
Complete Guide to the Valencia Marathon Trinidad Alfonso Zurich 2027 — Flat Course, World Records, Logistics and How to Train for It
Complete Guide to the Valencia Marathon 2027

Complete Guide to the Valencia Marathon 2027
On December 5, 2027 Valencia hosts the fastest marathon in Spain and one of the five fastest in the world. Course record at 2:01:48 (Sisay Lemma, 2023), an essentially flat profile (~12 m of elevation gain), sea level, 30,000 runners, World Athletics Platinum Label and an iconic finish across the lake of the City of Arts and Sciences (Ciudad de las Artes y las Ciencias). This guide covers what the official site never quite explains: why Valencia is the perfect track for your PB, what the route really looks like, where the race is decided (yes, in Valencia too) and how to put your race-weekend logistics together in the Running City.
| Item | Info |
|---|---|
| Date | December 5, 2027 |
| Distance | 42.195 km (marathon) |
| Elevation gain | ~12 m (flat profile) |
| City | Valencia (sea level) |
| Start | Avinguda d'Antoni Ferrandis (City of Arts) |
| Finish | City of Arts and Sciences lake (Hemisférico walkway) |
| Start time | ~8:30 am (confirm via official communication) |
| Organizer | SD Correcaminos / Trinidad Alfonso Foundation |
| Category | World Athletics Platinum Label |
| Entry | valenciaciudaddelrunning.com |
The Valencia Marathon Trinidad Alfonso Zurich is the fastest marathon in Spain and one of the fastest in the world. The organization (SD Correcaminos + Trinidad Alfonso Foundation, with Zurich as title sponsor since the 2026 edition) has spent fifteen years building a record-setting track with a flat course at sea level, an elite field chasing the world record every December, ~30,000 runners in the marathon, 80+ countries represented and an iconic finish across the lake of the City of Arts and Sciences. It holds the Platinum Label from World Athletics — the highest tier on the international calendar.
Women's elite field crossing the Hemisférico walkway toward the finish — the postcard that defines the Valencia Marathon.
Valencia is the opposite of Madrid. If Madrid is atmosphere, hills and experience, Valencia is pure track: sea level, flat profile, ideal temperature, moderate wind, smooth asphalt. What you give up in scenery you gain on the clock: the average amateur knocks 3–6 minutes off their previous PB when jumping from a rolling marathon (Madrid, Bilbao, San Sebastián) to Valencia. For elite runners it's the track where Kelvin Kiptum ran 2:01:53 in 2022 and Sisay Lemma set the record at 2:01:48 in 2023 — the second and third fastest times in history at that point.
The Valencia Marathon course is a single loop of 42.195 km through the center and seafront neighborhoods of Valencia with ~12 m of total elevation gain — essentially flat. It starts next to the City of Arts and Sciences (Avinguda d'Antoni Ferrandis), runs through the former Turia riverbed (cauce del Turia) turned park, the Plaza del Ayuntamiento, the Cathedral, the Malvarrosa beachfront promenade, returns to the center and finishes with the iconic Hemisférico walkway over the City of Arts lake.
Official 3D map of the full Valencia Marathon course (published by the organizer), with the route through the Turia riverbed park, the historic center and the seafront stretch clearly visible.
The first kilometers drop gently north along the Paseo de la Alameda and the former Turia riverbed (cauce del Turia) — a 9 km linear park that is Valencia's green spine. The course passes through Plaza del Ayuntamiento (around km 12), runs the historic center next to the Cathedral and the Lonja de la Seda, and heads out to the seafront promenade and Malvarrosa beach (km 22–28) — a section with crowds, festive atmosphere and Mediterranean Sea views. The final third returns to the center via the north and enters the City of Arts from the Oceanogràfic side. The finish crosses the pedestrian Hemisférico walkway over the lake's water surface — one of the most photographed finish lines in the running world.
