
TCS Amsterdam Marathon 2026 Complete Guide — Flat Course, Olympic Stadium Finish and How to Train For It
TCS Amsterdam Marathon 2026 Complete Guide
TCS Amsterdam Marathon 2026 Complete Guide
By · Updated 2026-05-06

TCS Amsterdam Marathon 2026 Complete Guide
By · Updated 2026-05-06
On Sunday, October 18, 2026 Amsterdam hosts the 51st edition of its marathon — Europe's PB-friendly marathon that few know about outside the hardcore circuit. A record-eligible flat course (~10 m total elevation gain), start and finish inside the Olympisch Stadion built for the 1928 Olympics, and a clean route through Vondelpark and the Amstel river out-and-back that produces the steadiest splits on the calendar. This guide covers what Le Champion's official site doesn't quite spell out: why the absolute flat can fool you and break your race at km 30–35, how to get in before it sells out in February, where to stay 5 minutes from the Olympisch Stadion, and how to build the plan to finish on the 1928 Olympic track.
| Data | Information |
|---|---|
| Date | Sunday, October 18, 2026 |
| Distance | 42.195 km (marathon) |
| Elevation gain | ~10 m (absolute flat) |
| City | Amsterdam (≈2 m above sea level) |
| Start and finish | Olympisch Stadion (Amsterdam Zuid) |
| Start time | ~09:30 (elite + waves every 5 minutes) |
| Organizer | Le Champion · TCS (Tata Consultancy Services) |
| Registration | tcsamsterdammarathon.nl |
The TCS Amsterdam Marathon is the fastest international marathon in the Netherlands and one of the five flattest courses in Europe to set a personal best. Organized by Le Champion since 1975, with TCS (Tata Consultancy Services) as title sponsor, it draws ~16,000 marathon finishers and a combined ~50,000 runners across the half marathon (~18,000) and the 8K (~12,000) over the same weekend. Start and finish are inside the Olympisch Stadion, the same venue where the Olympic flame burned in 1928 — finishing the marathon by running on the 1928 Olympic track is one of the most symbolic experiences on the European calendar.
Pack leaving the Olympisch Stadion in the opening minutes of the race, with the 1928 Olympic torch tower in the background — the postcard that defines the Amsterdam race.
Unlike Berlin (massive queue), London (impossible lottery) or Valencia (no-longer-low-cost pricing), Amsterdam combines an absolute flat course (~10 m total elevation gain, net 0 m profile because you start and finish at the same point), cool mid-October weather (8–15 °C, optimal for marathon), and an €85–110 bib price that makes it the best price-quality for PB in Europe. The catch: the crowd support is more compact than at a World Marathon Major. The 12 km of the Amstel out-and-back run through quiet rural country — don't expect Gran Vía closed off with the public roaring the entire way.
The TCS Amsterdam Marathon course is a single 42.195 km loop with ~10 m total elevation gain — the flattest course on the European calendar alongside Berlin and Valencia. It starts at the Olympisch Stadion in Amsterdam Zuid, crosses Vondelpark, heads south along the Amstel river avenue to Ouderkerk aan de Amstel, returns along the opposite bank of the Amstel, and finishes inside the Olympisch Stadion with the final 400 m on the 1928 Olympic track.
Official course map of the TCS Amsterdam Marathon (published by Le Champion), with the loop starting and finishing at the Olympisch Stadion and the Amstel out-and-back clearly visible.
The course leaves north of the Olympisch Stadion, crosses the Amsterdam Zuid neighborhood, enters Vondelpark around km 5 (a section with crowds and trees, festive atmosphere) and exits the park toward the Amstel canal. Around km 11 the long out-and-back along the Amstel river begins — the section that defines the race: you run 12 km southeast to the picturesque village of Ouderkerk aan de Amstel around km 23, where the organization sets up the largest solid aid station of the race, and return along the opposite bank of the river heading north toward Amsterdam.
Asphalt is the dominant surface, in excellent condition throughout (the Netherlands invests heavily in cycle paths and secondary roads). Aid stations with water, isotonic drink and banana are roughly every 5 km, with solid aid stations (gels, fruit, sponges) at km 21.1, km 25 (Ouderkerk) and km 35. There are also 3 "Stroopwafel" stations — the typical Dutch caramel wafer — spread across the course from km 30. Crowd density is high in Vondelpark, at the canal junction at km 8–10 and in the final 3 km back to the stadium. It's thinned out during the Amstel out-and-back (km 13–35 roughly) — you'll be running 20+ km in semi-rural country with scattered crowd support.
