
Great North Run 2026 Complete Guide — The World's Largest Half Marathon
📖 14 min read 📝 3,200 words 🎯 Skim friendly
Great North Run 2026 Complete Guide
By Ramon Curto · Updated 2026-05-06

📖 14 min read 📝 3,200 words 🎯 Skim friendly
By Ramon Curto · Updated 2026-05-06
On Sunday, September 13, 2026 Newcastle upon Tyne hosts the world's largest half marathon. ~57,000 finishers, start at Town Moor, Tyne Bridge at km 1 as the postcard welcome and finish on the South Shields seafront with the North Sea as backdrop. The AJ Bell Great North Run isn't just another race: it's the institution that invented mass-participation running in the UK back in 1981 and the event the rest of the international calendar tries to imitate. This guide covers what the official site doesn't quite spell out: what the net downhill really feels like, where the race breaks, how to train for it in 12 weeks, what realistic time to expect and how to nail the weekend logistics across Newcastle and South Shields.
| Item | Info |
|---|---|
| Date | Sunday, September 13, 2026 |
| Distance | 21.0975 km (half marathon) |
| Profile | Net downhill (~80 m net altitude loss) |
| Start | Town Moor, Newcastle upon Tyne |
| Finish | South Shields seafront |
| Start time | ~10:10 elite, waves until 11:30 |
| Field size | ~57,000 finishers (the world's largest half marathon) |
| Organizer | Great Run Company (founded by Brendan Foster, 1981) |
| Title sponsor | AJ Bell (since 2024) |
| Registration | greatrun.org/great-north-run |
The AJ Bell Great North Run is the half marathon with the most history and the largest field in the world. Organized by the Great Run Company since 1981, it gathers ~57,000 finishers every year, attracts runners from 60+ countries and combines the most intense atmosphere on the international calendar with a net downhill profile that has historically favoured personal bests. ITV broadcasts live, ~250,000 applications come in annually for the ballot — the Great North Run isn't a race, it's the institution that invented mass-participation running in the UK.
Lead pack of the Great North Run crossing Tyne Bridge at km 1, with the Tyne River and Newcastle skyline as backdrop — the postcard that defines the race.
Newcastle upon Tyne sits in north-east England, on the banks of the Tyne River, and the race starts from Town Moor (the large green area north of the city centre). The first thing you meet is Tyne Bridge at km 1 — the green bridge linking Newcastle with Gateshead. It's one of the most recognizable visual icons in the international running calendar, the equivalent of the Verrazzano in NYC or Tower Bridge in London. From there the course descends towards the south-east suburbs (Felling, Heworth) until reaching the South Shields seafront with views of the North Sea. Net downhill — ~80 m net loss — but the sea wind can show up in the final 5 km and flip your splits upside down.
The Great North Run course connects two cities: it starts at Newcastle's Town Moor, crosses the Tyne Bridge by km 1, runs through Gateshead and the south-east suburbs (Felling, Heworth), and finishes on the South Shields seafront with the North Sea as backdrop. Net downhill (~80 m net loss) over 21.1 km — a profile that's friendly to a PB, although there are two small climbs in the first half and the wildcard of the sea wind in the final stretch.
Official Great North Run map showing the full route Newcastle → Gateshead → Felling → Heworth → South Shields, highlighting the Tyne Bridge at km 1 and the seafront finish.
Recent editions have started from Town Moor, north of Newcastle's centre, in staggered waves that kick off at 10:10 with the elite block and continue until 11:30 with the final pens. The first kilometre drops down the A167 towards the centre, and before reaching km 2 you meet the postcard: Tyne Bridge — the green art-deco bridge from 1928 connecting Newcastle with Gateshead. Crossing it with 57,000 runners and thousands of spectators on the quaysides is one of the most photographed moments in world running.
After the Tyne Bridge the course climbs slightly into Gateshead (km 2–4, a small rise of 30–40 m) and then snakes south-east on the A184 through Felling, Heworth and the South Tyneside suburbs. The middle section is undulating with a downhill bias — no dramatic gradients but long false flats. Around km 16 the course aims for the final stretch: the last 5K is the most exposed, dropping towards South Shields, with the final 1.5–2 km running along The Leas seafront with the North Sea on your left. The finish is right on the promenade.