The asphalt is uniform and smooth along almost the entire course (with short stretches of fine cobblestones in the historic center, easy to run). Aid stations with water and isotonic drink are roughly every 5 km, with solid fueling stops (gels, fruit, banana) at km 21.1 and km 33. Crowd density is highest at the Turia riverbed, Plaza del Ayuntamiento, Malvarrosa and finish — thinner in the transition stretches between neighborhoods.
The elevation is negligible for a marathon — barely 12 m of total positive gain, spread across imperceptible undulations. There are no structural hills. The only functional "rise" is the overpasses across the Turia riverbed (1–2 meters tall, ridiculous), and the entry/exits to the bridges in the center. The factor that does matter is wind: Valencia can have a sea breeze on the Malvarrosa stretch, but it rarely exceeds 15–20 km/h.
🚨 Where the race is decided (yes, here too)
Course data for Strava / Garmin: the organizer publishes the official GPX a few weeks before the race on its website. Popular Strava segments to scout are "Cauce Turia maratón Valencia" (the spine of the course) and "Pasarela Hemisférico final" (the last km).
The Valencia Marathon has been raced since 1981, making it one of the five oldest international marathons in Spain (along with Madrid, Barcelona, San Sebastián and Sevilla). In its early decades it was a modest race of a few thousand runners. The transformation came around 2014 with the entry of the Trinidad Alfonso Foundation as the lead driver: investment in the elite field, course tweaks to make it even faster, World Athletics certification and sustained growth to the 30,000 entrants the race has hit since 2018. In 2026 Zurich Insurance stepped in as title sponsor, replacing the brief 2024 sponsor EDP.
Elite runners crossing the Hemisférico walkway toward the finish — the iconic image anchoring the roll-of-honor section.
Race and roll-of-honor data (recent editions):
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| First Valencia marathon edition | 1981 |
| Editions raced | 47 (as of 2026) |
| World Athletics category | Platinum Label |
| Current distances | Marathon · 10K |
| Marathon participants (recent editions) | ~30,000 |
| Countries represented | 80+ |
| Men's course record | 2:01:48 (Sisay Lemma, ETH, 2023) |
| Women's course record | 2:14:00 (Joyciline Jepkosgei, KEN, 2025) |
Verified winners and times of the 5 most recent editions:
| Year | 🥇 Men | Country | Time | 🥇 Women | Country | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | John Korir | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:02:25 | Joyciline Jepkosgei | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:14:00 |
| 2024 | Sabastian Sawe | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:02:05 | Alemu Megertu | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:16:49 |
| 2023 | Sisay Lemma | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:01:48 | Worknesh Degefa | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:15:51 |
| 2022 | Kelvin Kiptum | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:01:53 | Amane Beriso | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:14:58 |
| 2021 | Lawrence Cherono | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:05:11 | Nancy Jelagat | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:19:30 |
Data verified against the public archive of Valencia Marathon (Wikipedia EN). Bold times = current course record.
Entry for the Valencia Marathon 2027 opens in January–February 2027 and typically sells out within hours (the 2024 edition closed in under 4 hours; 2025 took 6 days with an expanded cap). The organizer publishes an early alert with the exact date and time — schedule it. The RFEA federation license costs +€5 on top of the bib.
Aerial view of the massive start corral in front of the Oceanogràfic — ideal to reinforce the "30,000 runners, slots gone in hours" message.
Reference for the 2026 edition close:
Assuming there are always last-minute bibs in Valencia is a mistake: from March onwards, the only routes are bib transfer through the official Marketplace or waiting for charity bibs sold by partner non-profits (with a 30–50% surcharge).
Valencia Marathon uses a tiered pricing system — the bib price rises every time a tier closes. Slots are split into limited quotas, so the first tier disappears in hours: if you can afford it and you know you're running, set the alarm.
| Tier | Approx. open | Approx. close | Marathon | 10K |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🟢 Early-bird | January 2027 | (limited quota) | €70–80 | €22–25 |
| 🟡 Standard | February 2027 | (limited quota) | €90–110 | €28–32 |
| 🔴 Last slots / charity | March 2027 | until close | €120–150 | €35–40 |
Indicative prices based on the 2026 edition structure. Always confirm on the official entry site — amounts and tiers are updated there.
