On Saturday March 28 (women) and Sunday March 29 (men), 2026 the Costa del Sol stages the IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship for the very first time on Spanish soil. The pinnacle of half-iron racing, after a decade of Anglo and Central-European hosts, lands in Marbella: 113.1 km split between the Mediterranean off Bonita Beach, a 90 km bike west to Estepona/Manilva that loops inland through the Sierra Bermeja foothills, and a 21.1 km finish along the Marbella seafront promenade. This is not an open-entry race: it is qualifier-only from a regional 70.3 within the previous 12 months, with race entry around $695–795 USD before flights to Málaga (AGP) or rooms at Marbella Club. This guide covers what the official site doesn't quite explain: how you qualify, what each segment really feels like, where the race breaks, how to plan 24+ weeks of training, and how to handle logistics from elsewhere in Europe or globally.
The Marbella 70.3 difficulty triangle: 16 °C sea forcing wetsuits + Sierra Bermeja rolling at km 60–80 + strong March sun on the closing promenade. As a qualifier-only race there are no weak rivals: even the deepest age groups bring elite times, and the day is decided by power management on the bike, not peak watts.
What the 70.3 World Championship actually is, why it comes to Spain in 2026 and how it differs from a regional 70.3.
The IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship is the closing event of the global half-iron circuit: ~50 regional 70.3 races each year hand out age-group slots, and the qualifiers converge on a rotating venue. From its first edition in Clearwater, Florida (2006) the race has cycled through Las Vegas, Mont-Tremblant, Nelson Mandela Bay, Chattanooga, Nice, St. George, Lahti and Taupō. 2026 is the first time it has ever been held in Spain, after Marbella won the host bid in 2024.
Three traits separate it from a normal 70.3:
100% qualified field. Each athlete has earned a slot at a regional 70.3 within the previous 12 months. Outcome: finisher rate ~96%, almost no DNFs from underpreparation.
Two-day format. Saturday women + Sunday men has been standard since 2017 — full media coverage of each category without overlap.
Rotating venue. Marbella was chosen for its mild March climate, Costa del Sol tourism infrastructure and a bike script that mixes flat coast with a short but technical inland loop.
Note:70.3 refers to the 70.3 miles that the three distances add up to (≈113.1 km). It's the exact half of a full IRONMAN (140.6 miles / 226 km).
Start at Bonita Beach / Playa de la Bajadilla, in central Marbella. Format: rolling start by cap colour, waves every 5 seconds based on declared target time. The course is a single-loop trapezoid marked with large yellow buoys every 250 m: 750 m parallel to the shore eastbound, turn, 400 m offshore, turn, 750 m back to the start chute.
Real Mediterranean conditions in March:
Water temperature: 15–17 °C. Wetsuit mandatory — IRONMAN enforces it below 24.5 °C; below 16 °C the swim may be shortened or "long-sleeve full" wetsuits made compulsory.
Swell: typically 0.3–0.8 m, mild unless an easterly Levante wind picks up. The bigger risk isn't waves but occasional jellyfish and face/hand cold in the first 200 m.
Sighting:La Concha mountain to the north-east is visible from the water and serves as the natural reference point.
Out of T1 at Bonita Beach, west on the N-340 and the closed A-7 motorway. Course structure:
Km 0–30: flat coastal Marbella → San Pedro Alcántara → Estepona. High average speed (38–42 km/h with packs). No drafting.
Km 30–55: Estepona → Manilva → inland turn onto the MA-8300 and back roads heading into the Sierra Bermeja foothills. Here come 4–7% short ramps — no long climbs, just a steady drip of pitches that breaks rhythm.
Km 55–80: inland loop with two ~3 km segments at average 5%. This is where the race breaks: if you spent in the coastal section, you lose 2–3 min per km versus split target.
Km 80–90: technical descent back to Estepona and flat finish into T2 at Marbella centre.
Roads and traffic: A-7 fully closed during the race, secondary roads with rolling closures. Asphalt is generally good; watch for speed bumps in town sections (Estepona, San Pedro).