Tarmac is the dominant surface (wide urban and suburban roads, no significant cobble). Water stations sit roughly every 3 miles (~5 km) — Lucozade Sport at some key points, and a solid station (gels) around km 13–14. Crowd density is maximum on the Tyne Bridge, in central Gateshead and over the final 3 km to the finish — thinner in the middle suburbs but never fully empty: the Great North is famous for having spectators across the entire route.
Forget the "all downhill" myth. The course loses net altitude but isn't a slide. The elevation breaks down like this:
🚨 Where the race breaks
Course data for Strava / Garmin: the organizer publishes the official GPX a few weeks before the race on its site. To preview the profile during the week, search Strava for public Great North segments — several of the route's icons (Tyne Bridge, John Reid Road) have popular segments with hundreds of thousands of attempts.
The Great North Run has been held since 1981, when olympic medallist Brendan Foster — bronze in the 10,000 m at Montreal '76 and a BBC commentator — designed the race inspired by a popular event he had run in New Zealand. The first edition drew around 12,000 participants; in 2014 it reached 41,615 finishers, certified by Guinness World Records in 2016 as the world's largest half marathon. Today it tops ~57,000 annual finishers and ITV broadcasts it live. Title sponsorship has gone through Bupa (1990s–2014), Morrisons (2015), Simplyhealth (2017–2022) and since 2024 it's been AJ Bell.
Recent edition winner crossing the finish line in South Shields with medal and the North Sea as backdrop — the iconic image that anchors the past-winners section.
Race and past-winners data (recent editions):
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| First Great North Run edition | 1981 |
| Editions held | 44 (as of 2025) |
| Distance | Half marathon (21.0975 km) |
| Finishers (recent editions) | ~57,000 |
| Finish rate | 95%+ |
| Men's elite course record | 58:56 (Martin Mathathi, KEN, 2011) |
| Women's elite course record | 1:04:28 (Brigid Kosgei, KEN, 2019) |
Verified winners and times from the 5 most recent editions:
| Year | 🥇 Men's | Country | Time | 🥇 Women's | Country | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | Alex Mutiso | 🇰🇪 KEN | 1:00:52 | Sheila Chepkirui | 🇰🇪 KEN | 1:09:32 |
| 2024 | Abel Kipchumba | 🇰🇪 KEN | 59:52 | Mary Ngugi-Cooper | 🇰🇪 KEN | 1:07:40 |
| 2023 | Tamirat Tola | 🇪🇹 ETH | 59:58 | Peres Jepchirchir | 🇰🇪 KEN | 1:06:45 |
| 2022 | Jacob Kiplimo | 🇺🇬 UGA | 59:33 | Hellen Obiri | 🇰🇪 KEN | 1:07:05 |
| 2021 | Marc Scott | 🇬🇧 GBR | 1:01:22 | Hellen Obiri | 🇰🇪 KEN | 1:07:42 |
Data verified against the public archive at Great North Run (Wikipedia EN).
Registration for the AJ Bell Great North Run runs primarily by public ballot, not first-come-first-served. The ballot opens in early February (~7 months before the race), receives ~250,000 applications for ~57,000 places and resolves by lottery in March. The standard bib price ranges from £64–95 depending on wave. If you don't get in via the ballot, there are three alternative routes: charity bibs (fundraising commitment of £200–500+ for charity organizations), Club Place (for clubs affiliated with UK Athletics) and Champion Place (for elite and sub-elite runners with verified times).
Aerial shot of the massive field crossing the Tyne Bridge — the image that defines the scale of the Great North Run and reinforces the "57,000 runners, places gone fast" message.