Forget the "easy flat" myth. Amsterdam is genuinely flat (~10 m total elevation, net 0 m profile) — but the absolute flat can fool you. The smooth feel of the first 20 km invites you to ease up the pace "because it feels easy", and many runners go out too hard in the first third without realizing it. When the return along the Amstel from km 30–35 arrives, the easy glycogen runs out, the legs ask for a tempo change, and the runner who went out 10–15 seconds per km above target pays the full price in the last 7–10 km.
🚨 Where the race breaks
Course data for Strava / Garmin: Le Champion publishes the official GPX on the website 4–6 weeks before the race. To recon the Amstel out-and-back midweek, search Strava for the "Amstel River Out-and-Back" segment or the local routes from AAC Amsterdam and Phanos (the city's two big clubs).
The Amsterdam Marathon has been raced since 1975, when the first edition was held to coincide with the city's 700th anniversary celebrations. The Olympisch Stadion that hosts start and finish is the same venue built for the 1928 Olympic Games, the first Games in which the Olympic flame burned continuously throughout the competition. Running the Amsterdam Marathon and entering the stadium through the north tunnel for the final 400 m on the Olympic track is one of the most symbolic finishes on the European calendar: you literally end in the same venue where Boughera El Ouafi won Olympic gold in the 1928 marathon in 2:32:57.
Winner of the most recent edition crossing the finish line inside the Olympisch Stadion, with the 1928 Olympic torch tower in the background — iconic image to anchor the roll of honor section.
Roll of honor and race data (recent editions):
| Data | Value |
|---|---|
| First edition | 1975 |
| Editions held | 50 (through 2025) |
| Current distances | Marathon · Half marathon · 8K · Mini Marathon (youth) |
| Marathon finishers (recent editions) | ~16,000 |
| Combined weekend total | ~50,000 runners |
| Countries represented | 100+ |
| Men's elite course record | 2:03:31 (Geoffrey Toroitich Kipchumba, KEN, 2025) |
| Women's elite course record | 2:16:52 (Yalemzerf Yehualaw, ETH, 2024) |
Verified winners and times of the 5 most recent editions:
| Year | 🥇 Men | Country | Time | 🥇 Women | Country | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | Geoffrey Toroitich Kipchumba | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:03:31 | Aynalem Desta | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:17:38 |
| 2024 | Tsegaye Getachew | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:05:38 | Yalemzerf Yehualaw | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:16:52 |
| 2023 | Joshua Belet | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:04:18 | Meseret Belete | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:18:21 |
| 2022 | Tsegaye Getachew | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:04:49 | Almaz Ayana | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:17:20 |
| 2021 | Tamirat Tola | 🇪🇹 ETH | 2:03:39 | Angela Tanui | 🇰🇪 KEN | 2:17:57 |
Data verified against the public archive of Amsterdam Marathon (Wikipedia EN). The current course record is held by Toroitich Kipchumba with 2:03:31 (2025); on the women's side, Yehualaw with 2:16:52 (2024).
Registration for the TCS Amsterdam Marathon 2026 opens late January / early February 2026 and works on a first-come-first-served basis — no lottery, no draw, no BQ. Whoever clicks the button first gets in. The full marathon sells out in 2–4 weeks from opening, before the end of February in recent editions. The half marathon lasts longer (4–6 weeks) and the 8K is practically open until spring.
Aerial view of the pack in the opening kilometers along Vondelpark, perfect to reinforce the "thousands of runners every year, bibs that fly" message.
Reference from the 2025 edition at close:
Thinking you can wait until spring to sign up for Amsterdam is a mistake. Runners who wait end up turning to the TCS Marketplace (official bib resale market) or staying out. If you're going to run Amsterdam, set a calendar alert for late January 2026.
