
Absa Cape Epic 2026 Complete Guide — The Tour de France of Mountain Biking, 8-Day Pairs Race, South Africa and How to Train For It
📖 19 min read 📝 9,500 words 🎯 Skim friendly

📖 19 min read 📝 9,500 words 🎯 Skim friendly
From Sunday March 15 to Sunday March 22, 2026, South Africa's Western Cape hosts what is undisputedly the Tour de France of mountain biking: the Absa Cape Epic. Eight days, prologue plus seven stages, ~600 km, ~16,000 m of elevation, ~1,200 riders divided into 600 teams of two riders who must cross the finish line together within two minutes of each other every single day. It is not a charity ride or a "prestige event by name only" — it is a UCI hors-catégorie stage race with world elite at the front and amateurs who have trained two years to be there. This guide covers what the official site never quite tells you: how the pairs format actually works, where the race breaks, how to train for 8 consecutive days at 8 hours of saddle time, and how to put together the trip from Europe or the Americas.
| Data | Information |
|---|---|
| Dates | Sunday March 15 to Sunday March 22, 2026 (8 days) |
| Format | Pairs (2 people) — must finish each stage together within <2 min |
| Structure | Prologue (~25 km team time trial) + 7 stages (75-125 km) |
| Total distance | ~600 km |
| Total elevation gain | ~16,000 m |
| Categories | Men's, Women's, Mixed, Masters (40+), Grand Masters (50+) |
| Region | Western Cape, South Africa (Stellenbosch, Paarl, Wellington, Worcester, Tulbagh, Ceres) |
| Prologue start | Cape Town V&A Waterfront |
| Final finish | Cape Town V&A Waterfront (Stage 7) |
| Participants | ~1,200 riders · 600 teams · firm cap |
| Organiser | Cape Epic Pty (founded 2004 by Kevin Vermaak) |
| Registration | cape-epic.com — annual lottery |
The Absa Cape Epic is the most prestigious mountain bike stage race in the world, founded in 2004 by Kevin Vermaak with the explicit goal of "creating for MTB what the Tour de France is for road cycling." Twenty-two editions later, the goal has been delivered: each year the lottery draws 3,000-4,000 team entries for 600 spots, the registration window closes within hours, and the palmarès is populated by names like Christoph Sauser, Karl Platt, Jaroslav Kulhavy, Annika Langvad and Sabine Spitz — Olympic and World Cup elite of XCO and XCM.
The lead group of Cape Epic crossing a dirt road through Stellenbosch vineyards at sunrise, riders' shadows stretched long, with Table Mountain silhouetted in the background — the universal Cape Epic postcard.
What separates Cape Epic from any other MTB event on the calendar is the combination of three ingredients:
Why is it called the "Tour de France of MTB"? Because it combines historical prestige, world-class elite competition, global media coverage (live TV broadcast in 70 countries) and mass-event scale that no other MTB stage race matches. Trans Alp (Germany-Italy) and Trans Provence (France) are brutal and have their following, but neither has Cape Epic's media weight or depth of elite participation.
Cape Epic is designed as a full-year preparation goal. If you fit any of these profiles, it is for you:
If you are riding solo with no partner, if you have never done a 6-hour MTB ride loaded with bottles and a repair kit, or if you think you will "just cruise and enjoy" — Cape Epic is not the race. Start with a 3-4 day European stage race (Andalucía Bike Race, Costa Blanca Bike Race) before considering the jump.
The Cape Epic course changes every year, but the general structure has held steady for a decade: prologue in Cape Town, stages through the wine lands of the Western Cape (Stellenbosch, Paarl, Franschhoek, Wellington), incursion into the more arid mountains of the interior (Worcester, Tulbagh, Ceres), and dramatic return to Cape Town for the final stage finishing at V&A Waterfront.
The prologue starts and finishes at the Cape Town V&A Waterfront, the touristic heart of Cape Town with views to Table Mountain. Teams roll out at 30-second intervals in TT format, normally over a 20-25 km route mixing forest gravel, technical singletrack and short tarmac sections. It is the shortest day — 1 to 2 hours — but it defines the start grid for the rest of the race, so no competitive team takes it lightly.
First real stage. Departure from Cape Town or Stellenbosch (varies by year), traversing the Stellenbosch vineyards and climbing Helderberg or Bottelary. It is a "leg-tester" stage designed for teams to gauge their actual level on the first two long climbs. Teams that pushed too hard in the prologue pay for it here.
Transition stage heading north. Usually includes a pass through Paarl (second largest city in the Cape Winelands) and climbs to Paarl Rock or Bain's Kloof Pass. One of Cape Epic's longer stages by distance, and where the first DNFs from digestive collapse or chronic mechanical issues start showing up.