| Included in price | NOT included (optional extra) |
|---|---|
| ✅ Bib with timing chip | ❌ RFEA federation license (+€5) |
| ✅ Finisher technical T-shirt | ❌ Official professional photo (~€15–20) |
| ✅ Finisher medal with ribbon | ❌ Saturday pasta party (sometimes extra) |
| ✅ On-course aid stations | ❌ Premium baggage drop service |
| ✅ Post-finish bag (fruit, isotonic, bars) | ❌ Cancellation insurance |
| ✅ Digital diploma with certified time | ❌ Organized expo trip |
| ✅ Expo + weekend entertainment access |
Things to factor in beyond the bib price:
Family and runners at the runner expo (Feria Valencia), with stands or the bib pickup desk visible.
Bib pickup happens at the Runner Expo, normally held the three days before the race (Thursday, Friday and Saturday) at Feria Valencia or the City of Arts exhibition center. No bibs are issued on race day: you must pick yours up in person before the expo closes on Saturday, historically around 21:00.
You'll need:
Family and friends can pick up on your behalf with a signed authorization and a copy of your ID. The race kit usually includes the finisher technical T-shirt, the bib with chip, a bag tag and the course map. Finisher medals are handed out in the post-finish zone after crossing the line.
The most practical way to reach Valencia from outside is the AVE high-speed train from Madrid (1h45) or a flight to Valencia Airport (8 km from the center), with a direct Metrovalencia connection (lines 3 and 5) to Xàtiva or Alameda stations — both under 15 minutes' walk from the center. Manises Airport has low-cost flights from across Europe, and the AVE links Valencia with Madrid, Sevilla and Barcelona in 1h45–3h depending on destination.
Joaquín Sorolla AVE station or a recognizable central metro entrance (Xàtiva, Alameda) — visual reference for first-time visitors.
On race day, take the metro to the start. The Alameda (lines 3 and 9) and Ayora (line 6) stations leave you 8–15 minutes' walk from the start area at the City of Arts. The metro starts running around 05:30, and in some recent editions it has been free for runners with bibs — confirm via official communication.
For the expo, the closest stations to Feria Valencia are Benimàmet (line 2) or a direct bus from Alameda. From the center the metro ride is about 25 minutes door to door.
If you're driving, park in the south of the city (areas: Marítim-Vivers, Camí del Mar) and take the metro in. Forget about parking near the start — the City of Arts area is closed off from early Sunday morning and public car parks fill up by 06:30. The CV-30 / V-21 motorway is the natural northern access; the A-3 / A-7 from Madrid or Barcelona.
For a marathon runner in Valencia, staying within a 20-minute walk of the start isn't a luxury: it's strategy. The marathon spits you out at the finish around 11:30–13:30 depending on your goal — you walk back to the hotel sweaty, hungry, with cramps creeping in. The difference between sleeping next to the City of Arts (15-min walk to the corral on Sunday at 7:30) and a hotel in the center 35 minutes away can cost you 1–2 minutes on the clock and double that in mental stress.
Aerial of the City of Arts and Sciences or a wide map of the Alameda–City of Arts axis showing hotel density and proximity to the start.