Unlike Madrid or Valencia, Le Champion doesn't use tiered pricing by date: the bib costs the same from opening to close. The policy is "first to register, first to enter" and stays flat.
| Distance | 2026 standard price | Charity bib |
|---|---|---|
| 🏃 Marathon | €85–110 | Available via partner NGOs (~€250 + fundraising challenge) |
| 🏃♀️ Half Marathon | €60–75 | Limited |
| 🏃♂️ 8K | €35–45 | No |
| 👶 Mini Marathon (youth) | €15–20 | No |
Indicative prices based on the 2025 edition. Always confirm on the official registration page — final amounts are published in January.
| Included in price | NOT included (optional extra) |
|---|---|
| ✅ Bib with timing chip | ❌ Saturday pasta party (~€25) |
| ✅ Finisher technical shirt | ❌ Official professional photo (~€20–30) |
| ✅ Finisher medal | ❌ Exclusive race travel bag (extra) |
| ✅ On-course aid stations (Stroopwafel included) | ❌ Premium baggage check service |
| ✅ Post-finish bag (fruit, water, isotonic) | ❌ Cancellation insurance |
| ✅ Digital diploma with certified time | |
| ✅ Olympisch Stadion access for finishers |
What you need to keep in mind beyond the bib price:
Family and runners at the TCS Marathon Expo at RAI Amsterdam, with stands or the bib pickup counter visible.
Bib pickup is at the TCS Marathon Expo, normally held the two days before the race (Friday and Saturday) at RAI Amsterdam (convention center south of the city, Europaplein stop). Bibs are not handed out on race day: you need to pick yours up in person before the expo closes on Saturday, historically around 18:00.
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 normally includes the finisher technical shirt, the bib with timing chip, a baggage tag, and a course map. Finisher medals are handed out in the post-finish area inside the Olympisch Stadion after crossing the line.
The most practical way to reach the start of the TCS Amsterdam Marathon is by tram: lines 1, 2, 5, 16 and 24 from the municipal operator GVB drop you less than a 5-minute walk from the Olympisch Stadion (Stadionplein, Olympisch Stadion and VU Medisch Centrum stops). Trams start running at 06:00. The Amsterdam Zuid metro and train station is a 15-minute walk away.
Façade of the Olympisch Stadion with the torch tower visible — visual reference for the reader arriving in Amsterdam for the first time who needs to recognize the start area.
Amsterdam has one of the densest tram networks in the world. On marathon morning, GVB boosts frequencies on the lines toward the Olympisch Stadion. Plan to be at your wave 45–60 minutes before the gun: the start goes out in 5-minute waves and the porta-potty queues spike in the final 30 minutes.
For the expo, the closest train station to RAI Amsterdam is Amsterdam RAI (Sprinter lines from Centraal, 8 minutes), or Europaplein on the metro (lines 50 / 51 / 52 / 53 / 54). From the center it's about 15 minutes door-to-door.
If you're driving from Spain: the realistic option is to fly to Schiphol and forget about it. Driving from Madrid is ~1,700 km (16+ hours) and parking in Amsterdam will cost you €200 over three days.
For a marathon runner, staying within a 15-minute walk of the Olympisch Stadion isn't luxury: it's logistics. The marathon drops you at the finish around 12:30–14:30 depending on target — you head back to the hotel sweaty, hungry, with cramps starting. The difference between walking 10 minutes to the hotel from the stadium track versus catching a tram with two transfers can cost you mood, recovery and weekend enjoyment.
Wide shot of Amsterdam Zuid showing hotel density and proximity to the Olympisch Stadion, or panoramic of the center / Jordaan with its iconic canals.
| Hotel | Cat. | €/night* | To stadium | Runner highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NH Collection Amsterdam Barbizon Palace | 4* | €180–250 | 700 m · 9 min | Reliable late check-out |
| Hilton Amsterdam | 5* | €250–380 | 1.2 km · 15 min | Bathtub, strong AC |
| Apollo Hotel Amsterdam | 4* | €140–190 | 800 m · 10 min | Early breakfast for groups |
| Park Plaza Vondelpark | 4* | €160–220 | 1.3 km · 16 min | Next to Vondelpark, gym |
| Bilderberg Garden Hotel | 4* | €150–210 | 600 m · 7 min | Closest to the stadium |
| Hotel | Cat. | €/night* | To stadium | Runner highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pulitzer Amsterdam | 5* | €380–600 | 5.2 km · 22 min | Bathtub, luxury, next to the Prinsengracht |
| Andaz Prinsengracht | 5* | €320–480 | 5.0 km · 21 min | Boutique, strong AC, late check-out |
| NH Collection Doelen | 5* | €250–380 | 4.8 km · 19 min | Next to the Amstel, river view |
| Sofitel Legend The Grand | 5* | €400–600 | 4.5 km · 18 min | Luxury, perfect for celebrating |
| INK Hotel Amsterdam – MGallery | 4* | €200–280 | 4.3 km · 17 min | Mid-to-upper boutique |
| Hotel | Cat. | €/night* | To stadium | Runner highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conservatorium Hotel | 5* | €450–700 | 2.2 km · 26 min | Gym, spa, luxury |
| Park Hotel Amsterdam | 4* | €180–260 | 2.5 km · 28 min | Next to Vondelpark, mid-to-upper range |
| Hilton Amsterdam (south Vondel) | 5* | €250–380 | 1.8 km · 22 min | Already covered in Zuid |
| The Dylan Amsterdam | 5* | €380–550 | 4.2 km · 17 min | Boutique, next to the Keizersgracht |
| Hotel Okura Amsterdam | 5* | €280–420 | 1.5 km · 18 min | Panoramic view, gym |
*Indicative race-weekend rate (third weekend of October). Varies by booking lead time, availability and current promotions.