2025 edition reference at close:
The Great North Run doesn't work like European halves with early-bird tiers: most runners enter via ballot at a single price. Alternative routes work differently — especially charity, where the bib is included but you commit to fundraising a minimum amount.
| Route | Opens | Bib price | Extra commitment |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🟢 Public ballot | ~Feb 2026 | £64–95 | Lottery in March, not guaranteed |
| 🟡 Charity bib | Mar–Jul 2026 | Included | £200–500+ fundraising for the organization |
| 🟠 Club Place | Feb–Apr 2026 | £64–95 | UK Athletics affiliated clubs only |
| 🔴 Champion Place | Mar–Jul 2026 | Variable | Verified time (sub-elite and elite) |
Indicative prices based on the 2025 edition structure. Always confirm on the official Great North Run site — amounts and deadlines update there.
| Included in price | NOT included (optional extra) |
|---|---|
| ✅ Bib with chip timing | ❌ Official professional photo (~£15–25) |
| ✅ Finisher technical T-shirt | ❌ Saturday pasta party (extra) |
| ✅ Finisher medal | ❌ Premium bag-drop service |
| ✅ On-course aid stations | ❌ Cancellation insurance |
| ✅ Post-finish bag (fruit, isotonic) | ❌ Return transport South Shields → Newcastle (Metro: included in some editions) |
| ✅ Access to the South Shields finish village | |
| ✅ Digital diploma with certified time |
What to keep in mind beyond the bib price:
Family members and runners at the Great North Run Health and Fitness Expo, with stands or the bib pickup counter visible.
Bib pickup happens at the Great North Run Health and Fitness Expo, normally held over the two days before the race (Friday and Saturday) in Newcastle (recent editions at the Utilita Arena Newcastle, next to the city centre). In some editions, the bib is mailed to your registration address 2–3 weeks beforehand — always confirm the year's method when you register.
If you need to pick up in person, you'll need:
Friends and family can pick up for you with a signed authorization and a copy of your ID. The race kit normally includes the finisher technical T-shirt, the bib with chip, a bag tag, the race guide and a course map. Finisher medals are handed out in the post-finish area after crossing the line, in the South Shields village.
The Big Half and the Great Run Series. The Great North Run is part of the Great Run Series, a constellation of UK races organized by the same company: Great Manchester Run (May), Great Birmingham Run (May), Great North Run (September), Great Scottish Run (October) and others. If you like the format and you're making a UK trip, scanning the full calendar opens up options.
The most practical way to reach Newcastle is by train: Newcastle Central Station is connected with London (LNER, ~3 h), Edinburgh (~1.5 h), Manchester, York and every major UK city. LNER trains (London → Edinburgh) are the main service on the East Coast Main Line. If you're flying, Newcastle Airport sits north of the city with a direct Metro Tyne and Wear (green line) connection to the centre in ~25 minutes.
Newcastle Central Station, the Tyne Bridge or a recognizable Metro Tyne and Wear entrance — visual reference for first-time visitors to Newcastle.
For race morning: the Metro Tyne and Wear is the optimal way to reach Town Moor. Haymarket and Jesmond stations are ~10 minutes' walk from the start area. The Metro starts running around 06:00. Plan to be in your pen 45–60 minutes before your wave's start — the platforms fill up fast and the queues at the toilet trailers explode in the final 30 minutes.
To return from the finish in South Shields you have three options:
For the expo, the closest stations depend on the year's venue. In recent editions the Utilita Arena Newcastle sits ~5 minutes' walk from Newcastle Central Station (Metro green / yellow line).
Coming by car isn't recommended. Newcastle's centre and the roads to Town Moor are closed from early morning until mid-afternoon, and the parking near start and finish saturates. If you have to drive, park at a peripheral Metro station (Heworth, Whitley Bay) and come in by public transport.
For a Great North runner, staying within 15 minutes' walk of either start or finish isn't a luxury: it's logistics. The race spits you out at the finish between 11:30 and 14:00 depending on wave — you head back to your accommodation sweating, hungry, with cramps coming on. The difference between sleeping well with an early breakfast and a 10-minute walk to your pen versus catching a 7:30 Metro with two transfers can cost you 1 minute on the clock and twice that in mental stress.
