‘There Are Going to Be People Walking:’ A Look at the Grueling Olympic Marathon Course (2024)

The final weekend of the 2024 Paris Olympics will host back-to-back days of thrilling marathons. These prestigious races, set against the backdrop of two of France’s most iconic landscapes—Paris and Versailles—will weave through a tapestry of history, culture, and breathtaking scenery. They begin on August 10 with the men’s race, and then, in a nod to the 40th anniversary of the first women’s Olympic Marathon in Los Angeles, the Paris Olympics will conclude on August 11 with the women’s race for the first time in history.

Here are some of the key details you’ll want to know.

What sites will the runners pass?

It’s not a bad way to tour the area, and it’s quite different than the Paris Marathon that is held each April. Athletes will find themselves tracing a route that dances through nine arrondissem*nts (neighborhoods) of Paris along the banks of the Seine. The runners will begin at the Hôtel de Ville, or city hall, and then pass landmarks such as the Palais Garnier opera house, Place Vendôme, the Louvre museum, and past the Trocadéro.

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Next, they will leave the city to run through historic French towns, including Sevres, on their way to Versailles. The return to the city is a different route and will take them through the Forêt Domaniale de Meudon, a forest.

‘There Are Going to Be People Walking:’ A Look at the Grueling Olympic Marathon Course (1)

Hôtel de Ville will be where the runners begin the marathon.

When back in the city, they will be on the Left Bank and run past the Eiffel Tower as well as Parisian neighborhoods. The race ends at the Esplanade des Invalides, in which Napoleon is buried.

This route is based on significant French history. In October 1789, between 6,000 and 7,000 Parisian women, joined by men, marched from the Hôtel de Ville through the city to Versailles. It was because of that march that Louis XVI agreed to ratify the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizens. The marathoners are symbolically running in their footsteps.

How tough is the course?

Unlike some more recent Olympics and U.S. Marathon Trials races, this course isn’t a circuit of repeated loops. Instead, it’s a full loop starting in Paris and loops down to Versailles outside of the city.

While the elevation profile for the first nine miles looks fairly tame, once the runners are past the halfway mark the landscape changes. The most notable course feature is the three uphill stretches—they’re incredibly steep and very long.

The first big hill comes just before the 10-mile mark, and it climbs at a 4 percent grade, which is roughly the same as Boston’s famed Newton hills. The difference with the Paris version is that it ascends for about 1.25 miles before it levels off for a bit. (Boston’s longest hill is less than half a mile, according to Sean Hartnett, emeritus professor of geography at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, who specializes in marathon routes and other running competitions.)

The next hill at the 12-mile mark is at 5 percent, steeper than anything on the Boston course and 900 meters long. But those two are just appetizers for the real challenge. That hits just after the 18-mile mark.

Runners will have to climb for 600 meters, at an average grade of 10.5 percent. Yes, picture putting your treadmill at 10 percent and trying to run up it at marathon pace. Hartnett calls it a “doozy” and struggles to find courses to compare it to. The Bix 7 in Davenport, Iowa, perhaps? Then he gives up. “It’s unlike anything in any competitive road marathon,” he said. (You can view a detailed description of the 15K-33K section as mapped by Hartnett here.)

In total, the route will include 1,430 feet of elevation gain. Possibly more challenging is the 1,437 feet of descent. The make-or-break point for the route might be just after that final brutal uphill, when they are bombing downhill—at some points at a gradient of 13.5 percent. Runners will have to be efficient going down, without pounding so much they trash their quads before the final flat stretch before the finish.

‘There Are Going to Be People Walking:’ A Look at the Grueling Olympic Marathon Course (2)

To put the course into some more perspective, the World Marathon Majors that are considered the hilliest—Boston and New York City—each have an elevation gain of a little over 800 total feet. And for one final nugget, the average grade of the Mount Washington Auto Road Race is 12 percent. The course record for that 7.4-miler is at around 8:00 pace.

This course will make the fastest marathoners in the world look almost human at times.

How do the marathoners feel about the course?

Pat Tiernan, an Olympian for Australia who is running the marathon, made two trips to Paris from his training base with Puma in North Carolina to examine the course. His first trip, in early April, was just to get a feel for the course. The second, in late May, was to train on it.

“The first thing you notice,” Tiernan said in a phone call with Runner’s World, “is that it’s going to be a brutal course. There are going to be people walking.”

If you look closely at the official Strava route, you can spot some U.S. Olympic marathoners on the leaderboards of the course’s toughest segments.

On April 10, U.S. team member Clayton Young did a 12.80-mile run on the hilliest section of the course, where he “pushed the uphills, chilled the downhills.” During the steepest climb—right before the mile 18 split—Young tackled a .44-mile segment in 3:09, giving him a modest average pace (for a world-class marathoner) of 7:01 per mile. But if you look at Strava’s “grade adjusted pace,” which factors in elevation, that 7:01 converts to 5:03 mile pace. His average heart rate was 179 beats per minute.

