes it — the same house that runs the Tour de France — so expect French organization at the highest level: spotless signage, gram-perfect aid stations, evacuation plans that don't fail. The course is relatively flat — ~140 m of cumulative elevation — but it's not Berlin: two forests (Vincennes and Boulogne) introduce undulations that punish runners who go out hard. This guide covers what the official site doesn't quite spell out: how the route really runs, where the race breaks, what weather to expect on the second Sunday in April, and how to build the weekend.

⚡ Quick verdict
  • One line: continental Europe's biggest marathon, postcard start on the Champs-Élysées and a relatively fast course with two forests that undulate the finish.
  • Best for: marathoners who want a World Marathon Majors-style experience without doing Boston/NYC, and runners with a 3:00–4:30 PB who value atmosphere without giving up an honest clock.
  • Skip if: you're chasing an absolute sub-2:30 personal record — Berlin / Valencia / Sevilla are 2–4 minutes faster at the elite end.
  • Key data: 42.195 km · ~140 m elevation gain · ~57,000 finishers · 95%+ finish rate · ASO (Tour de France) running the show.
  • Registration: opens September 2026, first-come-first-served, sells out in 24–48 hours. No official lottery.
📑 Table of contents
  1. Key facts
  2. About the race
  3. Course
  4. History and roll of honour
  5. Registration and pricing
  6. Getting there and parking
  7. Where to stay
  8. Weather and forecast
  9. How to train — 16-week plan
  10. Splits calculator
  11. Race plan
  12. Nutrition
  13. Gear
  14. FAQ

Key facts#

The essentials in one table: date, distance, elevation, start, organizer and registration link.
DataInformation
DateSunday, April 11, 2027
Distance42.195 km (marathon)
Elevation gain~140 m (relatively flat, with undulations)
CityParis (35–80 m elevation)
StartAvenue des Champs-Élysées (between Arc de Triomphe and Concorde)
Start time~8:00–8:45 in waves (confirm via official communications)
OrganizerAmaury Sport Organisation (ASO) — the Tour de France people
Title sponsorSchneider Electric (since 2017)
Registrationschneiderelectricparismarathon.com

About the race#

What kind of marathon Paris really is, which runner it fits and which it doesn't.

The Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris is continental Europe's biggest marathon (~57,000 finishers), organized by Amaury Sport Organisation (ASO) since 2002. The same house that runs the Tour de France, the Vuelta a España, the Dakar and Roland-Garros handles operations: expect French organization at the highest level — flawless signage, aid stations calibrated to the gram, evacuation plans that just work. Schneider Electric has been title sponsor since 2017. The Champs-Élysées start between the Arc de Triomphe and the Place de la Concorde is the most iconic starting line on the European marathon calendar.

📷 Photo pending · About the race header

Lead pack heading down the Champs-Élysées with the Arc de Triomphe in the background and the Place de la Concorde opening below — the postcard that defines the Paris race.

Paris isn't a mountain marathon and it isn't a flat record-track. It's a fast-but-not-record-fast marathon: a sea-level course (35–80 m elevation), ~140 m of cumulative gain, two forest loops (Bois de Vincennes and Bois de Boulogne) that add undulations, and a technical zone with bends and kilometers between buildings where the GPS can lie. Elite winners come home in 2:04–2:08; a well-prepared amateur can target 3% below their best on a flat marathon like Valencia or Berlin.

Is this race for you?#

  • If you've run a recent sub-3:30 in another marathon: target 3:30–3:35 here. The course doesn't punish significantly, but the bends in Bois de Boulogne do.
  • If you're stepping up from halves but have never raced 42K: yes, it fits. ASO runs a precise show, aid stations are frequent, and the Champs-Élysées start turns the debut into a memorable experience.
  • If you want a World Marathon Majors-style experience without entering a lottery: Paris is your best bet. Berlin lottery = 25% acceptance; NYC = 3%; Tokyo = 5%. Paris is first-come-first-served — set the alarm for opening and you're in.
  • If you're chasing an absolute sub-2:30 PB: go to Valencia (December) or Berlin (September). Paris is 2–4 minutes slower at the elite end because of the bends and the forest loops.
  • If you're training for Boston, NYC, Chicago: Paris is an ideal test 6 months out — the format (~57,000 runners), the crowd density and the undulations replicate many of the dynamics of the American Majors.

See other international marathons →

Course#

A single 42 km loop that starts on the Champs-Élysées, swings east through Vincennes, returns through the center past the Eiffel Tower, and finishes west after Bois de Boulogne — where the race breaks.

The Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris course is a single 42.195 km loop that starts on the Champs-Élysées, drops down to Place de la Concorde, swings east toward Bois de Vincennes (km 5–15), returns to the center past Place de la Bastille and the Hôtel de Ville zone, climbs the Seine quays toward the Tour Eiffel (km 25–28), crosses Trocadéro, swings west into Bois de Boulogne (km 32–37) and finishes on Avenue Foch, 500 m from the Arc de Triomphe. Asphalt almost the whole way, with short stretches of smooth cobblestone in the central bends.

📷 Photo pending · 3D course map

Official 3D map of the full Marathon de Paris course (published by ASO), with the Champs-Élysées start, the two forest loops (Vincennes and Boulogne) and the Avenue Foch finish clearly visible.

The start is arguably the most photogenic on the European calendar: you stand on the Champs-Élysées with the Arc de Triomphe at your back and the Place de la Concorde 1.9 km downhill. The first kilometers drop gently, cross Concorde, hit Rue de Rivoli and swing southeast toward Place de la Bastille. From Bastille the route enters Bois de Vincennes (km 6–8), where you meet the first significant undulation: a gentle 30–40 m climb between the lakes. It's the first silent trap — runners who hit the Champs-Élysées at 4:00 min/km (with the slope helping) drift to 4:15 here without noticing.

Bois de Vincennes km 6–12 — green recovery before the city turns. The forest occupies you from km 5 to km 15 roughly, in a green, shaded section with scattered crowds. It's the course's recovery zone: use it to settle into your pace, drink at the km 5 and km 10 stations, and slot in the first gel. Coming out of the forest (km 15) you return to the center via Avenue Daumesnil, pass Bastille a second time, hit the Seine quays (Rive Droite) and cut across the historic center with views of Notre-Dame in the distance (km 19), Hôtel de Ville (km 20–21) and Île de la Cité.

