Edinburgh Marathon 2026
The Edinburgh Marathon has a reputation it doesn't quite deserve. People assume Scotland means hills. The truth is the course profile is one of the flattest in the UK Big Five — under 100m of total elevation gain. The wind is the actual variable that decides whether you PB or struggle.
The course honestly
The route starts in central Edinburgh, heads east along the coast through Portobello and Musselburgh, loops out toward Prestonpans, then back. It's a net-downhill point-to-point with one nasty pinch around mile 7 — the so-called "Lochend pinch" (about 25 metres of climb over half a mile) — and a flat second half. The fast runners average a 1:32 first half, 1:38 second half.
If you're racing your first marathon, this is a friendly course. If you're chasing a time, the variable is wind direction. East-to-west tailwinds make this a sub-3 course for capable runners. West-to-east headwinds add 4-6 minutes.
If you actually want to train for this course properly, a real marathon training plan book by a coach who races at the level above you is worth more than every running app. Books force you to think; apps just tell you what to do.
What to wear (the weather lottery)
Edinburgh in late May can be 6°C with horizontal rain or 22°C with sun. I've experienced both at this race. Layer planning is everything. The expo bag drop is well-organized; use it for the layer you start in and don't need at mile 4.
Shoes: this is a road marathon on smooth tarmac, no special trail considerations. Race in what you trained in. A pair of dedicated racing shoes with a carbon plate will save you maybe 90 seconds over standard trainers — worth it for a target-time race, irrelevant for a finish-line race.
Socks: do not wear new socks. Wear the pair you wore on your 30k long run. A good pair of anti-blister running socks is the single most underrated piece of marathon gear.
Nutrition and hydration on course
Edinburgh has water stations every 5km and a couple of gel stations. Don't experiment with the on-course gels if you trained on something else — the GI distress story is the most common marathon ruin. Bring your own gels in a running belt with gel pockets and stick to the schedule you rehearsed.
The other variable: caffeine. If you don't normally run with caffeine, race day is not the day to start. If you do, time it for mile 18 onwards — that's where the wall hits the bulk of the field.
The elite race nobody discusses
The elite race in Edinburgh is competitive but not at the same level as London. The course record is in the 2:09 range. Top international Kenyans and Ethiopians come for the cash and the late-May timing in the championship build-up cycle. The race rarely gets the post-finish coverage it deserves.
If you're spectating, the best vantage points are Musselburgh (around mile 18) and the finish line. The straight return into central Edinburgh is crowded but easier to find a spot than the start.
A pair of lightweight foldable camping stools is the actual support-spectator gear gap — standing for four hours waiting for your runner is brutal otherwise.
Recovery — the unglamorous part
The 60 minutes after the finish line decides how your next two weeks go. Food in the first 30 minutes, hydration sustained for two hours, light walking for the rest of the day, no hot bath. Foam-rolling the next morning. A high-density foam roller is non-negotiable kit.
Compression: the data on compression socks during the race is mixed. The data on compression socks for travel home (the train back from Edinburgh is brutal on the legs) is unambiguous. Wear them after, not during.
The actual recommendation
If this is your first marathon: do Edinburgh. The course is forgiving, the city is genuinely good for a post-race weekend, and the field is welcoming. If you're chasing a sub-3:30 and the weather looks favourable: do Edinburgh. The flat second half rewards even pacing.
If you're a 2:30 elite chasing a championship time: there are faster courses. Berlin, Valencia, Chicago. Edinburgh is a tactically fair race, not a record-setter.
Hydrate the week before. Don't try anything new on race day. The marathon doesn't reward improvisation.
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