Dakotah Lindwurm, a U.S. team member for the women, also previewed the course in April in a run she called, “Tour de La Olympic hills 🥴].” She racked up an impressive 16 “course records” during her 10.87-mile workout, and on the same steep segment that Young ran, she averaged 7:43 pace with a grade-adjusted pace of 5:21 per mile.

Emily Sisson, the U.S. record holder in the marathon, has been training for both the hills and the flats. “We’ve been doing a lot of stuff on hills, because [we] want to come out of the hills into the last 10K feeling good,” she says. “That’s also why you don’t want to slack on 10K work, because it could be quite fast at the end. So kind of trying to do it all.”

Tiernan agreed with Sisson on the unique challenge. If marathoners go too hard through the hills, they could struggle at the end, he said. If they go too easy through the hills and subsequent descents, they might be out of touch by the final 10K. He said the Paris course is as “if you were to do a 10K road race, then go and run a hard 10K hill cross country course, then a 10K road race.”

If nothing else, it could make for some surprises on the podium.

When exactly are the races?

The men’s event happens on Saturday, August 10. If you want to watch live, get your favorite espresso ready. The event begins at 2 a.m. ET/11 p.m. PT in the U.S. The following day for the women’s race, the 2024 Paris Olympics fully conclude in honor of the 40th anniversary of the first women’s Olympic marathon event, won by Joan Benoit-Samuelson. The start time is also at 2 a.m. ET/11 p.m. PT.

Who are the major names in each race?

Both races are packed with star power in the form of returning Olympic champions, world record holders, and World Marathon Majors winners. The biggest storyline in the men’s race is whether Eliud Kipchoge, the two-time Olympic marathon gold medalist who many consider to be the greatest of all time, will be able to retain his crown in what may be his final Olympics at age 39.

The women’s event is even more stacked and should make for quite the event to cap off the 2024 Olympics. Newly ratified world record holder Tigist Assefa of Ethiopia will have to match speed and strategy against the likes of Hellen Obiri and Peres Jepchirchir of Kenya and the Netherlands’s Sifan Hassan, who is running the marathon after racing in the 5,000 and 10,000 meters on the track.

Men’s Marathon Contenders

  • Eliud Kipchoge, Kenya (2:01:09)
  • Kenenisa Bekele, Ethiopia (2:01:41)
  • Benson Kipruto, Kenya (2:02:16)
  • Tamirat Tola, Ethiopia (2:03:39)
  • Conner Mantz, USA (2:07:47)
  • Clayton Young, USA (2:08:00)

Women’s Marathon Contenders

  • Tigist Assefa, Ethiopia (2:11:53)
  • Sifan Hassan, Netherlands (2:13:44)
  • Peres Jepchirchir, Kenya (2:16:16)
  • Emily Sisson, USA (2:18:29)
  • Hellen Obiri, Kenya (2:21:38)
  • Rose Chelimo, Bahrain (2:22:51)
  • Fiona O’Keeffe, USA (2:22:10)
  • Sharon Lokedi, Kenya (2:22:45)

Did you know there is a mass participation race?

If not, now you do. It’s called the Marathon Pour Tous, and we’re pretty jealous we can’t run this one. There will be a full marathon and a 10K on the same route as the Olympic marathon on the evening of August 10. Yes, a night race in the City of Lights. More than 20,000 participants are expected for each event.

—Taylor Dutch, Theo Kahler, and Cindy Kuzma contributed to this story.

‘There Are Going to Be People Walking:’ A Look at the Grueling Olympic Marathon Course (3)

Sarah Lorge Butler

Sarah Lorge Butler is a writer and editor living in Eugene, Oregon, and her stories about the sport, its trends, and fascinating individuals have appeared in Runner’s World since 2005. She is the author of two popular fitness books, Run Your Butt Off! and Walk Your Butt Off!

‘There Are Going to Be People Walking:’ A Look at the Grueling Olympic Marathon Course (4)

Brian Dalek

Director of Content Operations, Runner’s World & Bicycling

Brian has spent more than a decade focused on creating compelling news, health, and fitness content—with a particular interest on enthusiast activities like running and cycling. He’s coordinated coverage of major events like the Boston Marathon, New York City Marathon, and Tour de France, with an eye toward both the professional race and the engaging stories readers love.

‘There Are Going to Be People Walking:’ A Look at the Grueling Olympic Marathon Course (2024)

FAQs

Where does the Olympic Marathon end? ›

The 42.195km route of the Paris 2024 Olympic marathon will pass by some of the most relevant monuments of the Seine capital. It starts at the City Hall (Hotel Ville) and ends at 'Les Invalides'.