| Hotel | Cat. | €/night* | To start | Runner highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hotel Ilunion Aqua 4 | 4* | €110–150 | 800 m · 10 min | Next to the City of Arts, strong A/C |
| Eurostars Rey Don Jaime | 4* | €130–180 | 1.2 km · 15 min | Bathtub, frequent late check-out |
| Sercotel Sorolla Palace | 4* | €100–140 | 1.5 km · 18 min | Near Palau de la Música, mid-range |
| Hotel Las Arenas Balneario Resort | 5* | €220–340 | 1.5 km · 18 min (taxi 5 min) | Spa and heated pools for recovery |
| The Ayre Hotel Astoria Palace | 4* | €130–180 | 1.8 km · 22 min | Between Center and City of Arts |
| Hotel | Cat. | €/night* | To start | Runner highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SH Valencia Palace | 5* | €180–240 | 2.5 km · 30 min (taxi 8 min) | Near Alameda, top A/C |
| Vincci Mercat | 4* | €120–160 | 2.8 km · 35 min (taxi 8 min) | Historic Center, next to the Mercado Central |
| Hotel Caro | 5* boutique | €240–360 | 2.0 km · 25 min (taxi 6 min) | Romantic boutique, bathtub, inner garden |
| Catalonia Excelsior | 4* | €110–150 | 2.3 km · 28 min (taxi 7 min) | Next to City Hall, solid mid-range |
| The Westin Valencia | 5* | €220–320 | 2.0 km · 25 min (taxi 6 min) | Historic luxury, 24h gym, spa |
| Hotel | Cat. | €/night* | To start | Runner highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hotel Las Arenas Balneario | 5* | €220–340 | 4.0 km · taxi 12 min | Spa with heated pool for recovery |
| Hotel Neptuno | 4* | €130–180 | 3.5 km · taxi 10 min | Beachfront, sea views |
| Hotel Boutique Balandret | 4* boutique | €150–200 | 3.2 km · taxi 9 min | Small boutique, local vibe |
| Apartamentos Malvarrosa | Apt | €90–130 | 3.5 km · taxi 10 min | In-unit kitchen for custom early breakfasts |
*Indicative rate for the race weekend (first Sunday of December). Varies by booking lead time, availability and current promotions.
The weather in Valencia on the first Sunday of December averages 8 °C low at the start and 18 °C high with sunny conditions on around 75% of days, per historical data from AEMET. Rain is uncommon (one day with light precipitation every 6 editions), wind moderate (10–15 km/h, mostly easterly sea breeze) and humidity relatively low (55–70%). It's the best weather window in the Spanish marathon calendar — and one of the best in the world.
Finishers from a recent edition with their medals on a sunny December day — the standard pattern of Valencia Marathon weekend.
The weather variable is, ironically, a blessing. While Madrid can hit you with 25 °C in April or Barcelona with 22 °C in March, Valencia gives you the ideal thermal range for a marathon: cold (not freezing) start temperature climbing progressively without crossing into heat stress. Your body enters the optimal aerobic zone between 12–16 °C, and that's exactly what you'll have between km 5 and the finish.
Plan by forecast:
Wind can be a factor on the seafront promenade (km 22–28) — if it blows from the east (most common in December) it'll be a crosswind or slight headwind. If it blows from the west, it pushes you on the Malvarrosa stretch but hits you in the face on the way back to the center. The historical wind average is 10–14 km/h, perfectly manageable.
The recommended plan to prepare for the Valencia Marathon is a 16-week block with peak volume in weeks 11–13 (between 50 km and 130+ km per week depending on goal), one long run a week and a three-week taper. The key for Valencia: train sustained quality paces (tempo runs, long marathon-pace runs, 10K-pace intervals), because the track is unforgiving with the runner who shows up unable to lock in a single pace for 42 km.
Runner training at marathon pace on a track or in the Turia riverbed park — aspirational image anchoring the 16-week plan.
Approach Valencia as a marathon where the deciding factor is endurance at target pace, not the elevation. Pick your goal and follow the table — these are peak volumes (weeks 11–13), not full-cycle averages.
| Goal | Average pace | Peak weekly vol. | Peak long run |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5h00 | 7:06 min/km | 35–45 km | 25–28 km |
| 4h30 | 6:24 min/km | 45–55 km | 28–30 km |
| 4h00 | 5:41 min/km | 55–70 km | 30–32 km |
| 3h30 | 4:58 min/km | 70–85 km | 32–35 km |
| 3h00 | 4:16 min/km | 90–110 km | 32–36 km |
| ≤2h45 | 3:54 min/km | 110–130+ km | 32–38 km |
How to read the table and build the cycle:
Three sessions worth gold for Valencia:
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 two last long runs (weeks 11 and 12) are what fill the cup.