Two laps of 10.5 km along the Marbella seafront promenade, from T2 (centre) out to the Marbella Lighthouse and back, repeated. Flat: <50 m total elevation across the whole half-marathon. Surface is mostly tile and boardwalk (not asphalt) — slightly tougher on the joints but kinder on the calves.
Aid stations every ~2 km with water, sports drink (Maurten Drink Mix is the official partner), Maurten gels, fruit, Coca-Cola and sponges. Finish line on Avenida del Mar, the official IRONMAN arch facing the Salvador Dalí sculptures.
Where the half-marathon breaks:km 14–18. This is where overpacing the bike is paid back: if you rode above 75% FTP through the inland loop, here pace falls 30–45 s/km. Athletes who hit km 10 in 42 min walk into the finish at 1:35 — wondering what happened.
Origin of the 70.3 World Championship, previous hosts and time references.
2006 — Clearwater, FL. First edition. Andy Potts (USA) and Samantha Warriner (NZL) open the record book.
2011 — Las Vegas, NV. First year out of Florida; brutal desert heat.
2014 — Mont-Tremblant, QC. First edition outside the US (Canada).
2018 — Nelson Mandela Bay, RSA. First African host.
2019 — Nice, FR. First time on continental Europe.
2022 — St. George, UT (women) + 2023 — Lahti, FIN (women) / Taupō, NZL (men). The two-day, two-venue format is consolidated.
2025 — Marbella confirmed. The IRONMAN Group announces Marbella as the 2026 host (the 21st edition).
2026 — Marbella, ESP. First time in Spain.
Course records: each venue has its own record. Historical 70.3 World Championship results are searchable on the official IRONMAN archive. Elite winning times typically range 3:35–3:55 (men) and 3:55–4:15 (women) depending on course profile.
Regional 70.3 qualifier. Each year ~50 events allocate slots by age group. Your placing within your age group (not overall) determines whether you receive a slot. Slot count varies with field size (rule of thumb: "1 slot per ~75 athletes in the age group").
Roll-down. If a qualified athlete declines, the slot rolls down to the next eligible.
Legacy / Foundation slots. Small charity quota (~$1,500–2,500 USD donation to the IRONMAN Foundation).
Pro qualification. PTO/IRONMAN Pro Series points system — outside age-group scope.
Flights to Málaga, train and transport options to reach Marbella with a bike.
Málaga Airport (AGP) — 60 km north-east. Main hub: direct flights from Madrid, Barcelona, London, Paris, Frankfurt, Zürich, Amsterdam. Rental car 45 min on the A-7. Direct Avanza bus AGP–Marbella ~€13 / 50 min.
Gibraltar Airport (GIB) — 70 km south-east. Limited connections (London, Manchester) but useful from the UK.
AVE Madrid–Málaga — 2 h 30 min to Málaga María Zambrano + 1 h transfer to Marbella.
Driving from Madrid: A-4 + A-44 + A-7, ~5 h 30 min. From Barcelona: AP-7 along the Mediterranean, ~9 h.
Bike: airline transport runs €60–150 per leg depending on carrier. Iberia, Vueling and Ryanair are the most-used Spanish options. Book early — special-baggage capacity saturates in March.
Race-day parking: Marbella offers public parking at La Bajadilla, Plaza de la Patera and Avenida Ricardo Soriano. Arrive before 06:00 — central Marbella closes to traffic from 06:30.
Quieter, recommended if you bring family. 30 min by car to Marbella.
Kempinski Hotel Bahía (5*) — beach, premium standard. ~€400–650/night.
Elba Estepona Gran Hotel (4*) — all-inclusive option. ~€180–270/night.
Iberostar Marbella Coral Beach (4*) — on the Marbella/Estepona border. ~€170–260/night.
Recommendation: if it's your first time on the Costa del Sol, prioritise Marbella centre — pre-race logistics (bike check-in, briefing, swim start) save you 60–90 min of driving every day.
Focus: intensity introduction — swim with CSS sets (400 m + 200 m tests), bike with sweet-spot blocks (88–94% FTP) on simulated Sierra Bermeja terrain (rolling rides), run with tempo and target-pace work.