View of Newcastle's Quayside with the Tyne Bridge and Millennium Bridge — visual reference for the most touristy accommodation zone.
| Hotel | Cat. | £/night* | To start | Runner highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hilton Newcastle Gateshead | 4* | 110–170 £ | 2.5 km · Metro 1 stop | Tyne views, gym, AC |
| Crowne Plaza Newcastle | 4* | 120–180 £ | 1.8 km · 22 min | Stephenson Quarter, Central Station link |
| Malmaison Newcastle | 4* boutique | 130–200 £ | 2.2 km · Metro | Quayside boutique, late check-out |
| Hampton by Hilton Newcastle | 3* | 80–120 £ | 2.0 km · 25 min | Strong value |
| Sandman Signature Newcastle Hotel | 4* | 100–150 £ | 1.7 km · 20 min | Large rooms |
| Hotel | Cat. | £/night* | To start | Runner highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vermont Hotel | 4* | 120–180 £ | 2.8 km · Metro | Beside Tyne Bridge, historic building |
| Crowne Plaza Newcastle (Stephenson Quarter) | 4* | 120–180 £ | 1.8 km · 22 min | Close to Central Station |
| Hilton Garden Inn Newcastle Quayside | 4* | 110–160 £ | 3.0 km · Metro | Tyne views, gym |
| Malmaison Newcastle | 4* boutique | 130–200 £ | 2.2 km · Metro | Quayside boutique, bathtub |
| Hotel du Vin Newcastle | 4* boutique | 140–210 £ | 2.5 km · Metro | Premium boutique on Quayside |
| Hotel | Cat. | £/night* | To finish | Runner highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Sea Hotel | 3* | 80–140 £ | 0.8 km · 10 min | Seafront, beside the promenade |
| Best Western Sea Hotel | 3* | 90–150 £ | 1.0 km · 12 min | Sea views, finish zone |
| Little Haven Hotel | 3* | 70–120 £ | 1.5 km · 18 min | Boutique opposite the beach |
| Premier Inn South Shields | 3* | 70–110 £ | 2.0 km · 25 min | Reliable chain, AC |
| Marsden Grotto / local B&Bs | B&B | 60–100 £ | 1.0–2.0 km | Local character, hearty breakfast |
*Indicative race weekend rates (second Sunday in September). Varies depending on booking lead time, availability and current promotions.
The weather in Newcastle in mid-September averages 10 °C low and 17 °C high with grey but mild days about 60% of the time, according to Met Office historical data. Light rain is common (drizzle in 2 of every 5 recent editions), but the variable that defines the Great North Run is the North Sea wind — from km 16, when the course aims for the coastal final stretch into South Shields, the wind can show up head-on and break the splits of the final 5K.
Recent edition finishers on the South Shields seafront with their medals on a soft grey day — the standard pattern for the second Sunday of September in north-east England.
The variable to watch is the wind. For the half, mild temperatures (12–18 °C) are nearly always favourable — the race has rarely been run in extreme heat. What separates a fast edition from a slow one is the wind direction along the coast:
Plan by forecast:
The coach's tip: if the 48 h forecast shows easterly wind above 20 km/h, revise your plan downwards by 30–60 seconds on your initial target. Net downhill compensates part of it, but not all.
The recommended plan to prepare for the AJ Bell Great North Run is a 12-week block with peak volume in weeks 8–10 (between 35 km and 90+ km weekly depending on goal), one weekly long run and a two-week taper. The key for Great North: train at least two long runs with downhill false-flat sections (to learn not to burn yourself with the "easy" feel of net downhill) and one long tempo session in wind-exposed conditions if you live near the coast.
Runner crossing the Great North Run finish in South Shields or training on a seafront — aspirational image anchoring the 12-week plan.
