DATEV Challenge Roth 2026 Complete Guide — The World's Most-Loved Iron-Distance Triathlon, Solar Hill, Roth Stadium and How to Train For It | SportPlan
23 min leestijd·triatlontriathlon
DATEV Challenge Roth 2026 Complete Guide — The World's Most-Loved Iron-Distance Triathlon, Solar Hill, Roth Stadium and How to Train For It
On July 5, 2026 the small Bavarian town of Roth transforms again into what most triathletes describe as the best iron-distance experience in the world: DATEV Challenge Roth. 226 km across the Main-Donau Canal, Bavarian villages and two passes over the legendary Solarer Berg (Solar Hill) with 200,000+ spectators creating a tunnel of sound. It's not an IRONMAN — it's Challenge: family-owned by the Walchshöfer family since 2002, and famous for 27 straight hours of crowd support (an unofficial record in the sport). With course world records (7:23:48 by Magnus Ditlev in 2024, 8:18:13 by Anne Haug in 2023), Roth is also the fastest amateur iron-distance on the calendar. This guide covers what the official website doesn't quite explain: how to grab a bib in the minutes the November sale lasts, how each of the three segments really plays out, where the race breaks (km 145–170 of the bike), how to train 32+ weeks, and how to nail the logistics from Nuremberg.
What makes Roth unique: 27 hours of continuous crowd support + Solar Hill + Roth stadium + world record 7:23:48. It's not just a fast iron-distance: it's the iron-distance every Pro World Tour athlete puts in their top-3 "must do before retirement". On average faster than the IRONMAN World Championship Kona, with zero altitude and the best atmosphere in the sport.
What Challenge Roth really is, why it's not an IRONMAN and why pros pick Roth to chase the world record.
DATEV Challenge Roth is not an IRONMAN — and that matters. The race was born in 1984 as IRONMAN Europe, organized by Detlef Kühnel and the Walchshöfer family from Roth, a town of 25,000 people 30 km south of Nuremberg. When IRONMAN (the Wanda Sports brand) reorganized its calendar in 2002, the Walchshöfer family decided to break away and create Challenge Roth, an independent, family-owned race without an IRONMAN license. The consequence: Roth keeps a village soul that no IRONMAN in the world matches. The race director is still Felix Walchshöfer (the dad), his son Felix-Pia works in the organization, and most volunteers are neighbors from Roth and surrounding villages.
📷 Photo pending · About the race header
Aerial view of the Roth Triathlon-Park during the start with thousands of swim caps entering the Main-Donau Canal at sunrise.
With ~5,500 athletes (3,500 individual + 600 three-person relay teams + 200 charity bibs) and ~50 nationalities represented (50% non-German), Roth is a global event with human scale. The wave start runs like a Swiss watch, the aid stations are endless, the volunteers know your name before you arrive. It's the only iron-distance where spectators camp on Solar Hill 24 hours before to grab a spot in the most famous human wall in the sport.
If you're coming from 1–2 completed half-distances and want a fast first iron-distance with crowd support: yes. It's the best possible first iron-distance — fast profile, reasonable climate, atmosphere that pushes you.
If you've done several European IRONMAN and want a PR: yes, absolutely. Roth is where records get broken. Current world record: 7:23:48 (Magnus Ditlev, 2024) — the first sub-7:30 in history.
If you've done Kona or extreme IRONMAN and want something "easier": yes, but careful — records get broken here because the course is fast, not because it's easy. 226 km are still 226 km.
If you need an event with shuttle buses, 5 hotels and an airport 5 minutes away:* better IRONMAN Frankfurt or Hamburg. Roth is a small town, zero 5* hotels in the center, mandatory logistics planning.
If you doubt you can finish 226 km: Roth has a 15-hour cutoff (more relaxed than some regional IRONMAN races). If your half iron-distance is sub-6h, you have plenty of margin. Aim for "finish".
Three races inside the race: German canal, two laps with two passes over Solar Hill, and a marathon along the canal — where it's won, where it's lost, where the race breaks.
Challenge Roth runs on a circuit that starts and finishes at Roth's Triathlon-Park. The swim is a single 3.8 km loop in the Main-Donau Canal (clockwise), the bike is two 90 km laps through Bavarian back roads with two passes over Solar Hill (km 70 and km 160), and the marathon covers two 21.1 km loops along the canal back to the Triathlon-Park stadium. The race is decided at km 145–170 of the bike (second pass of Solar Hill + final 25 km approach to T2).
📷 Photo pending · 3D map of the full course
Official 3D map of the Challenge Roth course with the three segments — Main-Donau Canal, two-lap bike with Solar Hill, two-lap run to the stadium.
The start is in the Main-Donau-Kanal (a navigable waterway connecting the Main and the Danube), a canal 70 m wide and 4 m deep with flat water, no currents and no waves. The start is in waves by age group (not mass start) every 5–10 minutes from 06:30. The course is a single clockwise loop marked by big yellow buoys: 1.9 km south, starboard turn, ~150 m crossing, 1.9 km back north to the swim exit ramp.