Not sure what time goal is realistic for Valencia? Cross your most recent half-marathon best with the "Valencia marathon" factor (which rewards the flat profile + sea level):
| Your recent half best | Flat equivalent (marathon) | Realistic Valencia |
|---|---|---|
| 1:20 | sub-2:50 flat | 2:48–2:53 |
| 1:25 | sub-3:00 flat | 2:58–3:03 |
| 1:35 | sub-3:20 flat | 3:18–3:25 |
| 1:45 | sub-3:42 flat | 3:40–3:48 |
| 1:55 | sub-4:05 flat | 4:00–4:10 |
| 2:05 | sub-4:25 flat | 4:20–4:30 |
| 2:15 | sub-4:48 flat | 4:42–4:55 |
How to read it: the "flat" column is the unadjusted Riegel conversion (your half × ~2.11). Valencia rewards an extra 1–2% from the combo of flat track + sea level + massive organization — that gives you the realistic range. If you've done two long runs with target-pace blocks and your weekly load was on point, aim for the low end. If the last hour usually breaks you, the high end.
Once you have your target time, this calculator gives you the required average pace (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:
| Punto | Tiempo acumulado | Parcial |
|---|---|---|
| 5 km | 21:20 | 21:20 |
| 10 km | 42:40 | 21:20 |
| 15 km | 1:03:59 | 21:20 |
| Media (21,1 km) | 1:30:00 | 26:01 |
| 30 km | 2:07:59 | 37:59 |
| Meta | 3:00:00 | 52:01 |
Splits asumen ritmo constante. En carreras con desnivel real (Valencia Marathon) — banca 5–8 s/km en bajadas y pierde el mismo margen en subidas; el ritmo medio se mantiene.
The calculator above gives you the pace. But a real race plan answers more questions: what strategy do I start with? How many gels do I carry? When does the caffeine go in? What do I do if I'm 30 seconds over goal at km 21?
Set 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 it as a PDF to take with you on race day.
PDF A4, optimizado para imprimir y llevar el día de carrera.
You're at the corral. You did the 16-week plan. What separates good training from a good time is what you do over the next 3–5 hours. In Valencia more than any other Spanish marathon, what you decide in the first 5 km sets up the rest.
The Valencia race plan should mix patience in km 1–8 (don't get carried away by the start party and the 30,000 runners), single-pace discipline in km 8–32 (this is where the PB is built), and mental endurance in km 32–42 (the Hemisférico walkway is approaching, but the last hour weighs). Every target time (sub-2:30 to finish) has a specific splits pattern.
| Goal | Target splits | Valencia-specific tactical note |
|---|---|---|
| sub-2:30 | 3:33 min/km | 17:46 every 5K. Use the elite group. Gels every 5 km from km 5. Zero margin for tactical errors. |
| sub-2:45 | 3:54 min/km | Cross the half at 1:22:30. Single pace, no swings >3 s/km. The km 12 walkway is the first mental test. |
| sub-3:00 | 4:16 min/km | Cross the half at 1:30:00. The classic mistake is going out at 4:08 the first 10 km. Hold 4:18 to km 8. |
| sub-3:30 | 4:58 min/km | Cross the half at 1:45:00. Drink at every aid station from km 5. The Malvarrosa (km 22–28) has crowds — don't speed up on emotion. |
| sub-4:00 | 5:41 min/km | Even splits, 28:25 every 5K. Walk 15 s through every aid station. The track is flat — use the gift, don't spend it in the first 10 km. |
| sub-4:30 | 6:24 min/km | Walk-run strategy from km 25 if needed. The pack in the first 5K is huge — float with it but don't get tangled up. |
| sub-5:00 | 7:06 min/km | Walk-run from km 1: 8 run / 1 walk. Gives you margin to enjoy the Hemisférico walkway. |
| Finish | 7:00–7:30 | No watch. Enjoy the Turia riverbed, Plaza del Ayuntamiento, Malvarrosa and the most photographed finish in world running. |
This is where the marathon is decided, even on a flat track. Three anchors:
The nutrition strategy for Valencia pivots on 60–100 g of carbs per hour depending on goal, with 5–8 gels spaced every 25–30 minutes from km 5 (earlier than in Madrid because the pace is higher). Carb loading the 3 days prior should be 8–10 g/kg/day, and Saturday dinner light and familiar (Valencian paella or pasta — no chorizo, no spice). Extra sodium only if the forecast goes above 18 °C or the wind picks up.