Approach Great North as a net downhill half marathon with variable wind, not as a guaranteed flat track. Pick your goal and follow the table — these are peak volumes (weeks 8–10), not averages across the full cycle.
| Goal | Average pace | Peak weekly vol. | Peak long run |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2h15 | 6:24 min/km | 25–35 km | 16–18 km |
| 2h00 | 5:41 min/km | 35–45 km | 18–20 km |
| 1h45 | 4:58 min/km | 45–60 km | 20–22 km |
| 1h40 | 4:44 min/km | 55–65 km | 22–24 km |
| 1h35 | 4:30 min/km | 60–75 km | 22–24 km |
| 1h30 | 4:16 min/km | 70–85 km | 24–26 km |
| ≤1h25 | 4:01 min/km | 85–100+ km | 24–28 km |
How to read the table and build the cycle:
Three sessions worth their weight in gold for Great North:
Taper is two weeks, not three. Week 11 at 65% of peak volume, week 12 at 40% holding race-pace short pickups. The last long run (week 9 or 10) is the one that fills the cup — don't invent a "test" the week before.
Don't know what realistic goal time you have for Great North? Cross your best recent 10K with the "Great North" factor (which includes the favourable net downhill and variable wind):
| Your best recent 10K | Flat half equivalent | Realistic Great North |
|---|---|---|
| 38:00 | sub-1:24 | 1:22–1:25 |
| 42:00 | sub-1:33 | 1:31–1:34 |
| 46:00 | sub-1:42 | 1:40–1:43 |
| 50:00 | sub-1:51 | 1:49–1:53 |
| 54:00 | sub-2:00 | 1:58–2:02 |
| 58:00 | sub-2:09 | 2:07–2:12 |
| 62:00 | sub-2:18 | 2:16–2:21 |
How to read it: the "flat" column is the unadjusted Riegel conversion (your 10K × ~2.21). Great North gains 1–2% from net downhill in favourable conditions, but loses 1–3% if the sea wind is head-on — that gives you the realistic range. If the forecast is favourable wind and your fitness is at peak, aim for the low end. If easterly, the high end.
Once you have your goal time, this calculator gives you the required average pace (in min/km and min/mi) and the cumulative splits at 5K, 10K, 15K, 10 miles and finish. Change the goal time in the field below and the table updates instantly:
| Punto | Tiempo acumulado | Parcial |
|---|---|---|
| 5 km | 24:53 | 24:53 |
| 10 km | 49:46 | 24:53 |
| 15 km | 1:14:39 | 24:53 |
| Media (21,1 km) | 1:45:00 | 30:21 |
| Meta | 1:45:00 | 0:00 |
Splits asumen ritmo constante. En carreras con desnivel real (Great North Run) — 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 do I start with? How many gels do I carry? When do I take the caffeine? What do I do if at km 10 I'm 30 seconds above target?
Configure your goal, strategy and aid plan. The planner generates a personalised plan by segment (with paces, HR zones, mental cues and minute-by-minute fuelling), a race-morning checklist, and a Plan B for the unexpected (sea wind, crowded waves, drizzle). Download it as PDF to take with you on race day.
PDF A4, optimizado para imprimir y llevar el día de carrera.
You're in the pen on Town Moor. You've done the 12-week plan. What separates a great training block from a great time is what you do over the next 90–130 minutes.
The race plan for Great North must combine conservative pacing in km 1–3 (Tyne Bridge + congestion + small Gateshead climb), goal pace from km 3–15 cashing in on the net downhill without burning yourself, and push or hold from km 16 to 21 depending on how you arrive at the coastal stretch. Each goal time (sub-1:30 to finish) has a specific split pattern.
| Goal | Target splits | Great North–specific tactical note |
|---|---|---|
| sub-1:30 | 4:16 min/km | Net downhill: cash in km 4–14 at 4:10 without overcooking. Hold 4:20 in the final 5K if there's wind. Cross 10K in 42:30. |
| sub-1:35 | 4:30 min/km | Conservative in km 0–3 (crowded Tyne Bridge). Aim for 4:25 between km 5–15. Cross 10K in 44:45. |
| sub-1:40 | 4:44 min/km | Cross 10K in 47:00. Hold the final 5K at 4:50; attack only if you arrive with legs. |
| sub-1:45 | 4:58 min/km | No rush km 1–3. Cross 10K in 49:30. Walk 10 s at every aid station. |
| sub-2:00 | 5:41 min/km | The classic mistake is going out at 5:30 on the Tyne Bridge euphoria. Hold 5:45 the first 3 km. Walk 15 s at every aid station. |
| sub-2:15 | 6:24 min/km | Very even splits: 6:20–6:30 throughout. Walk-run strategy from km 15 if you need it. |
| Finish | 6:30–7:30 | No watch. Enjoy the Tyne Bridge at km 1, the crowd signs and the seafront arrival. |
This is where Great North is decided. Three anchors:
The nutrition strategy for a half marathon pivots around 30–60 g of carbs per hour depending on goal, with 1–3 gels spread every 30–40 minutes from km 6–8. Carb loading over the 2 days before should be 6–8 g/kg/day, and Saturday dinner should be light and familiar (pasta or rice). It's not a marathon — you don't need the massive load nor the 6–8 gels you'd carry for 42K.