How to watch marathon Olympics? ›

Those watching in the United States can see the races on the USA Network, with coverage starting at 2 a.m. It will also be available to watch on NBC's Peaco*ck.

Where is the starting point for the 2024 Olympic Marathon? ›

The 2024 marathon route will follow the 1789 marchers' path, with the route beginning at the Hôtel de Ville in Paris and looping around Versailles before ending at the historic Esplanade des Invalides.

How far is the Paris Olympic Marathon? ›

The 26.2-mile course for both races links the Hôtel de Ville in Paris to Versailles and passes nine of the Île-de-France region's districts, as well as well-known sights, parks and forests. The route contains a 436-meter climb and 438-meter descent with a maximum incline of 13.5 percent.

Who won the race walking? ›

Spain's Martin Alvaro and Maria Perez win race walk mixed relay in the event's Olympic debut | NBC Olympics.

Where did the Battle of Marathon end? ›

The Battle of Marathon was fought between a Persian army and a mostly Athenian Greek army in 490 BCE during the first Greco-Persian War. The outnumbered Athenians famously defeated the Persian armies on the beach of Marathon, some 40 kilometers (25 miles) from Athens.

How long is an Olympic marathon? ›

The marathon was invented to headline the first Olympic Games in Athens in 1896, playing on the storied myth of Pheidippides who ran 26 miles or thereabouts from Marathon to Athens to deliver news of a famous Greek victory over the Persians.

How does the Olympic marathon work? ›

Each country can send a maximum of three women and three men to the Olympic marathon – but no country is guaranteed three spots. Countries can “unlock” their Olympic spots if athletes achieve one of the following: Run a fast enough qualifying time (two hours, eight minutes and 10 seconds for men, 2:26:50 for women).

How to watch men's Olympic marathon 2024? ›

All events at the 2024 Paris Olympics are being aired on the NBC family of networks, which includes NBC, USA Network, and CNBC, as well as Spanish broadcasts Universo and Telemundo. All the events also can be streamed live on Peaco*ck, Fubo ― which offers a free trial ― and NBCOlympics.com.

Who is running in the Olympic Marathon 2024? ›

Assefa will be present, too. Other contenders include the winners of the 2022 and 2023 New York City Marathon, Sharon Lokedi and Hellen Obiri of Kenya. Obiri also won the Boston Marathon in 2023 and 2024. Past world champion Rose Chelimo of Bahrain also is expected to be in the running.

Where is the Big 5 marathon held? ›

🙌 🏃 The Big Five Marathon is roaring back on 15 June 2024, offering you a thrilling race through the untamed savannah of Entabeni, South Africa. 🌍🏃‍♀️ Whether you're conquering the half or full marathon, it's your chance to run alongside the iconic Big Five game animals in their natural habitat.

How to enter Paris Olympic Marathon 2024? ›

Using the 'Marathon Pour Tous Paris 2024' app, or the clubparis2024.org website, earn points by doing sport (walking, cycling, swimming, running) or by taking part in games and quizzes. Players with 100,000 points qualify for the draw at the beginning of 2024. Almost 40,000 players are selected!

How much does it cost to run the Paris Marathon? ›

Seven Continents Club
Your ExperiencePrice fromAvailability
Paris Marathon 2025 - Entry OnlyFrom £159.00Book now
Paris Marathon 2025 - Hotel Only PackageFrom £249.00Book now
Paris Marathon 2025 - Premium PackageFrom £649.00Book now

Is there a time limit for the Paris Marathon? ›

Time Limit: The course time limit is six hours from the last participant crossing the start line. Number Pickup: You will need to pick-up your race bib at the Salon du Running (Parc des Expositions de la Porte de Versailles) from Thursday, April 10 through Saturday, April 12. Learn more here.

How many people finish the Paris Marathon? ›

51,100 out of 52,078 starters finished the race (98%) A fabulous course with a revamped finale in the streets of the French capital 43%...

Where is the closing ceremony for the Olympics 2024? ›

When is the 2024 Olympics Closing Ceremony? The closing ceremony is set for Sunday, Aug. 11 at Stade de France just north of Paris.

Where is the NYC marathon ending? ›

The race finishes at 67th Street on West Drive.

Where does the Seattle marathon end? ›

Current course

The marathon course begins on 5th Avenue N and Harrison Street near the Space Needle, and ends in the nearby Memorial Stadium. The course first heads southwest into Downtown Seattle before heading north via Interstate 5 and crossing the Lake Washington Ship Canal via Ship Canal Bridge.

Where does the Houston marathon end? ›

The Chevron Houston Marathon and Aramco Houston Half Marathon start line is on Congress Avenue at Fannin. Entry to the start line corrals is only a few blocks from the George R. Brown Convention Center. The finish is at Lamar and Crawford, one block up from the George R.

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