Weather in Amsterdam on the third Sunday of October averages 8 °C low and 15 °C high — the optimal temperature window for a marathon. The sky is usually gray or overcast (typical Dutch fall), with moderate humidity and wind generally below 20 km/h. Probability of rain hovers around 50% of editions, but heavy rain is rare: the usual is drizzle that wets the asphalt without flooding.
Finishers from a recent edition with their medals on a gray but dry day with soft light — the typical pattern of the mid-October race weekend in Amsterdam.
The variable to watch is the Amstel wind. On the river out-and-back, if a strong northerly blows (uncommon but it happens), it hits you in the face during the 12 km return (km 23–35). That can cost 30–60 seconds per km in bad conditions — the only real "trap" on the course. Temperature itself isn't usually a problem: Dutch October is cool, not extremely cold, and rarely climbs above 18 °C on race day.
Plan by forecast:
Bring throwaway clothing to the start — the corral is open-air and you'll be standing 30–45 minutes in 6–10 °C real feel. An old shirt + old long sleeve you toss at the gun is standard in Amsterdam.
The recommended plan to prepare for the TCS Amsterdam Marathon 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 Amsterdam: train steady sustained pace on flat (similar to Berlin or Valencia) and at least two long runs at marathon pace on completely flat terrain to "calibrate" the feel of holding the same split km after km.
Runner crossing the finish line inside the Olympisch Stadion or training on flat Dutch terrain (a dike or a cycle path) — aspirational image to anchor the 16-week plan.
Approach Amsterdam as a marathon with a budget of 0 m elevation, not as a rolling marathon. The flat course rewards whoever holds a single pace for 42 km more than whoever knows how to manage hills. Pick your goal and follow the table — these are peak volumes (weeks 11–13), not block 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 Amsterdam:
The taper is three weeks, not two. Week 14 at 80%, week 15 at 60%, week 16 at 40% holding race pace in short accelerations. The two final long runs (weeks 11 and 12) are what fill the cup.
Don't know what realistic target time you have for Amsterdam? Cross your best recent half marathon with the "Amsterdam flat" factor (which adds a small bonus for the fast course):
| Your recent best half | Flat equivalent (marathon) | Realistic Amsterdam |
|---|---|---|
| 1:25 | sub-3:00 flat | 2:58–3:02 |
| 1:35 | sub-3:20 flat | 3:18–3:22 |
| 1:45 | sub-3:42 flat | 3:38–3:42 |
| 1:55 | sub-4:05 flat | 4:00–4:05 |
| 2:05 | sub-4:25 flat | 4:20–4:28 |
| 2:15 | sub-4:48 flat | 4:42–4:50 |
How to read it: the "flat" column is the Riegel conversion without adjustments (your half × ~2.11). Amsterdam usually matches or slightly improves that number thanks to the flat + cool weather — aim for the lower end of the range if you've done the marathon-pace blocks in long runs, the higher end if you're tight on aerobic base.
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:
| 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 (Amsterdam 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: which strategy should I run? How many gels do I take? When do I add 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 it as a PDF to bring on race day.
PDF A4, optimizado para imprimir y llevar el día de carrera.
You arrive at the corral. You've done the 16-week plan. What separates good training from a PB in Amsterdam is respecting the steady pace for the next 3–5 hours.