Volunteer at a Great North Run aid station serving Lucozade Sport or water.
Saturday dinner is light, familiar and on the early side (eat before 21:00). Pasta or white rice with grilled chicken or fish, bread, fruit. Zero experiments. Newcastle has plenty of solid Italian options in the centre and Quayside.
Race-morning breakfast depends on whether you wake up hungry. The safe play: toast with honey/jam + banana + coffee (if you take it regularly). 60–80 g of carbs, eaten 2.5–3 hours before the start. If your stomach closes up with nerves, swap for a sports drink with 60 g of carbs.
What the organizer puts on course:
Carbs plan by goal:
| Goal | Carbs / hour | Gels to carry | When to take |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2h15 | 30 g/h | 1–2 gels | km 8, km 15 |
| 2h00 | 30–45 g/h | 2 gels | km 7, km 14 |
| 1h45 | 45–60 g/h | 2–3 gels | km 6, km 12, km 17 |
| 1h30 | 60 g/h | 3 gels | km 5, km 10, km 15 |
| ≤1h25 | 60–75 g/h | 3 gels | km 5, km 10, km 15 |
Three mistakes you see every year at the Great North Run:
Hydration by forecast:
Post-finish recovery — the first hour counts:
The best shoes for the AJ Bell Great North Run are light carbon-plate race shoes for sub-1:30, carbon plate or super-trainer between 1:30–1:45 (Saucony Endorphin Speed, Hoka Mach X), and a light daily trainer for over 1:45 (Nike Pegasus, ASICS Cumulus, Brooks Ghost). What matters isn't the brand but that they're already broken in and don't exceed 250–350 km of use.
Close-up of race shoes on the Great North Run start line on Town Moor — multiple brands visible.
Unlike a marathon, in the half the weight of the shoe matters more than the protection. An ultra-light carbon-plate saves you 4% of energy without the cumulative impact of 21 km wrecking the quads the way it would in a marathon. For runners coming from 10K and stepping up to a half, the light carbon-plate race shoe is the optimal pick if your goal is aggressive.
Recommendations by goal:
| Goal | Category | Common models |
|---|---|---|
| ≤1h25 | Light "race" carbon plate | Nike Alphafly 3 · adidas Adios Pro Evo · ASICS Metaspeed Sky · Saucony Endorphin Elite |
| 1h25–1h45 | Carbon plate | Nike Vaporfly 4 · adidas Adios Pro 4 · ASICS Metaspeed Edge · Saucony Endorphin Pro |
| 1h45–2h00 | Carbon plate or super-trainer | Saucony Endorphin Speed · Hoka Mach X · Puma Deviate Nitro Elite · ASICS Magic Speed |
| 2h00+ | Light daily trainer | Nike Pegasus · ASICS Cumulus · Brooks Ghost · Hoka Clifton |
Check this before you leave home:
Not "all the way" — but yes in net terms. The course loses about 80 m of net altitude between Newcastle (Town Moor) and South Shields, but there's a small climb at km 2–4 (entry to Gateshead, ~30–40 m) and undulating sections in the middle part. The general feel is friendly to a personal best — but it's not a continuous slide. And the final 5K on the seafront is flat and exposed to wind, which neutralizes part of the net-downhill advantage.