Mid-race "queen-light" stage. Usually crosses the mountainous area between Wellington and Tulbagh, with long climbs (5-8 km at 6-8 %) on dirt roads and technical descents of 15-20 minutes. A stage where the technical component (loose descents, rock traverses) carries real weight.
This is where Cape Epic breaks. Stage 4 is traditionally the longest and toughest of the year: 120 km and 3,000 m of climbing, with two big climbs of 1,000 m+ each. It arrives when you already have three days in the legs, your body weighs more than usual, you slept badly in a tent and your mind starts to wobble. 60 % of non-mechanical Cape Epic DNFs happen on stages 4 and 5.
Second consecutive queen stage. Usually in the Ceres / Worcester area, with more arid landscapes, stronger heat (can hit 30 °C+ in the lowlands) and significant wind exposure. If you survived stage 4 with legs, stage 5 is going to take them.
"Transition back" stage heading toward the Stellenbosch / Franschhoek area. The legs no longer respond like day one, but the finish line in Cape Town is within reach and that gives a huge psychological second wind. A stage to manage, not to attack.
Final stage with finish at Cape Town V&A Waterfront. Shortest distance of the Cape Epic (excluding the prologue) and moderate climbing, but with an urban finishing circuit through downtown Cape Town with thousands of spectators, a vermouth at the line, and the official finisher's ceremony with the most coveted medal in world MTB.
If you look at the full Cape Epic profile, you'll see that days 4-5 are the "plug" and days 6-7 are the "decompression finale". Structure your race plan to arrive mentally fresh at day 4 — because day 4 is where the race is decided for every amateur team.
The Absa Cape Epic was founded in 2004 by Kevin Vermaak, a South African entrepreneur who had ridden the Trans Alp a couple of years earlier and returned convinced that South Africa had the staging to create an even more spectacular stage race. The first edition had 245 teams. The sixth (2009) already exceeded 600 — the current cap — and had Absa Bank as title sponsor, a partnership that continues today.
Some palmarès highlights:
The Cape Epic finisher's medal is one of world MTB's most recognisable trophies — a bronze disc with the logo and year, given only to those who complete all 8 stages within the cutoff. Having one on the wall carries weight.
Cape Epic registration goes through an annual lottery, with a process that has changed little in the last 5 years:
| Item | Approximate price |
|---|---|
| Standard lottery entry (per team) | €7,000 - €9,000 |
| Charity entry (per team) | €12,000 - €15,000 |
| Tour operator (full package) | €11,000 - €14,000 |
| Madrid/Barcelona-Cape Town flight | €1,200 - €1,800 |
| Pre/post Cape Town hotel (3 nights) | €600 - €1,500 |
| Bike transport return | €400 - €800 |
| Minimum total per person | ~€10,000 - €13,000 |
The standard entry includes: bib, safety GPS, race village tent accommodation for all 8 nights, all meals (breakfast, aid stations, dinner), basic mechanical support, massage, kit laundry, airport transfer to the village, and the finisher's medal.
NOT included: the bike (you bring it), personal spares, international flights, pre/post Cape Town hotels, insurance and vaccinations.
The airport is Cape Town International Airport (CPT), 22 km from V&A Waterfront. Direct flights from Europe are scarce — the most efficient route from Spain is Madrid/Barcelona → Doha (Qatar Airways) → Cape Town, ~12 hours flight plus 2-3 h layover. Other options: Frankfurt-Cape Town (Lufthansa, ~11 h direct night flight), Amsterdam-Cape Town (KLM direct), or Istanbul-Cape Town (Turkish Airlines).
Visa: most EU/UK/US/Australia/Canada passports don't need a visa for tourist stays up to 90 days. Passport with 30+ days validity after departure and two blank pages.
Airport-to-V&A-Waterfront transfer: official taxi 30 min, €25-35; Uber works perfectly and is the most recommended option (€15-20). Cape Epic offers free official transfer from CPT to the race village in the days before the prologue.
Bike transport: most airlines charge extra (~€150-300 each way) for bike bag. Key tip: Qatar Airways allows a hard-shell bike bag at no extra cost if it fits within the sports baggage allowance, making it the favourite option for many Europeans.
For all 8 nights of Cape Epic you live in the race village, a camp set up at each stage's overnight location. Each team gets one Hi-Tec 4-person tent (shared by two riders) with inflatable mattresses and sleeping bags. The village includes:
It is not a 5* hotel, but after 8 hours on the bike, anything feels like paradise.
Recommended is to arrive 3-4 days before the prologue and stay 2-3 days after the final stage. Top options:
If you want to spend 1-2 extra days in wine country after the race:
March is late summer in the Western Cape. Cape Epic weather typically falls in these ranges:
Key implication: layered kit. Arm warmers + windvest + light gloves for the first 30-60 minutes of each stage, until the sun warms up. Then off and into the jersey pocket. Two-bottle minimum (preferably a Camelbak 1.5 L for long stages) — dehydration is enemy number one.
