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Stramilano 2026 Complete Guide — Italy's Biggest Urban Race, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II and How to Train For It | SportPlan
Stramilano 2026 Complete Guide — Italy's Biggest Urban Race, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II and How to Train For It
Stramilano 2026 Complete Guide — Italy's Biggest Urban Race, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II and How to Train For It
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20 min de lectura·runningmedia-maraton

Stramilano 2026 Complete Guide — Italy's Biggest Urban Race, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II and How to Train For It

📖 12 min read 📝 2,500 words 🎯 Skim friendly

Stramilano 2026 Complete Guide

By · Updated 2026-05-08

Nesta páxina

Key factsAbout the raceThe courseHistory & recordsRegistration & pricingGetting there & parkingWhere to stayWeather forecastHow to train — 12-week planPace calculatorRace planNutritionGearFAQComparison with other European half marathons

Artigos relacionados

Ramon Curto
📖 12 min read 📝 ~2,500 words 🎯 Skim friendly

On Sunday, March 22, 2026 Milan holds Italy's biggest urban running event since 1972 — the 54th edition of Stramilano, gathering ~50,000 runners across the competitive half marathon (World Athletics Bronze Label), the 10K, and the iconic family Stramilanina (~5 km with costumes, kids, and dogs). The half-marathon start at 09:00 CET from Castello Sforzesco takes you through Piazza del Duomo, the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II (the ONLY race in the world that runs through this iconic glass-roofed arcade), Corso Venezia and Buenos Aires, finishing at the Arena Civica in Parco Sempione. This guide covers what the official site doesn't quite spell out: how to manage the Corso Buenos Aires return (km 14–17) where the race breaks, the Italian pasta culture pre-race, and why Milan in March is one of Europe's best running weekend destinations.

⚡ Quick verdict
  • One line: Italy's biggest urban race, the only one that runs through Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II.
  • Best for: runners combining a competitive half with a family weekend (Stramilanina).
  • Skip if: you're chasing a flat-half PB — the historic center has cobblestone sections.
  • Key data: 21.1 km · <30 m elevation · ~50,000 runners total · World Athletics Bronze Label · March (~10 °C).
  • Entry: opens December 2025. Half €25–50; 10K €15–30; Stramilanina €5–10.
📑 Table of contents
  1. Key facts
  2. About the race
  3. The course
  4. History & records
  5. Registration & pricing
  6. Getting there & parking
  7. Where to stay
  8. Weather forecast
  9. How to train — 12-week plan
  10. Pace calculator
  11. Race plan
  12. Nutrition
  13. Gear
  14. FAQ

Key facts#

The essentials in one table: date, distances, start, organizer, and registration link.
ItemInformation
DateSunday March 22, 2026
DistancesHalf marathon (21.097 km) · 10K · Stramilanina (~5 km family)
Elevation gain<30 m (essentially flat)
CityMilan (Lombardy), Italy
StartCastello Sforzesco
FinishArena Civica / Parco Sempione
Start timeHalf 09:00 CET · Stramilanina 09:30 CET
OrganizerStramilano Onlus + GS Stramilano
Category (Half)World Athletics Bronze Label
Participants~50,000 (all distances)
Registrationstramilano.it

About the race#

Why Stramilano is Italy's biggest urban race, what runner fits, and how to leverage the massive family dimension.

Stramilano is Italy's biggest urban running event since 1972 — 54 consecutive editions making it the country's oldest mass running event. Organized by Stramilano Onlus (non-profit) and GS Stramilano, it gathers ~50,000 runners on a single morning across three parallel distances: the competitive half-marathon (~7,000–10,000 finishers, World Athletics Bronze Label), the 10K (~5,000–7,000 runners), and the massive family Stramilanina (~35,000–45,000 participants with costumes, kids and dogs — an urban running Carnival).

📷 Photo pending · About-the-race header

Field running through the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II with the floor mosaics and glass dome — the postcard image that defines Stramilano.

Stramilano is not Berlin Half nor Lisbon Half — it's not the fastest course nor does it chase records. It's the urban festival of Italian running: warm Milanese crowd, Saturday pasta-party, full family running together (Stramilanina is ~50% women, kids from 6 years, dogs on leash), and the only race in the world that crosses through the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II — the iconic 19th-century glass-roofed arcade, normally only for shopping pedestrians.