Volunteer at a Valencia Marathon aid station handing out isotonic drink.
Saturday dinner is light, familiar and early (eat before 21:00). Pasta or white rice with grilled chicken or fish, bread, fruit. If you're tempted to try the authentic Valencian paella, do it on Friday — not the night before. Zero experiments.
Race-morning breakfast depends on whether you wake up hungry. The safe play: toast with honey/jam + banana + coffee (if you usually have it). 80–100 g of carbs, eaten 2:30–3 hours before the gun. If your stomach closes from nerves, swap for a sports drink with 80 g of carbs.
What the organizer puts on the course:
Carb plan by goal:
| Goal | Carbs / hour | Gels to carry | When to take them |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5h00 | 30–45 g/h | 3–4 gels | km 8, km 18, km 28, km 36 |
| 4h00 | 45–60 g/h | 5 gels | km 8, km 16, km 22, km 30, km 36 |
| 3h30 | 60–75 g/h | 6 gels | km 6, km 12, km 18, km 24, km 30, km 36 |
| 3h00 | 75–90 g/h | 7 gels + flask | km 5, every 5 km to km 35 |
| ≤2h45 | 90–100 g/h | 8 gels + flask | km 4, every 4–5 km |
Three mistakes seen every year at the Valencia Marathon:
Hydration and sodium by forecast:
Post-finish recovery — the first hour matters more than after a half:
The best shoes for the Valencia Marathon are light race carbon plates for sub-3:00 (Vaporfly, Adios Pro Evo, Metaspeed Sky), protective carbon plates for 3:00–3:45 (Vaporfly 4, Adios Pro 4), plate or super-trainer between 3:45–4:00 (Endorphin Speed, Mach X), and a protective daily trainer for over 4:00. The critical thing isn't the brand but that they're already broken in and don't have more than 250–350 km on them. Valencia is the perfect track to get the most out of a carbon plate — more than any other domestic marathon.
Close-up of race shoes at the Valencia Marathon start — several brands visible.
Unlike Madrid, in Valencia speed weighs as much as muscular endurance. The track is flat, the pace is high, and the light carbon plate offers its maximum return in these conditions. For non-elite runners with an aggressive time goal, a "race" plate (sub 200 g) can be worth 30–60 seconds over a protective one. But if you trained in a protective shoe, don't swap to a lighter "for the marathon" — your quads need to be used to it.
Recommendations by goal:
| Goal | Category | Common models |
|---|---|---|
| ≤2h45 | Light "race" carbon plate | Nike Alphafly 3 · adidas Adios Pro Evo · ASICS Metaspeed Sky · Saucony Endorphin Elite |
| 2h45–3h30 | Protective carbon plate | Nike Vaporfly 4 · adidas Adios Pro 4 · ASICS Metaspeed Sky · Saucony Endorphin Pro |
| 3h30–4h00 | Carbon plate or super-trainer | Saucony Endorphin Speed · Hoka Mach X · Puma Deviate Nitro Elite · ASICS Magic Speed |
| 4h00+ | Protective daily trainer | Nike Pegasus · ASICS Cumulus / Nimbus · Brooks Ghost · Hoka Clifton |
Check this before leaving home:
The combination of flat profile (~12 m total elevation), sea level, smooth asphalt, ideal December temperature (8–18 °C), moderate wind and a Platinum Label organization makes Valencia, alongside Berlin, one of the two non-major tracks in the world where the elite chases the world record. For an amateur runner that translates to 3–6 minutes of advantage over your time on a rolling marathon (Madrid, San Sebastián, Bilbao). The men's course record stands at 2:01:48 (Sisay Lemma, 2023).
Recent editions close the marathon at 6 hours from the last corral, which equals about 8:30 min/km. Walking is allowed; the course has staggered partial closures (streets reopen to traffic after the last runner clears each zone). If you're going for a finish-without-time-limit, ask the organizer beforehand — some editions allow running up to 7 h on the sidewalk.