The km 21–27 stretch is one of the fastest on the course: you run the Seine quays, slightly downhill, and from km 25 the Tour Eiffel km 27 — the postcard motivator appears on your right, first small and then dominating the entire skyline. It's the day's motivational hit — more than one runner confesses that km 27 in front of the Eiffel Tower is where they remember why they signed up. You cross Pont d'Iéna, climb to Trocadéro (km 28 — small 200 m hill, 4–5% gradient) and head west on Avenue de New York.

🚨 Where the race breaks

🚨 Where the race breaks

Km 30–33, exiting Bois de Boulogne to the west. This is where 60–70% of runners who started above their target pace lose 1–3 minutes against the plan. The combination is treacherous: a gentle gradient (1.5–2%) in the quay tunnels, several tight bends that break the rhythm, and if the wind blows from the west (frequent in April), it hits head-on for 4–5 km straight.

The trick: reach km 30 feeling like you could accelerate if you wanted to. The mind wants to attack the last Trocadéro climb and let go; hold on. Bois de Boulogne km 32-37 — where the marathon is decided under tree cover with gentle undulations — if you haven't emptied the tank in the previous tunnel, the last 5 km on Avenue Foch are straight and fast.

The Bois de Boulogne spans kilometers 32–37: urban forest, 5–15 m undulations, asphalt in good shape, scattered crowds. It's the last forested zone and the marathon's last chance to punish anyone who went out hard. You exit the forest via Porte Dauphine, hit Avenue Foch (~1.5 km straight, slight downhill) and have the finish 500 m from the Arc de Triomphe.

Course data for Strava / Garmin: ASO publishes the official GPX and the detailed roadbook on their site a few weeks ahead. The Strava segment "Bois de Boulogne East-West" replicates the exact km 32–37 profile and is ideal for calibrating the last hour of your long run.

History and roll of honour#

Running since 1976, ASO in charge since 2002, Schneider Electric title sponsor since 2017 — continental Europe's biggest marathon with an African-dominated roll of honour.

The Marathon de Paris has been run since 1976, making it one of Europe's longest-running marathons (alongside Berlin, 1974, and London, 1981). The modern format and the explosive growth past 50,000 finishers arrive in 2002, when Amaury Sport Organisation (the Tour de France house) takes over operations. Schneider Electric has been title sponsor since 2017, giving the race its official name: Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris.

📷 Photo pending · History header

Most recent men's or women's winner crossing the line on Avenue Foch — iconic image anchoring the roll of honour section.

Race and roll of honour data (recent editions):

DataValue
First edition1976
ASO takes over2002
Schneider Electric sponsorsince 2017
Current distancesMarathon (only)
Finishers (recent editions)~57,000
Countries represented145+
Men's elite record2:04:21 (Elisha Rotich, KEN, 2021)
Women's elite record2:18:33 (Shure Demise, ETH, 2026)

Marathon de Paris roll of honour (last 5 editions)#

Verified winners and times for the 5 most recent editions:

Year🥇 MenCountryTime🥇 WomenCountryTime
2025Benard Biwott🇰🇪 KEN2:05:25Bedatu Hirpa🇪🇹 ETH2:20:45
2024Mulugeta Uma🇪🇹 ETH2:05:33Mestawot Fikir🇪🇹 ETH2:20:45
2023Gizealew Ayana🇪🇹 ETH2:07:15Helah Kiprop🇰🇪 KEN2:23:19
2022Deso Gelmisa🇪🇹 ETH2:05:07Judith Korir🇰🇪 KEN2:19:48
2021Elisha Rotich🇰🇪 KEN2:04:21Tigist Memuye🇪🇹 ETH2:26:11

Data verified against the public archive at Paris Marathon (Wikipedia EN). The 2021 edition was run in October due to COVID; the rest of the recent editions in April.

📊 Real stats from recent editions
  • Finish rate: ~95%. One of the highest on the European calendar — reflects the weight of the prepared runner (no low-cost tourism) and ASO's first-rate operation.
  • Time band distribution (recent editions):
    • sub-2:45 — 1.5% of finishers (elite + sub-elite)
    • 2:45–3:15 — 8%
    • 3:15–3:30 — 11%
    • 3:30–4:00 — 28%
    • 4:00–4:30 — 27%
    • 4:30–5:00 — 17%
    • +5:00 — 7.5%
  • Gender split: ~70% men / 30% women. The female share is among the highest in continental Europe and trending up steadily.
  • Historical weather (last 5 editions): start temp 6–11 °C, finish max 12–18 °C. One edition with light rain (2024), the rest sunny or overcast. Moderate wind in 3 of the 5 editions, strong only in 2023.

Registration and pricing#

First-come-first-served. Opens in September. Sells out in 24–48 hours. Set the alarm.

Registration for the Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris 2027 opens in September 2026 and runs as first-come-first-served with no lottery. The marathon sells out every year between 24 and 48 hours of opening — the ~80,000 bibs (~57,000 finishers + reserves) fly in less than two days. If you want to run Paris, set an alarm for opening day.

📷 Photo pending · Aerial view of the field

Aerial shot of the massive field heading down the Champs-Élysées in the early kilometers — perfect for reinforcing the "57,000 bibs that fly in 48 hours" message.

Reference from the 2026 edition at close:

  • Marathon: sold out (closed in 36 hours).
  • No second distance (Paris is marathon-only).

Three entry channels that stay open when the site reads "complet":

  1. Time qualifier: if you've run a certified marathon below a target time (rough guide: 3:00 men, 3:30 women in senior categories; varies year to year), you have a guaranteed entry path that opens weeks before the general public.
  2. Charity bib: through partner charities. Minimum donation €500–1,000+ depending on the cause, varies by organization and yearly cap.
  3. Official tour operators: "bib + hotel + transfers" packages sold by ASO-authorized agencies. Margin over the net registration price of ~€100–200 + the hotel.

Pricing structure#

ASO uses a tiered pricing system — the bib gets more expensive each time a tier closes, but in Paris tiers close in hours, not months. If you can afford it and you know you're racing, register in the first opening tier: the saving versus the last spots (when they're still around) is €30–50 per bib.

TierApprox. openApprox. closeMarathon
🟢 Early-bird (opening)Sept 2026 (alarm)Sept 2026 (24–36 h)€120–135
🟡 StandardSept-Oct 2026Oct-Nov 2026€150–165
🔴 Last spotsNov-Dec 2026until sold out€170–185
🟣 Charityopen year-rounduntil January 2027€500–1,000+

Indicative prices based on the 2026 edition structure. Always confirm on the official registration site — amounts and tiers are updated there.