Cape Epic requires a minimum of 6 months of specific preparation, ideally 9-12. Below is a general 26-week plan that assumes you are starting with a base of 8-12 hours/week already on MTB. If you are starting with less, extend the early phases.
| Punto | Tiempo acumulado | Parcial |
|---|---|---|
| 5 km | 17:30 | 17:30 |
| 10 km | 35:00 | 17:30 |
| 15 km | 52:30 | 17:30 |
| Media (21,1 km) | 1:13:50 | 21:20 |
| 30 km | 1:45:00 | 31:10 |
| Meta | 35:00:00 | 33:15:00 |
Splits asumen ritmo constante. En carreras con desnivel real (Absa Cape Epic) — banca 5–8 s/km en bajadas y pierde el mismo margen en subidas; el ritmo medio se mantiene.
Only 5-10 teams per year fall in this range. Average pace ~24 km/h on neutral stages. Implies UCI Elite training, extreme kg/W ratio and UCI stage-race experience.
Competitive Masters and Grand Masters categories, national-level podium teams. Average pace ~20 km/h.
The vast majority of amateur teams aspire to this range. Average pace ~17 km/h.
The "enjoy it" team without going to the limit. Average pace ~15 km/h.
Close to the cutoff, but no risk if the pair stays healthy. Average pace ~13-14 km/h.
Cape Epic has a total cutoff of around 50 hours. Teams arriving in this range are ~2 % of the total.
Cape Epic nutrition is 8 days of dinner pasta + meat + vegetables + 80 g/h of carbs during the stage. Key points:
If one of the two cannot continue, the entire team loses official general classification. The remaining rider can continue racing in "Outcast" category — they keep covering all stages, but their time doesn't count for GC. The finisher's medal is awarded only if they complete all 8 stages within the cutoff. For amateur teams with an "experience" goal, this means a unilateral DNF doesn't ruin the adventure for the other person.
Realistic minimum to be a finisher within the 50-hour cutoff:
Trans Alp (Germany-Italy, 7 days) is more alpine (peaks at 2,500 m, more proportional vertical, dolomitic landscape) but less technically demanding and less hot. Cape Epic is longer, more populated by world elite, more technically demanding in loose singletrack and more logistically complex (race village, different time zone, long flights). On prestige Cape Epic > Trans Alp; on raw daily climbing accumulation Trans Alp can hit some legs harder.
The race village is included in the entry and almost all teams use it — it is part of the experience. Some top teams pay for private accommodation (~€200-400/night extra per person) to sleep better, but they miss the atmosphere. Recommendation: race village. The camaraderie of the village is part of Cape Epic.
No. Cape Epic is demanding, expensive and logistically complex. Start with a 3-4 day European stage race (Andalucía Bike Race, La Rioja Bike Race, Mediterranean Epic) to see how your body responds to consecutive days. If you pass that with good sensations, jump to Cape Epic the following season.
Full-suspension, no doubt. The hardtail saves ~1 kg but the comfort and speed in Cape Epic's technical descents more than compensate. 95 % of the top 100 ride full-suspension.
Qatar Airways is the favourite option: bike bag in hard-shell case with no extra cost (within sports baggage allowance). Madrid/Barcelona-Doha-Cape Town, ~12 h flight + 2-3 h layover.
Minimum 2-3 extra days for Cape Town (Table Mountain, Cape Point, Robben Island, V&A Waterfront) and another 2-3 for wine country (Stellenbosch, Franschhoek). If you have an extra week: Kruger National Park safari (return domestic flight, ~€1,500 per person).
| Race | Country | Format | Distance | Climbing | Comparison |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absa Cape Epic | South Africa | MTB, 8 days, pairs | ~600 km | ~16,000 m | World's nº1 MTB stage race |
| Trans Alp | Germany-Italy | MTB, 7 days, pairs | ~600 km | ~17,000 m | More alpine, less prestigious |
| Trans Provence | France | MTB, 6 days, pairs | ~250 km | ~12,000 m | Enduro/all-mountain, different beast |
| Maratona dles Dolomites | Italy | Road, 1 day | 138 km | 4,230 m | Iconic road granfondo |
| La Marmotte | France | Road, 1 day | 174 km | 5,000 m | Alpine road granfondo |
| Quebrantahuesos | Spain | Road, 1 day | 200 km | 3,500 m | Pyrenees road granfondo |
| Andalucía Bike Race | Spain | MTB, 6 days, pairs | ~400 km | ~9,000 m | Good Cape Epic preparation |
Did this guide help? Share it with your team partner. And if you have a specific question, reach us by email. Ramon has covered stage races on four continents and answers personally.
Useful official links: Cape Epic official site, Wikipedia Cape Epic, Cycling South Africa, Cape Town Tourism, Western Cape Government.
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