The public ballot opens in early February and closes a few weeks later. It receives ~250,000 applications for ~57,000 places — the chance of getting in via lottery is roughly 1 in 4 (~25%). If you don't get in, you have three alternative routes: charity bib (with a £200–500+ fundraising commitment), Club Place (if you're affiliated with UK Athletics) or Champion Place (if you have a verified time).
Yes. The Great North Run closes the course 3 hours after the last pen of your wave starts, equivalent to about 8:30 min/km. Walking is allowed; the course has staggered partial closures (streets reopen to traffic after the last runner passes through each zone). If you're aiming for a finish-without-time-limit and your projected pace is around 8:30/km, look at the late waves — entering an early one gives you more margin.
No. Pickup is restricted to the Great North Run Health and Fitness Expo on Friday and Saturday. In some editions, the bib is mailed to your registration address 2–3 weeks before — always confirm the year's method. No bibs are handed out on race day under any circumstances.
There's a bag transfer service that moves your bag from the start (Town Moor) to the finish village (South Shields). Tag it with the printed sticker that comes in the kit, drop it 30–45 minutes before your wave and pick it up in the finishers' zone after you finish. There's staff but no ID check, so don't bring irreplaceable valuables.
Yes, headphones are allowed at the Great North Run. That said, the urban support along the route is one of the great attractions of the race — live bands, crowds across the 21 km, finish-line PA, ITV broadcasting. Many runners prefer to run without headphones to soak in the atmosphere. If you wear them, keep the volume low so you can hear race-direction calls.
Three options: the Metro Tyne and Wear (green line, South Shields station) is the most practical but gets very saturated in the hours after the race (30–60 min waits). In some editions there are official shuttle buses from the village to Newcastle. And taxi/Uber is expensive and slow because of the traffic gridlock around South Shields. If your accommodation is in South Shields, problem solved.
For sub-1:30, a light carbon-plate race shoe (Nike Alphafly, Adidas Adios Pro Evo, ASICS Metaspeed Sky). For 1:30–1:45, a protective carbon plate (Vaporfly 4, Adios Pro 4, Saucony Endorphin Pro). For over 1:45, a super-trainer or light daily trainer (Hoka Mach X, Saucony Endorphin Speed, Nike Pegasus). What matters most isn't the brand but that they're already broken in and don't exceed 250–350 km of use.
Light drizzle is common — technical kit (no cotton), peaked cap and stick to the plan. The North Sea wind is what penalizes most: if the 48 h forecast shows easterly wind above 20 km/h, adjust your goal down by 30–60 seconds on your plan. Drop target pace at km 12, not at km 18 — that way you reach the coastal stretch with margin to hold the effort when the wind hits head-on.
Yes, it's excellent for debutants. Net downhill, epic atmosphere (57,000 runners, ITV broadcasting, crowds across the route), massive organization with full medical cover and plentiful aid stations, staggered waves so you start in your pace bracket. The only catch: the ballot complicates planning — if your first half has a fixed date, look at first-come races like Lisbon Half or Valencia Half. If you have flexibility and you get in via ballot or charity, Great North is a memorable first half.
The AJ Bell Great North Run is the world's largest and most historic half marathon, with a net-downhill profile that's friendly to personal bests. If you're chasing a pure PB without coastal variables, Valencia or Lisbon are more reliable; if you want absolute mass-race atmosphere and an epic experience, Great North is unmatched.
All are half marathon (21.0975 km), so the choice depends on month, profile and what you're after:
| Race | Month | Profile | Best for | Atmosphere |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Great North Run (this guide) | September | Net downhill ~80 m | Epic atmosphere · masses · experience | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Zurich Madrid Half | March | ~150 m D+ | Spanish urban atmosphere | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Lisbon Half Marathon | March | Flat | Pure PB · Tagus bridge | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Paris Half Marathon | March | Flat-rolling | Spring PB · French atmosphere | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Berlin Half Marathon | April | Flat | Pure PB · fast track | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| United Airlines NYC Half | March | Rolling | NYC atmosphere · Central Park finish | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
Did this guide help? If you're running the Great North Run 2026, save the event in SportPlan to get registration-window alerts, expo reminders and, after, log your result.
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