The Amsterdam race plan should combine a conservative start in km 1–5 (Olympisch Stadion → Vondelpark, easy feel), invariable target pace from km 5 to 35, and push or hold from km 35 to 42 depending on how you arrive at the Amstel return. The Amsterdam trap: don't accelerate in Vondelpark "because it feels easy". Each target time (sub-2:45 to finish) has a specific split pattern.
| Goal | Target splits | Amsterdam-specific tactical note |
|---|---|---|
| sub-2:45 | 3:54 min/km | Controlled start Vondelpark (km 1–5). Hold absolute pace on the Amstel out. Attack only from km 38 if still holding. |
| sub-3:00 | 4:16 min/km | Cross half at 1:30:00. Hold 4:16 on the Amstel out. If you reach km 30 with legs, hold; the return is flat but psychologically long. |
| sub-3:30 | 4:58 min/km | No accelerations in Vondelpark. Cross half at 1:45:00. Walk 10 s at every Amstel aid station. |
| sub-4:00 | 5:41 min/km | The classic mistake is going out at 5:30 "because the flat allows it". Hold 5:45 for the first 8 km. Walk 15 s at every aid station. |
| sub-4:30 | 6:24 min/km | Very even splits: 6:20–6:30 the whole time. Walk-run strategy from km 30 if you need it. |
| sub-5:00 | 7:06 min/km | Walk-run plan from km 1: 8 run / 1 walk. Gives you margin to finish inside the stadium in good shape. |
| Finish | 7:00–7:30 | No watch. Enjoy Vondelpark, the rural Amstel out, and the entry into the Olympisch Stadion on the final stretch. |
It's where the marathon is decided. Three Amsterdam-specific anchors:
The nutrition strategy for Amsterdam pivots on 60–100 g of carbs per hour depending on goal, with 5–6 gels spread every 25–30 minutes from km 8. Carb loading over the 3 prior days should be 8–10 g/kg/day, and Saturday dinner light and familiar (pasta or rice). The flat + cool weather makes the risk of severe dehydration low, but don't neglect sodium — the marathon itself burns 1,500–3,000 mg of sodium regardless of weather.
Volunteer at a TCS Amsterdam Marathon aid station along the Amstel river handing out isotonic drink or a Stroopwafel.
Saturday dinner is light, familiar and on the early side (eat before 21:00). In Amsterdam you have excellent options: a modern Dutch bistro (Pulitzer's, De Plantage, Restaurant Vinkeles) serves perfect pasta or risotto. Avoid raw herring pre-race (pickled herring is a tourist plate, not pre-marathon food), avoid heavily buttered pancakes and heavy cheeses like aged Gouda. Pasta or white rice with grilled chicken or fish, bread, fruit. Zero experiments.
Race-morning breakfast depends on whether you wake up hungry. The safe play: toast with honey/jam + banana + coffee (if you usually drink it). 80–100 g of carbs, eaten 3 hours before the gun. If your stomach closes with nerves, swap for a sports drink with 80 g of carbs. Amsterdam Zuid hotels usually have a special pre-marathon buffet open from 06:00 on Sunday — confirm when booking.
What the organization puts on course:
Carb plan by goal:
| Goal | Carbs / hour | Gels to bring | 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 | 5–6 gels | km 6, km 12, km 18, km 24, km 30, km 36 |
| 3h00 | 75–90 g/h | 6–7 gels + flask | km 5, every 5 km until km 35 |
| ≤2h45 | 90–100 g/h | 8 gels + flask | km 4, every 4–5 km |
Three mistakes you see every year in Amsterdam:
Hydration and sodium by forecast:
Post-finish recovery — the first hour matters more than in a half:
The best shoes for the TCS Amsterdam Marathon are race carbon-plate for sub-3:30, carbon-plate or super-trainer between 3:30–4:00, and protective daily trainer for over 4:00. The absolute flat course + Dutch asphalt in perfect condition favors the most aggressive shoe: unlike Madrid or Boston, in Amsterdam you can go for the lighter option without paying a muscular toll for elevation.
Close-up of race shoes on the Olympisch Stadion start line — multiple carbon-plate brands visible.
Unlike a marathon with elevation, in Amsterdam energy efficiency outweighs muscle protection. An ultralight carbon plate saves 4% energy and the quads don't accumulate the damage they would on a rolling course. For non-elite runners, the aggressive bet (Vaporfly, Adios Pro Evo, Metaspeed Sky) is perfectly rational here. The critical thing is that they're already broken in and don't exceed 250–350 km of use.
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 | Race 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 the house:
Yes, one of the best bets on the European calendar. Absolute flat course (~10 m total elevation gain, net 0 m profile), cool mid-October weather (8–15 °C), asphalt in perfect condition, experienced organization. For runners coming from a rolling marathon like Madrid, Boston or Paris, Amsterdam usually shaves the time by 3–8 minutes without extra training. The only real variable is the Amstel wind, which in bad years can cost 30–60 seconds per km on the km 23–35 return.