What's included (and what's not) with the bib#

Included in the priceNOT included (optional extras)
✅ Bib with timing chip❌ Official professional photo (~€20–30)
✅ Finisher technical shirt❌ Saturday pasta party (€20–30 extra)
✅ Finisher medal❌ Premium baggage service
✅ On-course aid stations (liquids every 5 km, solids at 4 points)❌ Cancellation insurance (~€15)
✅ Post-finish bag (fruit, bars, isotonic)❌ VIP transfer / premium changing rooms
✅ Digital diploma with certified time
✅ Salón du Running access

Things to factor in beyond the bib price:

  • Refund policy: 80% refundable with a medical certificate before January 31, 2027. Bibs are not transferable to another edition or another race.
  • No official marketplace: unlike Madrid or Berlin, ASO does not allow bib transfers between runners. If you get injured, refund is the only official path.
  • Full event cancellation: rolls over to the following edition; no money back except in exceptional cases (COVID-style).
  • Mandatory medical certificate: unlike many international marathons, in France you need a medical certificate signed by a doctor (in French or English) or a French federation athletics license. Without one of the two, no bib is issued.
Note

For the 2027 edition, confirm current prices, opening date and medical certificate template on the official registration page.

Salón du Running (expo) and bib pickup#

📷 Photo pending · Salón du Running

Family members and runners at the Salón du Running (Paris Expo Porte de Versailles), with stands or the bib pickup counter visible.

Bib pickup happens at the Salón du Running, normally held the 3–4 days before the race (Thursday, Friday, Saturday) at Paris Expo Porte de Versailles (southwest Paris). No race-day pickup: you must collect in person before the expo closes Saturday, historically around 18:00.

You'll need:

  • Registration confirmation (printed or on phone)
  • Valid photo ID (national ID / passport)
  • Signed medical certificate or French federation license (FFA)

Family and friends can pick up for you with signed authorization and a copy of your ID + a copy of the medical certificate. The race kit normally includes the finisher technical shirt, the chip-timed bib, a bag tag and the official roadbook. Finisher medals are handed out in the post-finish zone after crossing on Avenue Foch.

Getting there and parking#

Métro and RER solve everything. Forget the car: the center is shut and the Champs-Élysées is a pedestrian zone on race day.

The most practical way to get to the Marathon de Paris start is by Métro or RER: the Charles-de-Gaulle Étoile (lines 1, 2, 6 + RER A), George V (line 1) and Franklin D. Roosevelt (lines 1 and 9) stations are 200–600 m from the Champs-Élysées start zone. The Métro starts running at 05:30 on Sundays. For finishers on Avenue Foch, the closest stations are Porte Dauphine (line 2) and Argentine (line 1).

📷 Photo pending · Arc de Triomphe / Champs-Élysées

Charles-de-Gaulle Étoile Métro entrance or aerial view of the Arc de Triomphe with the Champs-Élysées in the background — visual anchor for the first-time visitor to Paris.

Paris has one of the densest public transport networks in the world: 16 Métro lines, 5 RER lines (express commuter rail), trams, buses. Race morning the Métro starts at 05:30 on Sundays. Plan to be in your wave 45–60 minutes before the gun: the marathon launches in 4–6 staggered waves from 8:00, and porta-potty queues blow up in the last 30 minutes.

For the Salón du Running at Paris Expo Porte de Versailles, the nearest Métro stations are Porte de Versailles (line 12) and Balard (line 8). From the center it's about 25 minutes door to door.

Arriving from the airport:

  • Charles de Gaulle (CDG): RER B to Châtelet–Les Halles (35 min, €11) or taxi (€55, 45–70 min depending on traffic). If you arrive Friday for the Salón du Running, RER B; if you arrive late with luggage, taxi.
  • Orly: Orlyval + RER B to Châtelet (40 min, €14) or taxi (€40). The Roissybus from CDG to Opéra is an alternative at €17 if your hotel is near Grands Boulevards.

Driving is not recommended. The Champs-Élysées and the entire central area are closed from early morning into the afternoon. Paris has Crit'Air, a low-emission zone (ZFE) restricting older vehicles in the entire center. If you do drive, park at a Park & Ride on the periphery (RER stations) and switch to public transport.

Where to stay#

Three neighborhoods that work for runners (Champs-Élysées / 8e, le Marais, Trocadéro / 16e) and everything you need to know to keep the hotel from sabotaging your marathon.

For a marathon runner in Paris, staying within 20 minutes' walk of the start or the finish isn't luxury: it's logistics. The marathon spits you out around 11:00–13:30 depending on goal — you walk back to the hotel sweating, hungry, with cramps building. Walking 5 minutes to your wave versus catching the Métro at 7:30 with a transfer can be worth 1–2 minutes on the clock and twice that in mental stress.

📷 Photo pending · Recommended neighborhood

Wide shot of Champs-Élysées or le Marais showing hotel density and proximity to the start or finish zone.

What matters for a marathoner in Paris#

  • Breakfast before 6:30 (or bagged the night before). Eating 2:30–3 h before the gun is critical; buffets that open at 7:00 are too late if the start is at 8:30.
  • Late check-out until 14:00–15:00. You finish later than at a half-marathon — you need margin for a shower, food, rest. Paris doesn't always grant it free: ask at booking.
  • Bathtub for ice / contrast baths post-race. More useful after 42K than after 21K. Filter on Booking ("baignoire").
  • Independent A/C. In April it's not critical, but if your room faces south it does help. Even so, working ventilation is the floor.
  • Inner room or high floor. Saturday night in le Marais or near the Champs-Élysées is loud — don't gamble on your pre-marathon sleep.
  • Real distance in meters, not in marketing minutes. <1,500 m: easy walk. 1,500–3,000 m: Métro mandatory. >3,000 m: pass.