Is this race for you?#

  • If you want a competitive half with European-capital atmosphere: fits perfectly. Bronze Label World Athletics + 50,000 runners + unique setting.
  • If you're chasing a flat-half PB: Stramilano is flat but the historic center has cobblestone sections; it's not Lisbon Half nor Valencia Half. Plan 5 sec/km more conservative.
  • If you travel with non-running family: the ideal option. The Stramilanina (5 km family) is perfect for partner/kids to also run. After: dinner in Brera, Aperitivo in Naviglio Grande, museums.
  • If you combine Milan with tourism: March is low price and high enjoyment — Milan Fashion Week is over, hotels more affordable, fresh climate to walk the city.
  • If you've never run in Italy: Stramilano is the perfect debut. Hospitable Italians, solid organization, world-class pre/post-race food.

See other European half marathons →

The course#

Loop through Milan's heart — Castello Sforzesco, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, Corso Buenos Aires and finish at Arena Civica.

The Stramilano half-marathon course is a single 21.097 km loop through Milan's historic center and eastern districts with <30 m of total positive elevation — essentially flat. It starts at Castello Sforzesco, runs through Via Dante, enters Piazza del Duomo (km 5–7, universal photo spot), crosses the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II (THE ONLY race in the world that goes through), continues via Corso Vittorio Emanuele, Corso Venezia, Porta Venezia, Corso Buenos Aires, Loreto, returns west through residential neighborhoods (San Siro stadium view from afar), Corso Sempione, and finishes at the Arena Civica in Parco Sempione.

📷 Photo pending · Course map

Official course map published by Stramilano Onlus, with the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II passage highlighted.

The first 5 km cross the historic center from Castello → Via Dante → Piazza del Duomo. The Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II section (km 6) is THE iconic section — 200 meters running through the covered arcade with floor mosaic, the Prada / Versace / Louis Vuitton logos overhead, and the glass dome above your head.

From km 8 you exit via Corso Vittorio Emanuele and Corso Venezia toward Porta Venezia (km 10), and enter the longest single section: Corso Buenos Aires (km 10–14), Milan's straight commercial artery with shops, restaurants, and crowds. You reach Loreto (km 14) and start the return through western residential neighborhoods toward Sempione/Arena Civica.

The asphalt is uniform and smooth in most of the course except short cobblestone sections in the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II and parts of the historic center — easily runnable but force you 5 sec/km slower there.

🚨 Where the race breaks

Km 14–17, the east-to-west return through residential neighborhoods. This is where the runner who enjoyed the center euphoria (Galleria + Corso Buenos Aires) and accidentally accelerated starts to crack. The crowd density drops dramatically when you exit Loreto into the residential west; you lose the "pull" of the public and pace becomes mental. The euphoria of the first 12 km doesn't help on km 14–17.

The trick: maintain target pace through the historic center (km 5–7). DON'T accelerate due to crowd energy in the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele. Cross the half (10.5 km) at target time. Save the last third's mental fuel for the residential neighborhoods at km 14–17 — where you need your head more than your legs.

Strava data: popular segments are "Stramilano Galleria Sprint" (km 6, Galleria pass) and "Corso Venezia tempo" (km 9–11). Official GPX is published a few weeks before.

History & records#

From 1972 to 54 editions: Italy's oldest urban race, founded by GS Stramilano with the pre-running-boom idea of "running for everyone."

Stramilano was first run in 1972, making it Italy's oldest mass urban race. Founded by GS Stramilano and a group of Milanese enthusiasts with the revolutionary pre-running-boom idea of "running for everyone" — kids, elderly, families, not just athletes. The official competitive half-marathon was introduced later (1980s), and the family Stramilanina 5 km maintains the original spirit. 2026 is the 54th edition of the race.

Race data and palmarés (recent editions):

ItemValue
First edition1972
Annual edition since1972
World Athletics category (Half)Bronze Label
Current distancesHalf · 10K · Stramilanina (5K family)
Participants (all distances)~50,000
Countries represented (Half)40+
Men's course record (Half)~59:00 (consult official archive)
Women's course record (Half)~1:06:00 (consult official archive)

Recent palmarés#

Verified winners and times of recent editions are published on the official Stramilano archive and on Wikipedia: Stramilano. Course records are among the fastest for a historic-center urban race (with cobblestone sections) in Italy.