Registration opens late January / early February 2026 and runs on a first-come-first-served, no-lottery basis. The full marathon sells out in 2–4 weeks from opening — before the end of February in recent editions. Set a calendar alert for mid-January and click as soon as the button opens. The half marathon lasts longer (4–6 weeks) and the 8K is practically open until spring.
One of the most symbolic experiences on the European calendar. The final 400 m of the marathon are run on the tartan track inside the Olympisch Stadion, the same venue built for Amsterdam's 1928 Olympic Games. You enter the stadium through the north tunnel around km 41.8, hear the roar of the stands, and run the final 400 m on the Olympic track where the flame burned almost 100 years ago. The original torch tower still stands. You finish the marathon by running on the track from the first Olympic ceremony with a continuous flame in history.
Recent editions close the marathon at 6 hours from the last wave, equivalent to about 8:30 min/km. Walking is allowed; the course has staggered partial closures. If you're going for a finish-without-time-limit, the finish inside the stadium stays open until 16:00 — ask Le Champion before signing up if you'll be near the cutoff.
No. Pickup is restricted to the TCS Marathon Expo on Friday and Saturday at RAI Amsterdam. Bibs are not handed out on race day under any circumstance. Plan to arrive on Friday or Saturday morning to have at least one expo visit.
It's the only real "trap" on the course. If a strong northerly blows (>25 km/h), it hits you in the face during the 12 km Amstel return (km 23–35) — that can cost 30–60 seconds per km in bad conditions. Check the wind forecast 48–72 h out and adjust the plan: if strong wind is confirmed, save in km 1–25 and a controlled push only in the last 7. On the out (km 11–23) the wind is in your favor — don't be fooled by the fast feel.
Yes, headphones are allowed at the TCS Amsterdam Marathon. That said, the Amstel out-and-back is the loneliest section on the European calendar — 20+ km of semi-rural country with scattered crowd support. Many runners appreciate music or a podcast here. The Vondelpark, canals and final 3 km to the stadium do have atmosphere — take them off to enjoy.
For sub-3:30, the most aggressive option on the market: race carbon-plate (Nike Alphafly 3, Adios Pro Evo, Metaspeed Sky, Saucony Endorphin Elite). The absolute flat + perfect asphalt let you go for the lighter shoe without paying a muscular toll for elevation. For 3:30–4:00, a protective carbon-plate (Vaporfly 4, Saucony Endorphin Pro). For over 4:00, a super-trainer or daily trainer (Mach X, Pegasus, Cumulus). Most important: already broken in and not exceeding 250–350 km of use, and tested in light rain because mid-October in the Netherlands rains in 50% of editions.
The three are flat fast marathons — the choice depends on logistics, atmosphere and price:
If Berlin is impossible lottery or you don't want to pay €1,000 for charity, and Valencia is far in December, Amsterdam is the answer.
Yes, one of the best debut races on the calendar. The absolute flat, the cool weather, Le Champion's experienced organization and the finish at the Olympisch Stadion make it a memorable first marathon that's technically easy to manage (no elevation surprises, no altitude, no extreme heat). The one thing to watch: the Amstel out-and-back is psychologically long if you go alone. If it's your first marathon and you're traveling solo, connect with other runners via Strava or local Facebook groups to do the rural section with company.
TCS Amsterdam Marathon is the best price-quality for PB in Europe in fall, but not the absolute fastest. If you want pure absolute record, Berlin or Valencia are slightly faster; if you want World Marathon Major atmosphere, Berlin or London win.
All are marathon (42.195 km), so the choice depends on month, profile, price and what you want:
| Race | Month | Elevation | Best for | Price | Atmosphere |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TCS Amsterdam (this guide) | October | ~10 m | PB · price-quality · debut runners | €85–110 | ⭐⭐⭐ |
| BMW Berlin Marathon | September | ~80 m | Absolute record · World Marathon Major | €185–250 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Valencia Marathon | December | <50 m | Spanish PB · cool weather | €80–100 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris | April | ~100 m | PB · urban atmosphere | €110–130 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| TCS London Marathon | April | ~80 m | World Marathon Major · massive atmosphere | €150–200 (lottery) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| EDP Madrid | April | ~600 m | Atmosphere · experience | €80–100 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
Did this guide help? If you're running Amsterdam 2026, save the event on SportPlan to get registration alerts, expo reminders, and later log your result.