TheMarathon Clinic
Course pacing

How to pace the Auckland Marathon

The Barfoot & Thompson Auckland Marathon is a genuinely hilly marathon, with about 217 m of climbing and 217 m of descent (a near-level net change). Pace it by even effort, not even splits. Ease the climbs and protect your quads on the descents, or the hills will take far more than they give back.

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Next Auckland Marathon

Sunday 1 November 2026

About 18 weeks away · 126 days · projected from the usual race weekend

Build a plan for this race

Elevation gain

217m

Elevation loss

217m

Net change

0m

Terrain

Hilly

Typical race-day conditions

November

At the gun

14°C

~6:00am start

By the finish

17°C

warms through the morning

Humidity

80%

morning average

Conditions

Warm

a little warm; expect a small slowdown

Goal finish time
::
StrategyEven effort keeps your effort steady and lets pace drift with the terrain, slower up the climbs and faster down. Even pace holds one pace the whole way and ignores the hills.
Splits every
Units
Race conditionsPace for an ideal cool day, a typical race-day, or a warm-outlier year. Warmer conditions slow your realistic finish, and the splits below adjust to match.
AcclimatisedAcclimatised: you already train and race in conditions like these, so your body has adapted. You sweat sooner and more, hold a lower heart rate and core temperature, and barely lose time to the heat.Not yet: you mostly train in cooler weather, so a warm race hits harder, a higher heart rate, an earlier fade, and roughly twice the slowdown an adapted runner sees. It comes good after about two weeks of training in the heat.
Typical condition impactTypical November · +2.1%

A typical November morning sits around 14°C at the gun and 17°C by the finish. Adapted to conditions like these, the heat may still slow you about +2.1% against an ideal cool day. That moves your 3:30:00 goal to about 3:34:18, and the pace below already allows for it.

Your target pace

5:05/km

Your average across the whole course. The splits below shift it for every climb and descent, so your effort stays even the whole way.

Barfoot & Thompson Auckland Marathon

Auckland, New Zealand

Hover the map or the profile, the other follows.

This one is won on the back half.

0 km5101520253035400 m10 m20 m30 m40 m
km 26–26 climbs 17 m, right where most runners fade.
climb descenttarget pace

The coach's read

A rolling course defined by one feature: the climb over the Harbour Bridge, closed to traffic just for the race. It comes early enough to tempt you to attack it, don't. Run the bridge by effort, settle on the descent into the city, and hold form along the waterfront to the finish.

WHY  Allowing for a typical November day, that's about 5:04/km of effort the whole way, the splits below shift with the gradient, not your pace.

Ease the climbs, let the descents run, and stay relaxed through the second half.
JHJason HuntFounder & Head Coach

Hardest stretch

The km to 3 km: 5:38/km at +1.9%.

Free speed

The km to 17 km: 4:44/km at -1.3%.

Key climbs & descents
Your race-day splits
MarkerTarget paceClock
1 km5:13/km5:13
2 km5:07/km10:19
3 km5:38/km15:57
4 km4:50/km20:47
5 km5:18/km26:05
6 km5:02/km31:07
7 km4:49/km35:56
8 km5:02/km40:58
9 km5:08/km46:06
10 km5:05/km51:11
11 km4:59/km56:10
12 km4:45/km1:00:55
13 km5:00/km1:05:55
14 km5:02/km1:10:58
15 km5:18/km1:16:15
16 km5:36/km1:21:51
17 km4:44/km1:26:35
18 km4:54/km1:31:30
19 km5:05/km1:36:35
20 km5:00/km1:41:35
21 km5:08/km1:46:43
22 km5:14/km1:51:57
23 km4:53/km1:56:50
24 km5:06/km2:01:56
25 km4:49/km2:06:45
26 km5:18/km2:12:03
27 km5:05/km2:17:09
28 km5:08/km2:22:17
29 km5:05/km2:27:22
30 km5:01/km2:32:23
31 km5:06/km2:37:29
32 km5:06/km2:42:35
33 km5:00/km2:47:36
34 km5:08/km2:52:44
35 km4:59/km2:57:43
36 km5:07/km3:02:50
37 km4:58/km3:07:48
38 km4:56/km3:12:44
39 km5:20/km3:18:04
40 km5:02/km3:23:06
41 km5:14/km3:28:20
42 km4:58/km3:33:18
Finish5:10/km3:34:18

Even-effort splits distribute your goal time by the energy cost of each gradient (the Minetti grade-cost model), not an even pace. On a course this hilly, treat the splits as a guide to ±10–15 s/km: run the climbs by feel and protect your quads on the descents.

Train for this course, not just the distance.

A coach builds the climbs and descents into your plan.

·Race-day guide

Pacing the Auckland Marathon

A coach's read on how the Barfoot & Thompson Auckland Marathon runs, and how to spend your effort across it.

01The course

Kilometre by kilometre

  • The climbing that matters: 14.2–15.8 km (+28 m at 1.8%), 2.3–3.4 km (+25 m at 2.3%), 25.6–26.3 km (+17 m at 2.4%). Run these by effort; your pace will and should slow.
  • Where you get it back: 3.5–4.3 km (-20 m down), 15.9–16.7 km (-19 m down), 36.6–37.3 km (-16 m down). Let these run without braking or hammering: relaxed, quick feet.
  • Auckland Harbour Bridge (~15.9 km): The signature climb, up and over the bridge on a closed deck, with the harbour either side. Ease across it.

The one thing

This is not a course for even splits. Hold even effort, let the pace flex with the ground, and the time will look after itself.
02The plan

How to pace the Auckland Marathon

  1. Read the course before race day. Rolling, with the Harbour Bridge. A rolling course defined by one feature: the climb over the Harbour Bridge, closed to traffic just for the race.
  2. Pace by effort, not just the watch. Set the effort you can hold for the whole marathon, then let the pace flex with the ground: a little slower up, a little faster down, the same effort throughout.
  3. Give the climbs effort, not pace. Let your pace slow on the climbs while holding effort steady; chasing your flat pace uphill is the classic way to blow up. The biggest is around 14–16 km (+28 m).
  4. Protect your quads on the descents. Stay relaxed and let the descents come to you. Hammering downhill banks a few seconds now and wrecks your legs for the closing kilometres; the model deliberately caps the downhill benefit for this reason.
  5. Plan your finish. Run the bridge by effort, settle on the descent into the city, and hold form along the waterfront to the finish.
03Questions

Auckland Marathon, answered

Is the Auckland Marathon hilly?
Yes, it's a genuinely hilly course, with about 217 m of total climbing over the 42.2 km and a biggest single climb of roughly 28 m. Pace it by effort, not by pace.
How should I pace the Auckland Marathon?
The Barfoot & Thompson Auckland Marathon is a genuinely hilly marathon, with about 217 m of climbing and 217 m of descent (a near-level net change). Pace it by even effort, not even splits. Ease the climbs and protect your quads on the descents, or the hills will take far more than they give back.
What is the hardest part of the Auckland Marathon?
The toughest climb runs roughly 14–16 km, gaining about 28 m at an average 1.8%. A rolling course defined by one feature: the climb over the Harbour Bridge, closed to traffic just for the race.
Is the Auckland Marathon a good course for a PB?
It's a hard course to set an outright personal best on because of the climbing, but pacing it by effort gives you the best possible time for your fitness on the day.
How much elevation gain does the Auckland Marathon have?
About 217 m of total gain and 217 m of loss over the 42.2 km, in line with the organiser's published figures.

Train for Auckland. Not just the distance.

A coach builds this course's climbs, descents and race-day pacing into a plan made for you.