Best neighborhoods for runners#

Champs-Élysées / 8e arrondissement — the closest option to the start#

  • Distance to start: 200–1,500 m walking (3–18 min). Unbeatable for Sunday at 7:30.
  • Pros: walk to the start without the Métro, restaurants for the pasta dinner, 24h pharmacies, direct connection to the Salón du Running.
  • Cons: expensive. 8e arrondissement hotels run 30–60% more than the rest of Paris on race weekend.
  • Best for: runners traveling solo or with a runner partner who prioritize logistics over budget.
HotelCat.€/night*To startRunner edge
Hyatt Regency Paris Étoile4*€280–4201.2 km · 15 minEarly breakfast for groups
Marriott Champs-Élysées5*€450–650600 m · 8 minBathtub, strong A/C, late check-out
Hôtel Splendide Étoile4*€240–380800 m · 10 minDiscreet boutique near Étoile
Le Bristol Paris5* palace€1,200–2,0001.4 km · 17 minAbsolute luxury, perfect for celebrating
Hôtel Plaza Athénée5* palace€1,400–2,5001.5 km · 18 minIconic, bathtub, runner-suite if you ask

Le Marais / 4e–3e arrondissement — the historic center#

  • Distance to start: 3–4 km walking (35–45 min) or 1 Métro transfer from Saint-Paul / Châtelet. Don't walk — take the Métro.
  • Pros: top nightlife vibe, best traditional bistros for the pasta dinner, pedestrian streets for the Saturday shakeout, more reasonable pricing than the 8e.
  • Cons: Saturday night noisy (Marais is bar and restaurant central). Transport mandatory Sunday at 7:30.
HotelCat.€/night*To startRunner edge
Pavillon de la Reine5* boutique€380–5504.2 km · MétroBathtub, inner garden, guaranteed quiet
Hôtel des Grands Boulevards4* boutique€220–3403.5 km · MétroModern, A/C, in-house dinner restaurant
Hotel Saint-Paul Le Marais4*€180–2603.8 km · MétroDiscreet, quiet high floor
Hôtel Caron de Beaumarchais3*€150–2204.0 km · MétroFamily-run, mid-range, central
Cour des Vosges5* boutique€450–7004.5 km · MétroDiscreet luxury, perfect for celebrating

Trocadéro / 16e arrondissement — the option near the finish#

  • Distance to start: 1.5–2.5 km walking (18–28 min). Distance to finish (Avenue Foch): 800 m–1.5 km.
  • Pros: the closest neighborhood to the finish — walk back to the hotel after the race. Guaranteed quiet, top restaurants, Trocadéro park next door for the Saturday easy run, Eiffel Tower views.
  • Cons: transport recommended for the Sunday 7:30 start (although walking is doable if you wake up with time). Pricey.
HotelCat.€/night*To startRunner edge
Shangri-La Paris5* palace€900–1,5002.2 km · MétroEiffel Tower views, bathtub, strong A/C
The Peninsula Paris5* palace€800–1,3001.8 km · 22 minAbsolute luxury, bathtub, generous late check-out
Saint James Albany5*€400–6001.8 km · MétroDiscreet, quiet, private garden
Hôtel Keppler4* boutique€200–3201.5 km · 18 minMid-range boutique, very close to finish
Le Rond Point d'Auteuil3*€120–1802.5 km · MétroAffordable for the 16e, close to Bois de Boulogne

*Indicative race weekend rate (second Sunday in April). Varies with booking lead time, availability and current promotions. Paris in April is mid-high season — book 4–6 months out.

💡 SportPlan tip

Many Paris hotels offer an unpublished runner rate for Marathon de Paris weekend. Call the hotel directly (not Booking) and mention the marathon. Typical discount 10–20% + late check-out + early breakfast bag. Works especially well with independent boutiques (not the big chains).

Weather and forecast#

Second Sunday of April in Paris is cool and variable. For the marathon, heat is almost never an issue — the west wind is.

Paris weather on the second Sunday of April averages 6 °C low and 15 °C high with variable conditions: 50% chance of sunny, 30% overcast, 20% light rain, based on historical data from Météo-France. Wind is the most unpredictable variable: it can swing from dead calm to 25 km/h from the west.

📷 Photo pending · Variable day

Finishers from a recent edition with their medals on a partly cloudy day — the typical pattern of the second Sunday of April in Paris.

The variable to watch is the wind, not the heat. For the marathon, temperature is almost always optimal (6–15 °C, standard European conditions), but the west wind — frequent in April — hits head-on in the km 30–37 stretch (Trocadéro → Bois de Boulogne → Avenue Foch). An 8:30 start leaves you in near-ideal conditions for the first 4 hours; extreme heat is exceptional in Paris in April.

Plan by forecast:

  • <8 °C low: carry a throwaway old shirt for the 60 minutes in the wave. 3/4 tights if the low is <6 °C. Normal short-sleeve in race for any goal.
  • 8–14 °C: optimal conditions. Most PBs happen here. Tech singlet if you're going under 3:30; short sleeve if over 4 hours.
  • 14–18 °C: warm. Drink at every aid station from km 5. No real heat stress.
  • >18 °C (exceptional in April): drop target pace 3–5 sec/km. Carry your own bottle if going over 4h.
  • Light rain (20% probability): waterproof cap or visor, double-layer socks to prevent blisters, extra Vaseline in the groin. Don't overdress — light rain at 8–12 °C is comfortable pace if you wear technical kit.
  • West wind >15 km/h: plan B. Save 3–5 sec/km in km 1–25 (when it's tail or crosswind), bank fuel for the headwind tunnel of km 30–35.

Paris isn't Madrid, isn't Valencia, isn't Rome. Heat is almost never the problem in April; the wind can be. Watch the wind forecast (not just the temperature) in the 48 hours before.

How to train — 16-week plan#

Volumes by goal, key sessions for Paris (mostly flat terrain + bends + two forest loops), and a calculator to know what time is realistic from your best half.

The recommended plan to prepare the Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris is a 16-week block with peak volume in weeks 11–13 (between 50 km and 130+ km weekly depending on goal), one weekly long run and a three-week taper. The key for Paris: train on mostly flat terrain with gentle undulations, do at least two long runs with race-pace blocks after 25 km accumulated (to simulate km 32 of Bois de Boulogne) and slot in headwind work in the last 6 weeks.

📷 Photo pending · Training header

Runner crossing the line on Avenue Foch or training on flat weekend terrain — aspirational image anchoring the 16-week plan.

Treat Paris as a marathon with a low elevation budget (~140 m) but with two forest loops and high probability of west wind. Pick your goal and use the table — these are peak volumes (weeks 11–13), not block averages.