📊 Real statistics from recent editions
  • Half finisher rate: ~98 % — high thanks to flat profile and spring climate.
  • Stramilanina rate: ~99 % (family race, no time pressure).
  • Time-band distribution (Half):
    • sub-1:15 — 3 % (elite + sub-elite)
    • 1:15–1:30 — 12 %
    • 1:30–1:45 — 30 %
    • 1:45–2:00 — 28 %
    • 2:00–2:15 — 17 %
    • +2:15 — 10 %
  • Gender split (Half): ~70 % men / 30 % women. Stramilanina rises to ~50/50.
  • Weather history (last 10 editions): start 5–10 °C, finish 10–15 °C, no significant rain in 5 of 10 editions.
  • International %: ~10 % in the Half, growing thanks to Bronze Label + Italian tourism.

Registration & pricing#

December 2025 opening, no lottery, tiered pricing, and everything about the runner expo.

Stramilano 2026 entry opens in December 2025 and is managed via first-come-first-served (no lottery). Cap is ~10,000 half + ~7,000 10K + very generous capacity for Stramilanina (>40,000). Half sells out 4–6 weeks before; Stramilanina holds slots almost until the day before. Fees: half €25–50, 10K €15–30, Stramilanina €5–10. FIDAL license is included in some tiers.

Pricing structure by tier#

TierApprox openApprox closeHalf10KStramilanina
🟢 Early-birdDec 2025(cap-limited)€25–35€15–20€5
🟡 StandardFeb 2026(cap-limited)€35–45€20–25€7–10
🔴 Last placesMar 2026until close€45–55€25–30€10

Indicative pricing based on the 2025 edition. Always confirm at the official site — fees and tiers update there.

What's included in the bib#

IncludedNOT included (optional extra)
✅ Bib with timing chip❌ Official professional photo
✅ Finisher tech tee❌ Saturday pasta-party (sometimes extra)
✅ Finisher medal❌ Premium gear-check service
✅ On-course aid stations❌ Cancellation insurance
✅ Post-finish bag
✅ Stramilano Expo access

Expo and bib pickup#

Bib pickup happens at the Stramilano Expo, typically held at a pavilion near Parco Sempione / Castello Sforzesco, on Friday and Saturday before. Race-day pickup is not allowed for the Half (Stramilanina does allow late pickup). You'll need registration confirmation and a photo ID.

Getting there & parking#

Malpensa/Linate/Bergamo airports, Frecciarossa from Paris/Rome/Zurich, and why Metro Line 1 is the best Sunday option.

The most practical way to reach Milan is via Milano-Malpensa Airport (MXP) — the main international hub, 50 km from center, with Malpensa Express train ~50 min to Milano Centrale. Alternatives: Milano-Linate (LIN) 7 km from center (Bus 73 direct), or Bergamo Orio al Serio (BGY) 50 km (low-cost). By train from Europe: Frecciarossa Rome–Milan 3h, Paris–Milan 7h (TGV overnight or daytime), Zurich–Milan 3h30.

On race day, get to the start by metro or walking. Options from center:

  • Metro Line 1 (red) to Cairoli Castello — drops you AT the start at Castello Sforzesco. Operating from 06:00 CET on Sunday.
  • Walking — if you stay in Brera or near Cairoli, it's 5–15 min walk.
  • Historic tram — several lines pass through Cairoli; less fast than metro.

Forget about parking near the start — the entire Castello, Sempione and historic center area has road closures from 06:00 CET. If you come by car, park at peripheral train stations (Lambrate, Cadorna) and metro in.

Where to stay#

Three neighborhoods that work for runners (Castello/Brera, Centro Storico, Stazione Centrale) and everything that matters so the hotel doesn't sabotage your race.

For a Milan half-marathoner, staying in Castello / Brera is the optimal option — walk to the start in 5–10 min. The half drops you around 11:00–12:30 CET; head back to the hotel with cramps starting and you need shower + pasta + rest. Brera has the perfect post-race food offering (authentic trattorias, not touristy).

Best neighborhoods for runners#

Castello / Brera / Arena — the logistics option#

  • Distance to start: 0.3–1 km on foot (5–10 min). The most convenient option Sunday at 08:30.
  • Pros: unbeatable logistics. Walk to start and walk to finish. Brera is Milan's bohemian neighborhood with authentic trattorias, museums (Pinacoteca di Brera), art, and top Italian aperitivo.
  • Cons: central tourist zone, more expensive hotels. Saturday night can be loud near Brera.
HotelCat.€/night*To startRunner highlight
Hotel Principe di Savoia5*380–5201 km · 12 minHistoric luxury, premium spa
The Westin Palace Milan5*350–4801.2 km · 15 minNear Cordusio, strong AC
Hotel Cavour4*220–3200.5 km · 7 minNext to Brera, mid-high range
Hotel Manin4*180–2600.4 km · 5 minNext to Parco Indro Montanelli
Hotel Ariston3*130–1801 km · 12 minBudget, well-connected