Key sessions: 70.3 simulation every 3 weeks (1 km swim + 60 km bike + 12 km run).
Focus: course specificity — bike with rolling 80–90 km loops at 75% FTP, T2 brick sessions every 2 weeks, run on softer surface (board/tile) to mimic the seafront.
Test: full 113.1 km (bike at 75% FTP + 21 km at target pace) 6 weeks out.
Enter your goal time and the calculator splits swim / bike / run with T1 and T2.
🎯 Calculadora de ritmo y splitsEscribe tu tiempo objetivo para IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship Marbella
Ritmo medio requerido2:55 min/km
Equivalente en millas4:42 min/mi
Punto
Tiempo acumulado
Parcial
5 km
14:35
14:35
10 km
29:11
14:35
15 km
43:46
14:35
Media (21,1 km)
1:01:33
17:47
30 km
1:27:32
25:59
Meta
5:30:00
4:02:28
Splits asumen ritmo constante. En carreras con desnivel real (IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship Marbella) — banca 5–8 s/km en bajadas y pierde el mismo margen en subidas; el ritmo medio se mantiene.
Official distance: 113.1 km. The calculator estimates per-segment pacing assuming a balanced split (swim 5%, bike 55%, run 35%, transitions 5%).
Plan: finish under the 8 h 30 cutoff. Conservative bike (60–65% FTP) and run-walk (4 min run, 1 min walk) if needed.
Mindset: finishing the 70.3 World Championship is itself a career achievement.
Sierra Bermeja golden rule: in the inland loop km 60–80, keep power <75% FTP even if you drop 2 km/h below target speed. You'll recover on the descent and the first 8 km of the run. This is the #1 mistake of World Championship debutants.
Pre-race (90 min before): 100 g carbs (oats + banana + honey) + 500 ml sports drink.
Bike:90 g/h carbs (Maurten 100 gel every 25 min + 500 ml/h Maurten Drink Mix). Sodium 700–900 mg/h.
Run: 60–70 g/h. Maurten Caffeine gel at km 7 and 14. Coca-Cola at late aid stations.
Total fluid target: 750 ml/h on the bike, 500 ml/h on the run.
Common trap: underestimating bike carbs "because it's not hot." Glycogen cost on 90 km at 75% FTP is similar to Kona — duration, not temperature, drives the burn. Train your gut at 90 g/h during the specific block, don't improvise on race day.
You need to finish in a slot position within your age group at one of ~50 regional IRONMAN 70.3s held between March 2025 and February 2026. Slot count by age group depends on field size ("1 slot per ~75 athletes" rule). If a qualified athlete declines, the slot rolls down to the next.
Base entry runs $695–795 USD depending on the payment window. Adding flights to Málaga, 4 nights of accommodation in Marbella, and bike transport, total cost from elsewhere in Europe usually lands at €2,200–3,500.
Between 15 and 17 °C in late March. Wetsuit mandatory (IRONMAN enforces below 24.5 °C). If the thermometer drops below 16 °C, the organisation may shorten the swim or require a "long-sleeve full" wetsuit.
Fast in absolute terms (flat run, no long climbs on the bike), but the Sierra Bermeja loop at km 60–80 breaks rhythm. Estimated elite winning times: 3:35–3:55 (men) / 3:55–4:15 (women).
Yes: central Marbella allows free pedestrian access. Elite zones and T1/T2 are restricted, but the rest of the promenade is fully accessible to spectators. Avenida del Mar (finish) is prime cheering territory.
Marbella has spas in many hotels (Marbella Club, Puente Romano, Don Pepe). We recommend 10 min cold immersion, next-day massage, and a 30 min sunrise walk. Schedule your return flight Tuesday — not the same Monday.
IRONMAN has a contingency protocol: if swell tops 1 m or there's an electrical storm, the swim can be shortened or replaced by a duathlon format. In 20 years of 70.3 World Championship history this has happened only twice.
If you come from Kona 2025: Marbella is ~50% of the physiological stress (half the distance) but a similar competitive level since it's qualifier-only. If you come from a regional 70.3: it's a step up in race management, not in distance.