GoalAverage pacePeak weekly volPeak long run
5h007:06 min/km35–45 km25–28 km
4h306:24 min/km45–55 km28–30 km
4h005:41 min/km55–70 km30–32 km
3h304:58 min/km70–85 km32–35 km
3h004:16 min/km90–110 km32–36 km
≤2h453:54 min/km110–130+ km32–38 km

How to read the table and build the cycle:

  • These are peak volumes (weeks 11–13). The 16-week block average will be approximately 65% of the row you pick.
  • One long run per week, no more. It's the session that builds the most aerobic fitness. The two final peak long runs (weeks 11 and 12) hit 32–36 km.
  • The rest of the volume is easy conversational pace.
  • Standard distribution: 80% easy / 20% hard, measured in total time.
  • One quality session per week is enough up to the 4h00 goal; from there two come in.

Three sessions worth gold for Paris:

  1. Long run with race-pace block after 25 km accumulated (weeks 8–13). 30–34 km long run with the last 8–10 km at goal pace. Simulates km 32 leaving Bois de Boulogne — the moment where the marathon is decided.
  2. Tempo on terrain with headwind (weeks 4–10). 8–12 km at goal pace on a westward-facing loop if you train near the coast, or in a large park with exposed sections. Learn not to empty the tank fighting the wind.
  3. 1,000–2,000 m repeats with technical bends (weeks 6–13). 6–8 × 1,000–1,500 m at marathon pace on a loop with 4–6 tight turns. Trains you to enter and exit bends without losing cadence — replicates the dozens of turns in central Paris.

The taper is three weeks, not two. Week 14 at 80%, week 15 at 60%, week 16 at 40% holding race pace in short pickups. The last two long runs (in weeks 11 and 12) are the ones that fill the tank.

Equivalent times calculator#

Don't know what realistic target time you have for Paris? Cross your best recent half-marathon with the "Paris marathon" factor (which discounts the forest loops and the central bends):

Your best recent halfFlat equivalent (marathon)Realistic Paris
1:25sub-3:00 flat3:01–3:05
1:35sub-3:20 flat3:21–3:28
1:45sub-3:42 flat3:43–3:52
1:55sub-4:05 flat4:08–4:18
2:05sub-4:25 flat4:28–4:40
2:15sub-4:48 flat4:50–5:02

How to read this: the "flat" column is the Riegel conversion without adjustments (your half × ~2.11). Paris loses just 1–3% versus pure flat — significantly less than Madrid or Boston. If you've done long runs with race-pace blocks and your form holds, target the low end of the range. If your last hour falls apart or there's strong wind on race day, the high end.

Find another international marathon →

Splits calculator#

Calculate your average pace and the times you need to hit at each checkpoint for your goal. Print it and wear it on your arm on race day.

Once you have your target time, this calculator gives you the required average pace (in min/km and min/mi) and the cumulative splits at 5K, 10K, 15K, half marathon, 30K and finish. Change the target time in the field below and the table updates instantly:

🎯 Calculadora de ritmo y splitsEscribe tu tiempo objetivo para Marathon de Paris
Ritmo medio requerido4:16 min/km
Equivalente en millas6:52 min/mi
PuntoTiempo acumuladoParcial
5 km21:2021:20
10 km42:4021:20
15 km1:03:5921:20
Media (21,1 km)1:30:0026:01
30 km2:07:5937:59
Meta3:00:0052:01

Splits asumen ritmo constante. En carreras con desnivel real (Marathon de Paris) — banca 5–8 s/km en bajadas y pierde el mismo margen en subidas; el ritmo medio se mantiene.

Custom race plan#

The calculator above gives you the pace. But a real race plan answers more questions: with what strategy do I start on the Champs-Élysées? 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 fueling plan. The planner generates a personalized plan by segment (with paces, HR zones, mental cues and minute-by-minute fueling), a race-morning checklist, and a Plan B for the unexpected. Download as PDF to take with you on race day.

📋 Plan de carrera personalizadoConfigura objetivo, estrategia y avituallamiento. Genera tu plan paso a paso y descárgalo en PDF para llevártelo el día de carrera.
Estrategia de pacing
Ritmo medio4:16/km
Tiempo previsto3:00:00
Geles totales5
  • 📊 Ritmo por tramo con FC y cues mentales
  • ⏱️ Avituallamiento minuto a minuto (19 eventos)
  • ✅ Checklist de la mañana de carrera
  • 🆘 Plan B para los imprevistos

PDF A4, optimizado para imprimir y llevar el día de carrera.

Race plan#

You arrive at the wave on the Champs-Élysées. You've done the 16-week plan. What separates good training from a good time is what you do over the next 3–5 hours.

The Paris race plan has three Paris-specific keys: (1) ultra-controlled start on the Champs-Élysées — the slope helping + the crowd density + the postcard adrenaline tempt you to let go and hit km 1 in 3:50 when you're shooting for sub-3:00; (2) settled and well-hydrated pace in Bois de Vincennes (km 5–15), using the shade and scattered crowds to slot in gels comfortably; (3) push or hold in the km 30–33 tunnel leaving Bois de Boulogne, the moment where the marathon is decided.

Pacing by goal time#

GoalTarget splitsParis-specific tactical note
sub-2:453:54 min/kmBrake on the Champs-Élysées: km 1 in 3:58 (not 3:50). Hold by feel in Bois de Vincennes; attack km 22–27 (Tour Eiffel, slight downhill). If headwind in km 30–35, lose 5–8 sec/km, recover on Avenue Foch.
sub-3:004:16 min/kmCross half at 1:30:30. Bois de Vincennes at settled pace. Hold km 30–33 leaving Boulogne; attack km 38 on Avenue Foch if you arrive with legs.
sub-3:304:58 min/kmNo rush km 1–5 (Champs-Élysées + Concorde). Cross half at 1:45:30. Drink at every aid station. Walk 15 sec at the km 30 station.
sub-4:005:41 min/kmThe classic mistake is to start at 5:30 caught up in the Champs-Élysées crowd surge. Hold 5:45 the first 10 km. Walk 20 sec at every aid station from km 25.
sub-4:306:24 min/kmVery even splits: 6:20–6:30 throughout. Walk-run strategy from km 30 if you need it. Bois de Boulogne with short walks every 4 km.
sub-5:007:06 min/kmWalk-run plan B from km 1: 8 run / 1 walk. Gives you margin to finish in shape, enjoy the Tour Eiffel postcard and cross all of Avenue Foch.
Finish7:00–7:30No watch. Enjoy the Champs-Élysées, the Bois de Vincennes shade, the Tour Eiffel at km 27 and the arrival on Avenue Foch.