Centro Storico / Duomo — the tourist option#

  • Distance to start: 1.5–2.5 km on foot (15–25 min) or 5 min by metro.
  • Pros: atmosphere, top restaurants (Ristorante Cracco, Galleria), museums (Duomo, Pinacoteca Ambrosiana), direct view to Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II.
HotelCat.€/night*To startRunner highlight
Park Hyatt Milan5*480–6501.8 km · 22 min (taxi 5 min)Next to Duomo, international luxury
Mandarin Oriental Milan5*520–7201.5 km · 18 minSpa with pool, interior garden
Excelsior Hotel Gallia5*320–4401.8 km · 22 min (taxi 5 min)Next to Centrale Station
Hotel Spadari al Duomo4*240–3401.5 km · 18 minBoutique opposite Duomo
TownHouse Galleria5* boutique380–5201.5 km · 18 minINSIDE the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II

Stazione Centrale / Garibaldi — the transit option#

  • Distance to start: 2.5–3 km by metro (10 min).
  • Pros: next to Milano Centrale (perfect if coming by Frecciarossa). Garibaldi is modern district with office towers and restaurants.
HotelCat.€/night*Runner highlight
NH Collection Milan President4*200–280Well-connected, mid-range
Starhotels Echo4*180–250Opposite Centrale, perfect transit
Hotel Berna4*150–210Budget, next to Centrale

*Indicative weekend-of-race rate (3rd Sunday of March) in EUR. Varies with booking lead time, growing demand since the Bronze Label recognition, and overlap with Milan Fashion Week (February) or Salone del Mobile (April).

📬 Stramilano 2026 alerts

We'll alert you when registration opens (December 2025)#

One email when registration opens and one when prices change or the cap nears closure. Zero spam.

📩 Zero spam. Unsubscribe with one click. Privacy policy here.

Weather forecast#

3rd Sunday of March in Milan: 5–15 °C, fresh spring, no significant rain in 5 of 10 recent editions.

Milan weather on the third Sunday of March averages 5 °C low at start and 15 °C high at finish with sunny or partly cloudy conditions on around 65 % of days, per Servizio Meteorologico Aeronautica data. It's fresh European northern spring — optimal weather for a half marathon. Humidity is moderate (55–70 %), wind moderate from the west (10–15 km/h), and rain occasional (5 of 10 recent editions without significant precipitation).

Plan by forecast:

  • <5 °C at start + wind >15 km/h: late winter. Throwaway layer to corral. Arm warmers for the first 5 km.
  • 5–15 °C all day: the perfect conditions for a half. Target pace without penalty.
  • 15–22 °C: very good day. Watch dehydration if going sub-1:30 — comes earlier than expected in spring.
  • Light rain: aesthetic and traction factor. Cobblestone in historic center becomes slippery — careful in Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II.

How to train — 12-week plan#

Volumes by goal, key sessions for Stramilano (tempo + intervals), and a calculator to know what time is realistic from your best 10K.

The recommended plan to prepare Stramilano is a 12-week block with peak volume in weeks 8–10 (between 35 km and 80+ km weekly depending on goal), progressive long run, tempo + 10K-pace interval sessions, and a 2-week taper. Stramilano is a flat half without hills, so key sessions are 8–12 km tempo runs at goal pace and 1,000 m intervals at 10K pace.

Peak weekly volume by goal:

GoalPeak volumeMax long runSessions/week
Sub-1:2570–80 km22 km6
Sub-1:3060–70 km20 km5
Sub-1:3555–65 km19 km5
Sub-1:4545–55 km18 km4–5
Sub-2:0035–45 km16 km4
Finish (2:15+)25–35 km14 km3–4

Equivalent times calculator#

Based on your best recent 10K, here's your realistic Stramilano time (factoring flat profile + short cobblestone sections):

Best 10KRealistic Stramilano (Half)
38:00 (10K)1:23–1:25
42:00 (10K)1:32–1:34
46:00 (10K)1:41–1:43
50:00 (10K)1:50–1:52
55:00 (10K)2:01–2:04
60:00 (10K)2:13–2:16

Pace calculator#

Once you have your realistic goal, this calculator gives you the exact splits you need to hit at each course checkpoint.
🎯 Calculadora de ritmo y splitsEscribe tu tiempo objetivo para Stramilano Half Marathon
Ritmo medio requerido4:59 min/km
Equivalente en millas8:01 min/mi
PuntoTiempo acumuladoParcial
5 km24:5324:53
10 km49:4624:53
15 km1:14:3924:53
Media (21,1 km)1:45:0030:21
Meta1:45:000:00

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

Race plan#

The km-by-km tactical plan: controlled Castello start, pace through Galleria without accelerating, and mental reserve for residential neighborhoods at km 14–17.