What makes the Roth swim special:
Fresh canal water at 18–22 °C — wetsuit allowed if below 22 °C (announced 24 hours before on the official website).
Zero currents or waves — the canal doesn't move. It's the best swim possible for a personal best in iron-distance.
Wave start — zero physical combat like a European IRONMAN. Your age group wave goes together and you have space.
Limited visibility (3–5 m) — canal water, brown-greenish. You won't see small buoys, navigate by big buoys and the canal wall.
Spectators on the wall from km 0.5 — they shout your name if you wear it on your cap (a service the organization offers: personalized swim cap).
Swim target time: 50:00–58:00 for strong swimmers; 58:00–1:05:00 mid-pack; 1:05:00–1:15:00 comfortable but not fast swimmers. Segment cutoff: 2 hours 20 minutes from the start.
The Roth bike segment is two identical 90 km laps on well-paved Bavarian back roads. ~1,000 m total elevation gain (~500 m per lap) — rolling, not mountainous. The exit from T1 heads south, loops through Greding, Hilpoltstein, Allersberg and Heideck, and returns to Roth via Solarer Berg (Solar Hill) at km 70 and km 160.
Solar Hill (Solarer Berg) — the most iconic point in world triathlon:
Location: km 70 (first lap) and km 160 (second lap)
Profile: 1.2 km ramp at 8% average gradient, max 12% in the final 200 m
Spectators: 150,000–200,000 people on both sides of the road, forming a human wall 1.5 m wide leaving a corridor
Sound: indescribable. Athletes describe a "tunnel of sound" comparable to the Tour de France at Alpe d'Huez
Camping: many spectators camp 24–48 hours before to get a spot
Strava segment: "Solar Berg climb Roth" — save your KOM if you break 4 minutes
The rest of the bike — real profile:
km 0–25: comfortable, rolling, tailwind if it blows from the west
km 25–70: gentle rolling, going through Bavarian villages with crowds, arrival at first Solar Hill
km 70–90: technical descent, second loop starts
km 90–145: identical to the first lap, but here is where the heat starts to bite (Bavarian midday)
km 145–160: approach to second Solar Hill — where the race breaks
km 160–180: descent and approach to T2
Where the race breaks — km 145–170: the combination of second Solar Hill pass + midday heat + the 4 hours you've been pedaling drains your matches. If you've done the first 90 km above 80% of your FTP you'll be cooked and the final 25 km will be a sufferfest. Tactical fix: ride the first 90 km at 70–75% of your FTP, eat 90 g of carbohydrates per hour from km 10 (don't wait until you're hungry), and save matches for the marathon.
Bike target time: 4:30–5:00 for pros; 5:00–5:30 advanced athletes; 5:30–6:15 mid-pack; 6:15–7:30 "finish" group. Segment cutoff: 10 hours 30 minutes from the start.
The Roth marathon is two 21.1 km loops along the Main-Donau Canal, essentially flat (~50 m elevation). It exits the Triathlon-Park heading south, follows the canal to Hilpoltstein, makes a U-turn, goes back to Roth, repeats the loop, and enters the Triathlon-Park stadium for a finish with packed grandstands.
What makes the Roth marathon special:
Flat course — one of the fastest marathons on the iron-distance calendar.
Partial shade — the canal path is lined with trees, but there are stretches without shade (km 8–12 and km 30–34).
Aid stations every 2 km — water, isotonic, gels, watermelon, bananas, soup.
Continuous crowd support — every village along the canal comes out to the street.
Roth Stadium at the finish: packed grandstands, red carpet, voted by athletes as "the best finish in world triathlon" for 10+ years running.
Where the race breaks — km 25–32: the "dead" zone of the second loop (you've passed the equator, 17 km still to go, midday is still warming up). Fix: divide the marathon into 5 km blocks, hydrate at every aid station, hold conservative pace until km 32 and then decide if you have anything to push the finish.
Run target time: 2:45–3:00 for pros; 3:00–3:30 advanced; 3:30–4:00 mid-pack; 4:00–5:00 "finish" group. Segment cutoff: 15 hours from the start.
From IRONMAN Europe 1984 to Challenge Roth 2002, the course world records and the names that have made history.
Timeline:
1984: First edition as IRONMAN Europe in Roth. Director: Detlef Kühnel + Walchshöfer family.
1990s: Roth becomes the fastest and most popular iron-distance in Europe.
2002: The Walchshöfer family decides to break away from IRONMAN after disagreements with Wanda Sports. Challenge Roth is born, part of the Challenge Family circuit (Mallorca, Daytona, etc.).
2011: Andreas Raelert (GER) sets the first iron-distance world record in Roth: 7:41:33.
2016: Jan Frodeno (GER) lowers the record to 7:35:39 in Roth.
2023: Anne Haug (GER) sets the women's course world record in Roth at 8:18:13.