Race morning#

  • Wake up: 3.5 hours before (05:00 if start is at 08:30).
  • Breakfast: 3 h before. What you've tested in long runs, no experiments. 80–100 g of carbs. Don't try the hotel croissant — save it for the celebration.
  • Hotel checkout: 90–100 minutes before. The Champs-Élysées platforms fill from 60 minutes out.
  • Warm-up: light. A 5–10 minute jog + 4 × 50 m strides. If you're going under sub-3:30, add 10 extra minutes.
  • Wave: enter 45–60 minutes before the gun. The marathon launches in staggered waves from 8:00 (elite, sub-3, sub-3:30, sub-4, +4 hours waves).

Strategy by segment#

  • Km 1–5 (Champs-Élysées + Concorde, conservative): the costliest trap on the course. The descent, the Arc de Triomphe adrenaline at your back, thousands of runners surging, walls of crowd — everything pushes you to let go. If your watch reads 3:50/km at km 2 and you're shooting for sub-2:45, you're already too hot. Brake. Be the boring runner in the wave.
  • Km 5–15 (Bois de Vincennes, settled pace): breathing zone. Shaded, scattered crowds, gentle undulation. Settle into target pace, drink at every station, slot in the first and second gel. You don't win the marathon here, but you can lose it chasing fast packs and emptying the tank.
  • Km 15–25 (back to center + Seine, target pace): the fastest stretch on the course. Seine quays with slight downhill, Notre-Dame views in the distance, pass at Hôtel de Ville. Hold the pace, don't accelerate even if the legs feel good.
  • Km 25–30 (Tour Eiffel + Trocadéro, optional push): the motivational hit. If you arrive with legs, bank 3–5 sec/km on the descent to Pont d'Iéna and hold the Trocadéro climb (200 m, 4–5%). If you arrive on the edge, hold effort, not pace.
  • Km 30–33 (wind tunnel, push or hold): the key segment. Leaving Bois de Boulogne to the west, possible headwind, gentle undulation. If you arrive at km 30 with legs, hold the pace. If you arrive on the edge, hold effort and prepare the last 10 km.
  • Km 33–37 (Bois de Boulogne, hold on): gentle undulations under tree cover. Scattered crowds, mental solitude. Three mental anchors: km 35, km 38, finish. Take the kilometers one by one.
  • Km 37–42 (Avenue Foch, close it out): the last 5 km are straight and slightly downhill. If you arrive with energy, splits hold. If you arrive empty, you'll lose 30–60 sec/km in the last 3 km. The finish is in sight of the Arc de Triomphe.

Fueling tactics#

  • Km 5 (Bastille): drink even if you're not thirsty. It's the most underrated aid station — April in Paris is dry even when the temperature is low.
  • Km 15 (exit Vincennes): first solid station. Carry your own, don't rely solely on the organization.
  • Km 25 (Seine, before Tour Eiffel): second solid station. Slot in a caffeine gel if you're shooting for sub-3:30 or faster.
  • Km 30 (entry to Boulogne): the critical station. If you're suffering, walk 20–30 seconds and rehydrate; you lose less than you lose blowing up at km 35.
  • Km 35–40: the last ones. If you've still got glycogen, skip them. If not, drink + a fast gel. Avenue Foch is the home straight — save something for the last 500 m.

Mental: how not to quit at km 32 of Bois de Boulogne#

It's where the marathon is decided. Three anchors:

  1. Name the next three points: exit Bois (km 37), Porte Dauphine (km 38), Avenue Foch (km 39). As long as you have a next point, you keep going.
  2. Count down the kilometers from km 35: "seven km, six km, last 5K". The brain accepts small numbers better than big distances.
  3. Cadence of the feet, not of the watch: hold the cadence (170–185 spm). The watch can lie under tree cover; cadence cannot.

Post-finish — the first 60 minutes#

  • Don't stop. Keep walking 10–15 minutes down Avenue Foch. Stopping cold is the recipe for dizziness + cramps.
  • Hydrate before eating. Isotonic drink + water in the first 10 minutes.
  • Thermal blanket: use it. April in Paris is cool and core temp drops fast after a marathon.
  • Very light stretching: hamstrings, calves, quads. 30 seconds each, no bouncing. Better an easy walk than aggressive stretching.
  • Stop the watch when you cross the finishers' zone, not before. Your official time is by chip.
  • Photo at the Arc de Triomphe: yes, worth it. It's 500 m from the finish. With the medal on, the Arc finisher postcard is the one you'll be showing for ten years.

Save this event in SportPlan →

Nutrition#

Saturday dinner at a traditional bistro but no experiments, race-morning breakfast, carb plan by goal, sodium by wind.

The nutrition strategy for a marathon pivots on 60–100 g of carbs per hour depending on goal, with 5–8 gels spaced every 25–30 minutes from km 8. Carb loading the 3 days before should be 8–10 g/kg/day, and Saturday dinner light and familiar. Paris has a quirk: the Saturday food temptation is high — traditional bistros, markets, croissants, wine, cheese. It's not the night to discover French cuisine.

📷 Photo pending · Aid station

Volunteer at a Marathon de Paris aid station handing out isotonic drink.

Saturday dinner is light, familiar and early (eat before 21:00). In Paris you're lucky — any traditional bistro offers carbonara pasta or pesto tagliatelles, roast chicken with potatoes, country bread, fruit — all carbs without risk. Order pasta without heavy cream and chicken grilled. No exotic plats du jour, no shellfish, no strong cheese. Saturday is for hoarding fuel, not for discovering French cuisine.

Saturday afternoon chocolat chaud is a Parisian tradition that does fit: it's basically hot milk with chocolate, fast carbs + fats + a touch of caffeine. Taken at 17:00–18:00 with a croissant, it's perfect as a pre-dinner snack. Don't experiment with éclairs or mille-feuilles — those are for the Monday after.

Race-morning breakfast depends on whether you wake up hungry. The safe play: toast with honey/jam + banana + coffee (if you take it habitually). 80–100 g of carbs, eaten 3 hours before the gun. If your stomach shuts down with nerves, swap for a sports drink with 80 g of carbs. The hotel croissant waits until after the finish — it's 50% fat, doesn't work as pre-marathon breakfast.

What the organization provides on course:

  • Liquid aid stations every ~5 km (km 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40). Water and Powerade.
  • Solid aid stations at km 15, 21, 30 and 36 — gels, fruit (banana, orange), bars. Paris is one of the European calendar's marathons with the most solid stations.
  • Water sponges at least 3 points.
  • Solid finish-line aid: fruit, bars, isotonic, water, ASO branded snack pack.