The Stramilano race plan starts at the gun in Castello at 09:00 CET with temperatures of 5–10 °C (very light layer or arm warmers for the first km). The first 5 km cross the historic center toward the Duomo — Italian-village euphoria. Don't let it. The pass through Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II (km 6) is for photo, not for sprint.

Pacing-by-mark with tactical notes#

Goal5K splitStramilano tactical note
Sub-1:2520:08Center 4:00/km. Galleria 4:05/km (cobblestone). Buenos Aires 4:00/km. Return 4:02/km.
Sub-1:3021:18Center 4:14/km. Galleria 4:20/km. Buenos Aires 4:14/km.
Sub-1:3522:30Center 4:30/km. Galleria 4:35/km. Conservation critical km 14–17.
Sub-1:4524:53Center 4:55/km. Galleria 5:00/km. Return 4:58/km.
Sub-2:0028:25Center 5:35/km. Galleria 5:45/km. Return 5:40/km.
Sub-2:1531:58Center 6:18/km. Enjoy the scenery, no pace pressure.
Sub-2:3035:30Run-walk OK from km 14. Galleria photo without stress.

Race morning: wake 06:30 CET, Italian espresso (non-negotiable), light breakfast at 07:00, leave hotel at 08:00 to reach corral at 08:30 (30 min before gun). Old hoodie for corral.

Aid stations: every 5 km with water + electrolyte + banana. Cadence appropriate for cool weather. Drink at every one from km 5 if going slower than 1:45.

Nutrition#

Authentic Italian carb load Saturday, mandatory pre-race espresso, and gels every 25–30 minutes.

The Stramilano nutrition strategy is the standard for a cool-weather half marathon — and takes advantage of a unique edge: you're in Italy. Saturday dinner is authentic pasta in a Brera trattoria (linguine al pesto, spaghetti alle vongole, tagliatelle al ragù). No industrial carbs needed — traditional Italian cuisine IS pure-state carb loading.

Saturday dinner: 19:30–20:30 CET (Italian dinner is late). Pasta + lean protein (chicken or fish) + water. Avoid strong cheese and red wine in volume — alcohol dehydrates.

Sunday breakfast (07:00 CET): 2 hours before gun. Double espresso + cornetto (Italian croissant) with honey + banana. Italian espresso is part of the ritual and works as pre-race in Italian-accustomed stomachs.

On course: one gel every 25–30 minutes from km 6, last at km 16. Total 3–4 gels = 150–200 g of carbs. Drink water + electrolyte at every aid station.

Post-finish recovery: banana + bar + water. And then, at 13:00, THIS is the Italian gastronomic marathon: pizza margherita in Naviglio Grande, gelato in Brera, final espresso at any bar.

Gear#

Stramilano-specific list: very light layer for Milanese March, optional cap, and tempo shoes (carbon plate not essential for the distance).

Stramilano gear is the standard cool-spring European half kit. Start temperature (~7 °C) calls for a very light throwaway layer or arm warmers; finish (~13 °C) means just a tech singlet + shorts. For 21 km, carbon plate is not essential — a tempo shoe (Endorphin Pro, Saucony Endorphin Speed, Adidas Adios) works perfectly without the super-shoe price.

Stramilano-specific gear:

  • Very light layer or arm warmers. 5–8 °C at start. Arm warmers are the most versatile — slide them down to wrists if it warms up.
  • Multifunctional buff at neck. Useful if forecast <5 °C; lower to neck if it warms.
  • Anti-chafe + nipple plasters. Standard.
  • Light gel belt. For 3–4 of your own gels.
  • Tempo shoes or light carbon plate. Endorphin Pro, Adios Pro 4, Vaporfly 4, Metaspeed Sky+. Minimum 100 km broken in in one prior long run.
  • GPS watch with km splits. The historic center has tall buildings that may affect GPS — get a watch with strong tracking.

FAQ#

10 answers to real doubts: Half vs Stramilanina, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, pasta-party, and combining with Milan tourism.
Competitive Half or family Stramilanina?