2024: Magnus Ditlev (DEN) breaks the 7:30 barrier with 7:23:48 — the fastest iron-distance in history to date.
Course records (as of May 5, 2026):
Category
Time
Athlete
Year
Men
7:23:48
Magnus Ditlev (DEN)
2024
Women
8:18:13
Anne Haug (GER)
2023
For context: the absolute IRONMAN World Championship Kona men's record is 7:21:12 (Patrick Lange, 2024). Roth is less than 3 minutes off the absolute world record, and many years Roth has been the fastest race on the calendar. See Wikipedia: Challenge Roth.
Roth is in the middle of Bavaria. Nuremberg is the gateway — by plane, train and ICE.
Reference airports:
Airport
Distance to Roth
Driving time
Direct flights
Nuremberg (NUE)
35 km
30 min
European connections (Lufthansa, Eurowings)
Munich (MUC)
175 km
2 h 0 min
International hub (Lufthansa)
Frankfurt (FRA)
235 km
2 h 30 min
World hub (all majors)
Recommendation: fly to Nuremberg (NUE). It's the closest airport, has direct flights from Madrid, Barcelona, London and other European capitals, and the S-Bahn connection is excellent.
Train from Nuremberg to Roth:
S2 line of the Nuremberg S-Bahn — Hauptbahnhof (Nuremberg Central Station) → Roth.
Frequency: every 30 minutes.
Time: ~30 minutes.
Price: ~€8 one way.
Bicycle: allowed on S-Bahn outside rush hour (extra fee €4–6).
Car and parking:
Autobahn A9 (Munich-Berlin) → exit Roth (km 421).
Free parking at Triathlon-Park and designated zones (with shuttle on race day).
Race day: the center of Roth closes to traffic from 04:00 to 24:00. Park in designated zones and move on foot or by shuttle.
Bavarian July. Cold at sunrise, hot at midday. Thunderstorms possible. Triple gear plan.
Variable
Start (06:30)
Midday (12:00)
Afternoon (18:00)
Air temperature
12–18 °C
22–28 °C
18–24 °C
Canal water temperature
18–22 °C
—
—
Rain probability
Low (~10%)
Possible thunderstorms (~25%)
Low (~15%)
Wind
5–15 km/h
10–20 km/h
5–15 km/h
Humidity
70–85%
50–65%
55–70%
Critical notes:
Water at >22 °C → NO wetsuit allowed. If there's a heat wave in July, water can rise to 23–24 °C. Bring both: full suit and sleeveless, decision 24 hours before.
Afternoon thunderstorms: Bavarian July has possible convective storms between 14:00 and 18:00. They don't usually cancel the race, but they harden the bike and run.
Cold start: 12 °C at sunrise. Bring a plastic bag/windbreaker to throw away at the start of the bike.
Midday heat: 28 °C in T1 + 30 °C in T2 are normal. Pre-acclimatization in sauna 4–6 weeks before makes the difference.
Enter your total goal and the calculator returns approximate splits for swim, bike and run.
🎯 Calculadora de ritmo y splitsEscribe tu tiempo objetivo para DATEV Challenge Roth
Ritmo medio requerido2:55 min/km
Equivalente en millas4:42 min/mi
Punto
Tiempo acumulado
Parcial
5 km
14:36
14:36
10 km
29:12
14:36
15 km
43:48
14:36
Media (21,1 km)
1:01:37
17:48
30 km
1:27:37
26:00
Meta
11:00:00
9:32:23
Splits asumen ritmo constante. En carreras con desnivel real (DATEV Challenge Roth) — banca 5–8 s/km en bajadas y pierde el mismo margen en subidas; el ritmo medio se mantiene.
Indescribable. 150,000–200,000 spectators in 1.2 km of climb, forming a human wall leaving a 1.5 m corridor. Athletes describe "the most euphoric moment in the sport". People camp there 24–48 hours before.
Faster and with better atmosphere. Roth doesn't have extreme heat or Mumuku winds. Roth record: 7:23:48 vs Kona 7:21:12 — almost identical, but Kona requires qualification. Roth is the most popular iron-distance in the world, Kona the most prestigious.
Yes, the best "spectator experience" event on the calendar. They can see: swim start, T1, two passes over Solar Hill (bike), two passes through Roth (run), finish in stadium. 27 hours of continuous party.
Yes, the best possible. Fast course, reasonable climate, atmosphere that pushes you, 15-hour cutoff. If you've done 1–2 half-distances, Roth is the ideal place for your iron-distance debut.
Depends on water temperature. If < 22 °C: yes. If > 22 °C: no (per ITU/Challenge regulation). The decision is announced 24 hours before on the official website. Bring both.
Possible but not recommended. The S2 S-Bahn runs every 30 minutes (~30 min trip), but the first trains can be packed with spectators. Better option: stay in Roth or Schwabach Friday-Saturday, walk or shuttle on Sunday.