No. Pickup is restricted to the runner expo on Thursday, Friday and Saturday at Feria Valencia. Bibs are not handed out on race day under any circumstances, so plan your arrival to allow at least one expo visit.
There's a baggage drop at the start, next to the City of Arts. 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 post-finish zone after the race (not in the same place you dropped it — the finish is on the Hemisférico walkway, not the start). There are staff but ID is not checked, so don't carry valuables.
Yes, headphones are allowed at the Valencia Marathon. That said, the on-course atmosphere is one of the draws — bands, crowds at the Turia riverbed and Malvarrosa, finish-line PA — so many runners prefer to run without headphones. The lonelier section (the transition between Malvarrosa and the north of the city, km 28–32) does benefit from music if it helps you stay focused.
Yes, if you take pace discipline seriously. The flat profile and massive organization help debutants. But the danger is exactly that: the track feels "too easy" the first 10 km, and many debutants crack at km 30. If it's your first marathon in Valencia, be especially conservative with your goal pace and consider sub-4h or finishing as your goal, not an ambitious PB.
Valencia is a relatively low-wind city — the historical average for the first Sunday of December is 10–14 km/h. The Malvarrosa stretch (km 22–28) is the most exposed and usually has an easterly sea breeze (crosswind or slight headwind depending on course orientation). If the forecast goes above 20 km/h, slow your target pace 3–5 seconds per km in that stretch and save energy. Good news: after Malvarrosa the course slips between buildings and the wind disappears.
For sub-3:00, a light "race" carbon plate (Vaporfly 4, Alphafly 3, Metaspeed Sky, Adios Pro Evo). For 3:00–3:45, a protective plate (Vaporfly, Adios Pro, Metaspeed). For 3:45–4:00, a plate or super-trainer (Endorphin Speed, Mach X). For over 4:00, a protective daily trainer. Valencia is the best track on the Spanish calendar for a carbon plate — cash in the gift. Most important: that they're broken in and don't exceed 250–350 km.
Valencia is the fastest — record 2:01:48, flat profile, sea level. If you want a pure PB, it's the obvious pick in Spain. Madrid is the "experience" marathon — atmosphere, hills, altitude — more festive but 5–10 minutes slower. Sevilla is the other fast option (February, flat), a bit more intimate than Valencia, without Platinum Label status but with a record at 2:04. The key question: do you want time or experience? Valencia = time. Madrid = experience. Sevilla = the winter balance.
Yes, especially from Europe. Valencia has an airport 8 km from the center with low-cost flights from across Europe, fast AVE from Madrid, mid-to-upscale hotels at very competitive prices compared to London Marathon or Berlin, world-class food (Valencian paella, tapas trail, agua de Valencia) and the City of Arts as a calling card. For British, German or French runners, Valencia offers better value than any other European marathon in its category.
Valencia Marathon is the best fast marathon in Spain and one of the five fastest in the world, alongside Berlin, Chicago, London and Tokyo. If you're after a pure PB, Valencia is the local pick; for a World Marathon Major, the big internationals are the reference.
All are marathon (42.195 km), so the choice depends on month, elevation, temperature and prestige:
| Race | Month | Elevation | Best for | Course record |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Valencia Marathon (this guide) | December | ~12 m | Pure PB · national record | 2:01:48 |
| Berlin Marathon | September | ~50 m | International PB · world record | 2:01:09 |
| Chicago Marathon | October | ~30 m | PB · WMM | 2:00:35 |
| London Marathon | April | ~50 m | WMM atmosphere | 2:01:25 |
| EDP Madrid | April | ~600 m | Atmosphere · experience | 2:08:18 |
| Zurich Maratón Sevilla | February | <30 m | Winter PB | 2:04:43 |
Did this guide help? If you're running Valencia 2027, save the event in SportPlan to get entry-window alerts, expo reminders and, afterwards, log your result.
Seguir planificando
Usa SportPlan para comparar datas, gardar eventos e construír unha tempada adaptada aos teus fins de semana.