Carb plan by goal:

GoalCarbs / hourGels to carryWhen to take them
5h0030–45 g/h3–4 gelskm 8, km 18, km 28, km 36
4h0045–60 g/h5 gelskm 8, km 16, km 22, km 30, km 36
3h3060–75 g/h6 gelskm 6, km 12, km 18, km 24, km 30, km 36
3h0075–90 g/h7 gels + flaskkm 5, every 5 km until km 35
≤2h4590–100 g/h8 gels + flaskkm 4, every 4–5 km

Three mistakes you see every year at the Paris marathon:

  • Trying ASO/Powerade gels for the first time on race day. Carbs are rehearsed in at least 3 prior long runs; gut dysbiosis hits at km 30, not km 5.
  • Skipping the km 5 station because "I'm not thirsty". April in Paris is dry and the cool morning fools you: dehydration shows up at km 25, not km 35.
  • Eating cheese or foie at Saturday dinner. Paris gastronomy is for Monday. Saturday is plain pasta and grilled chicken.

Hydration and sodium by wind (not by heat):

  • No wind (rare in April): isotonic at every station. Electrolyte salt every hour from km 15.
  • West wind 10–20 km/h: the most common case. Electrolyte salt every 45–60 minutes. Sweat loss is lower but the km 30–35 effort against wind blows up fatigue.
  • West wind >20 km/h (exceptional): electrolyte salt every 45 minutes. Consider carrying your own bottle if going over 4h.
  • Light rain: don't change the hydration plan. Wet skin fools you — you're still sweating, keep drinking.

Post-finish recovery — the first hour counts more than at the half:

  • First 5 minutes: isotonic at the finish + water.
  • 0–30 minutes: thermal blanket + easy walk + second isotonic.
  • 30–60 minutes: real food with protein + carbs. Aim for 30 g of protein and 80 g of carbs in this window. A jambon baguette + banana + isotonic works perfectly.
  • 2–4 hours later: full normal meal. Here French cuisine does come in: bistro, red wine, cheese, dessert. Celebration goes here, not in the first 60 minutes.

Gear#

Shoes for a fast marathon (carbon plate or protective trainer), long-distance kit, GPS and the accessories that are gold from km 30 on.

The best shoes for the Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris are carbon-plate race 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 exceed 250–350 km of use. Paris, being flat with bends, rewards the lightest model that survives 42 km without trashing the quads.

📷 Photo pending · Shoes on the start line

Tight shot of race shoes on the Champs-Élysées start line — multiple brands visible.

Shoes — what runs Paris#

Unlike Madrid or Boston (with elevation), in Paris the bends and turns factor weighs as much as weight. An ultralight carbon plate can save you 4% of energy but leaves the quads trashed from km 30 if you don't manage your foot strike on the technical bends in the center. For non-elite runners, a plate with good protection (Vaporfly 4, Adios Pro Evo, Metaspeed Sky) or a protective super-trainer beats the lightest option.

Recommendations by goal:

GoalCategoryCommon models
≤2h45Light "race" carbon plateNike Alphafly 3 · adidas Adios Pro Evo · ASICS Metaspeed Sky · Saucony Endorphin Elite
2h45–3h30Protective carbon plateNike Vaporfly 4 · adidas Adios Pro 4 · ASICS Metaspeed Sky · Saucony Endorphin Pro
3h30–4h00Carbon plate or super-trainerSaucony Endorphin Speed · Hoka Mach X · Puma Deviate Nitro Elite · ASICS Magic Speed
4h00+Protective daily trainerNike Pegasus · ASICS Cumulus / Nimbus · Brooks Ghost · Hoka Clifton

Check this before leaving the house:

  • Kilometers on your shoes. A carbon plate loses return after 250–350 km. If you used them for the March half and your long runs, they arrive at Paris worn out.
  • Drop and footstrike style. Don't drop below your habitual drop "to gain 30 seconds" — the soleus and Achilles will charge you for it from km 25 on.
  • Tested in at least two long runs of >25 km. New shoes at a marathon is an expensive mistake.

Race kit#

  • Top: technical singlet if forecast >14 °C, normal short-sleeve if 8–14 °C, light long sleeve if start <8 °C. Materials: polyester or thin merino, never cotton.
  • Bottom: 5–7" shorts with gel pockets. 3/4 tights if start <8 °C.
  • Socks: thin technical, no toe seams, already tested in at least 5 long runs. Cotton socks are the source of half of all blisters.
  • Sports bra: high support, already tested in long runs.
  • Anti-chafe: Vaseline or BodyGlide on nipples, armpits, groin, bra zone. More marathoners finish with bloody nipples than with cramps — and the chance of light April rain multiplies the risk.

GPS and electronics#

  • GPS watch with >5 h battery. Models with barometric altimeter (Garmin Forerunner 265+, Coros Apex, Apple Watch Ultra) are useful even though elevation is low, because Paris altimetry is misleading.
  • Pin target pace + total time on the main screen. GPS distance can read +1–3% in central Paris — between Rivoli's tall buildings, the Bastille bends and the Seine tunnels, GPS bounces. Use the per-km step from official course markers to correct.
  • Hydration belt / vest: strongly recommended for the marathon if you're going over 4h.
  • Phone: optional. If you carry it, use an arm band or a belt with pocket. If it rains, waterproof case mandatory.

Accessories for the Paris marathon#

  • Sunglasses: yes, almost always. The low April sun on the Champs-Élysées and the Seine quays hits hard even at 12 °C.
  • Cap or visor: highly recommended if forecast is light rain. For sun it's not critical.
  • Throwaway layer: an old shirt is essential for the 60 minutes in the wave at 4–8 °C. ASO collects discarded clothing and donates it — leave it on the fence, not on the ground.
  • Gel belt: to carry 5–7 of your own gels. Don't underestimate the space you need.
  • Electrolyte salts: capsules or tablets to take every 45–60 min, especially with strong west wind.
  • Light long-sleeve throwaway: if low <6 °C, an old long-sleeve over the race top to ditch around km 5.

Compare with other European marathons →

FAQ#

10 honest answers to the real questions: how to enter, medical certificate, cutoff time, bibs, wind, GPS, shoes and comparison with London / Berlin / Madrid / Valencia / Boston / NYC / Tokyo / Chicago.
How do I get in if registration sells out in 24 hours?