The half marathon (21.1 km) is the competitive event with World Athletics Bronze Label, ~7,000–10,000 runners. The Stramilanina (~5 km) is the massive family event with 35,000–45,000 participants, kids from 6, dogs, costumes — running Carnival atmosphere. With non-running family: partner in Stramilanina while you run the Half. Reunite at Parco Sempione after.

Does it really run through the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II?

Yes, it's the only race in the world that goes through the iconic 19th-century glass-roofed arcade at km 6. It's 200 meters with floor mosaic, the Prada / Versace / Louis Vuitton logos overhead, and the glass dome above. An official photographer will be positioned to capture the pass — the photo that will headline your Instagram.

Is it a BQ or Boston qualifier?

No — Stramilano is a half marathon, not a marathon. Boston Qualifier only applies to marathons. But Stramilano times are valid for qualifying in other significant events (Stockholm Marathon, Madrid Half RFEA tier).

Is the Saturday pasta-party worth it?

YES. Stramilano's official pasta-party (Saturday afternoon) is one of Europe's best — authentic Italian pasta served by Brera restaurants, carb-loading atmosphere, runners from 40+ countries. Costs ~€15 extra and is absolutely worth it. Reserve with registration.

How long before should I arrive in Milan?

Friday ideal, Saturday minimum. With the same European time zone (CET = Madrid/Barcelona) there's no jet lag. Friday arrival lets you: Friday expo pickup + dinner in Brera, Saturday pasta-party + Duomo walk + rest, Sunday race + festive lunch.

Does cobblestone affect time?

Slightly. Cobblestone sections in historic center (Galleria + Duomo zones) total ~500 meters of the course. They're easy to run but force you ~5 sec/km slower there. Net penalty: 30–60 seconds on total time vs. a 100% smooth-asphalt half.

Can I pick up the bib on race day?

Half: no. Pickup is at the expo on Friday and Saturday before. Stramilanina does allow late pickup, even Saturday afternoon / Sunday early morning (consult official communication). You need ID/passport and registration confirmation.

Combine Stramilano with Milan tourism?

Perfect. March is low price + high enjoyment. Ideal plan: Friday flight, Saturday morning Duomo + Galleria + Pinacoteca di Brera, Saturday afternoon expo + pasta-party, Sunday race + post-finish pizza/gelato, Monday Lake Como (40 min by train) or Salone del Mobile early start, Tuesday return. Minimum 3 nights.

What shoes are best for Stramilano?

For sub-1:30, a light carbon plate (Vaporfly 4, Adios Pro 4, Metaspeed Sky+). For sub-1:45, a tempo shoe (Endorphin Pro, Endorphin Speed) is enough and saves money vs. super-shoes. Minimum 100 km broken in in one prior long run. Note: very delicate Pebax soles can be damaged by cobblestone — opt for models with protected edges.

How does Stramilano compare to Lisbon Half / Madrid Half?

Stramilano is urban atmosphere + Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II + cobblestone (slow). Lisbon Half is Bridge Crossing + world-record speed (the fastest). Madrid Half is Spanish atmosphere + gentle hills + classic urban zone. Stramilano is chosen for unique setting + family dimension + Italian culture, not for PB.


Comparison with other European half marathons#

How Stramilano stacks up against the other big urban European halves — so you know exactly when to pick which.

Stramilano is Italy's biggest urban race with a unique setting. This table compares Stramilano with its European peers:

RaceMonthElevationBest forCategory
Stramilano (this guide)March<30 m + cobblestoneGalleria Vittorio Emanuele II + familyBronze Label
Lisbon Half (EDP)March<50 m + bridge divePure PB, world recordGold Label
Madrid Half (Rock'n'Roll)April150–200 mAtmosphere, pre-marathon testBronze Label
Berlin HalfApril<30 mPure PB, fast courseGold Label
Roma-Ostia HalfMarch<30 mPoint-to-point fastSilver Label
Cracovia HalfOctober<30 mPoland, accessible PBBronze Label

See European half marathons →


Did this guide help? If you're running Stramilano 2026, save the event on SportPlan to get registration alerts, pasta-party info, and later log your Italian Bronze Label.

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Nesta páxina

  • Key facts
  • About the race
  • The course
  • History & records
  • Registration & pricing
  • Getting there & parking
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Ramon Curto· Founder & editor

Fundador de SportPlan. Lleva una década corriendo carreras populares en España. Autor de las guías de Madrid, Valencia y Zegama-Aizkorri en SportPlan.