Three real options: (1) General opening in September 2026 with an alarm — bibs fly in 24–48 hours, you have to be online at the exact moment; (2) Time qualifier: if you have a certified mark below a target time (typically sub-3:00 men / sub-3:30 women in senior categories), you have a guaranteed entry path that opens weeks before the public; (3) Charity bib: minimum donation €500–1,000+ through partner charities. No official lottery — Paris doesn't work like Berlin, NYC or Tokyo on this front.

Do I need a medical certificate to run the Marathon de Paris?

Yes, it's mandatory. Unlike many international marathons, French law requires a medical certificate signed by a doctor (in French or English) certifying no contraindication for participating in athletics competition events, or a current French federation athletics license (FFA). Without one of the two, no bib is issued. The official template is downloadable from the registration site.

How much elevation does the Marathon de Paris really have?

About 140 m of cumulative gain over 42.195 km, spread across gentle undulations in Bois de Vincennes (km 5–15), a small Trocadéro climb (km 28, 200 m at 4–5%) and Bois de Boulogne undulations (km 32–37). It's a relatively flat marathon — significantly faster than Madrid (~600 m) or Boston (~140 m with a more demanding profile), but slightly slower than Berlin (<50 m) or Valencia (<50 m) due to the bends and the forest loops. Take it as 42 km of undulating road with two forest sections, not as pure flat asphalt.

Is there a cutoff time?

Recent editions close the marathon at 5 hours 40 minutes from the last wave, equivalent to about 8:00 min/km. Walking is allowed; the course has staggered partial closures (streets reopen to traffic after the last runner in each zone passes). If you're aiming for finish-without-time-limit, ask the organizer first — some editions allow running up to 6 h on the sidewalk with a "marche / walk" bib.

Can I pick up the bib on race day?

No. Pickup is restricted to the Salón du Running Thursday through Saturday at Paris Expo Porte de Versailles. No bibs are issued the day of the race under any circumstances, so plan your arrival to allow at least one expo visit. If you arrive Saturday, do it before 16:00 — the queue grows exponentially in the last hour.

Where do I leave my bag during the race?

There's a baggage area at the Champs-Élysées start, organized by bib number in temporary marquees. 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 area at the finish (the baggage zone moves near the Avenue Foch finish). There's staff but no ID check, so don't pack valuables.

Are headphones allowed?

Yes, headphones are allowed at the Marathon de Paris. That said, the urban entertainment on the route is exceptional — bands every 3–5 km, massive crowds on the Champs-Élysées, on the Seine quays and on Avenue Foch — so many runners prefer running without headphones. The most solitary section (Bois de Vincennes interior, km 8–13) does benefit from music if it helps you hold focus.

How does the west wind affect the time?

Paris in April has a high probability (~60%) of west wind. Average historical speed is 10–18 km/h, with peak days at 25–30 km/h. The course has tailwind sections (km 5–15 heading east), neutral (center, Seine quays) and headwind (km 30–37, exiting Bois de Boulogne to the west). A 20 km/h headwind for 5 km costs between 20–40 seconds off the target pace in that section. Simple rule: if the forecast shows west wind >15 km/h, save 3–5 sec/km in km 1–25 and bank fuel for the km 30–35 tunnel.

What are the best shoes for the Paris marathon?

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 super-trainer (Saucony Endorphin Speed, Hoka Mach X). For over 4:00, a protective daily trainer (Nike Pegasus, ASICS Cumulus, Brooks Ghost). The most important thing isn't the brand but that they're already broken in and not over 250–350 km of use. Paris, being flat with bends, rewards the lightest model that survives 42 km without trashing the quads.

How does Paris compare with London, Berlin, Madrid, Valencia, Boston, NYC, Tokyo and Chicago?

Paris is continental Europe's biggest marathon and the best "first Major-style" for European runners. Berlin is flat and fast (world record), but you only get in via lottery. London is a World Marathon Major with top atmosphere, also lottery. Madrid is 600 m of elevation — 5–10 minutes slower. Valencia is flat and fast, the best PB option in Spanish. Boston has a qualifying-time cutoff and more cumulative elevation. NYC is a World Marathon Major with elevation and brutal lottery (3% acceptance). Tokyo lottery 5%, flat and fast but expensive and far. Chicago flat, fast, lottery 30%. Paris is the only big European marathon without a lottery that still offers Major-level organization.

Is it good for a first marathon?

Yes, if you go in without an aggressive time goal. The atmosphere, the ASO operation, the aid stations every 5 km, the Champs-Élysées postcard and the Tour Eiffel view make the experience memorable. Yes also if your goal is an honest clock — the course doesn't punish significantly. No, if your goal is an absolute sub-2:30 PB — Berlin or Valencia are significantly faster. If it's your first marathon and you want a time, Paris is a good option as long as you accept that the west wind and the forest loops can cost you 1–3% over pure potential.


Comparison with other marathons#

How Paris fits against the other big European and world marathons — so you know exactly when to pick which.

The Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris is the best World Marathon Majors-style experience without entering a lottery, but not the fastest on the calendar. If you want a pure PB, Berlin or Valencia are significantly faster; if you want atmosphere with massive crowds and historic prestige, Paris is continental Europe's best bet.

All are marathon (42.195 km), so the choice depends on month, lottery, elevation and what you're looking for:

RaceMonthElevationAccessBest forAtmosphere
Schneider Paris (this guide)April~140 mFirst-come-first-servedMajor-style without lottery · atmosphere · experience⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
London (TCS)April~50 mLottery (~5%)World Marathon Major · atmosphere⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Berlin (BMW)September<50 mLottery (~25%)PB · world record⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
EDP MadridApril~600 mOpenAtmosphere · experience (Spain)⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
ValenciaDecember<50 mOpenPure PB (Spain)⭐⭐⭐⭐
BostonApril~140 mQualifying timeTradition · prestige⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
New York City (TCS)November~250 mLottery (~3%)Major · 5 boroughs⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
TokyoMarch<50 mLottery (~5%)Major · flat⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Chicago (Bank of America)October<50 mLottery (~30%)Major · flat · fast⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Lottery acceptance and elevation data indicative based on recent editions (2023–2025). Always confirm on each race's official site.

See all international marathons →


Did this guide help? If you're running Paris 2027, save the event in SportPlan for registration alerts, Salón du Running reminders and, after, to log your result.

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  • Key facts
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  • Getting there and parking
  • Where to stay
  • Weather and forecast
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  • Splits calculator
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  • Race plan
  • Nutrition
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