Ultra Trail in Portugal: The Guide for Runners Who Want to Go Further

Paula Veloso
by Paula Veloso
11 hours ago

There comes a point in many runners’ and trail athletes’ careers when the half marathon distance no longer feels like enough. The legs want more, the mind wants more, and a growing curiosity begins to build around bigger numbers — 50 km, 80 km, 100 km, and for some, 50 miles or beyond.

Ultra trail is a world apart. It isn’t simply a longer distance — it’s a fundamentally different relationship with your body, with time, with darkness, with fatigue, and with landscape. And Portugal, with its mountain ranges, forests, ancient trails, and volcanic islands, is one of the best countries in Europe to experience it.

What Counts as Ultra Trail?

There’s no universal definition, but in Portugal and across most of Europe, ultra trail refers to any off-road running event longer than 42.195 km (marathon distance). In practice, the most common formats are:

  • 50 km: The entry point into the ultra world for many athletes. Long enough to require proper nutrition strategy and pacing, but accessible for trail runners with a solid base.
  • 80 km / 50 miles: A significant step up in difficulty. Usually involves running through the night, greater recovery challenges, and higher dependence on logistics and crew support.
  • 100 km / 100 miles: The territory of major international events. Portugal already has events in this range, and their reputation is growing.
  • 24 hours: Pure endurance format — not distance, but time. The goal is to cover as many kilometres as possible within 24 hours, making tactical decisions throughout about pace, rest and nutrition.

Portugal on the Ultra Trail Map

Portugal has been gaining growing recognition in the international ultra trail community. The conditions are genuinely exceptional: technical and varied terrain, a strong and welcoming community, well-organised events, and landscapes that attract athletes from across Europe.

Events like the MIUT in Madeira, the DMUT in the Douro Valley, and the EstrelAçor in the Azores are already on the radar of European ultra runners. But beyond these international reference points, there is a rich calendar of regional ultras in growth — events that combine technical challenge with local identity and an atmosphere that large commercial races rarely manage to replicate.

How to Prepare for Your First Ultra Trail

Build a solid aerobic base first. Before attempting an ultra, you should be able to run comfortably for 30-35 km in trail terrain. If you’re not there yet, that should be the first goal.

Consistent weekly volume: Ultra preparation requires consistency over months, not weeks. A weekly volume of 50-70 km of running and trail is a reasonable base for events in the 50-80 km range.

Back-to-back training: Two consecutive long training runs — for example, 25 km on Saturday followed by 20 km on Sunday — are the most effective way to simulate the accumulated fatigue an ultra requires. More useful than a single very long run.

Practise eating while moving: Nutritional management is one of the biggest challenges in ultra running. The body begins to refuse certain foods after 6-8 hours of effort. Train yourself to eat and drink during long runs, experiment with gels, bars and real food, and discover what works for you before race day.

Sleep management: In ultras lasting more than 10-12 hours, managing sleep deprivation becomes a performance factor. Training with mild sleep deprivation — starting long runs at 3 or 4am, for example — helps prepare the nervous system for what’s ahead.

Mandatory gear: Most ultras in Portugal have a mandatory gear list — running headlamp with spare battery, rain jacket, emergency blanket, whistle, basic first aid kit. Read the race regulations carefully and test your equipment in training.

Ultra and Endurance Events with Open Registrations

50 Milhas — No Reino da Pedra  One of the most challenging and atmospheric events on the list — 50 miles (approximately 80 km) across limestone terrain with significant elevation. For athletes with trail experience who are ready to step into genuine long-distance territory.

Trail Abrantes 100 One of the longest events on the national calendar, with 100 km through the interior of the Ribatejo region. A true ultra in every sense — night running, accumulated fatigue, and landscapes that few people ever see.

XIX Ultra Maratona Caminhos do Tejo In its nineteenth edition, this ultra marathon along the ancient paths of the Tagus river is one of the most historically rooted endurance events in Portugal. A route that tells the story of the Portuguese landscape through the athlete’s legs.

XII EstrelAçor Trail Ultra Endurance In the Azores, the EstrelAçor is an ultra endurance event with completely unique characteristics — volcanic terrain, humidity, and an island atmosphere that exists nowhere else on the national calendar. For those seeking a truly different ultra experience.

24H de P A 24-hour format event — the goal isn’t distance, it’s raw endurance. One of the most honest ways to test what body and mind are capable of when the clock runs but the course doesn’t end.

4th Iron Trail A long-distance trail combining the physical demands of serious terrain with the spirit of the country’s most demanding endurance events.

Your First Ultra: What to Expect

There will be a hard moment. In every ultra, there comes a point where body and mind argue about whether to continue. Knowing this moment will arrive — and having strategies to move through it — is half the preparation.

Pacing is everything. Going out too fast in an ultra is the most expensive mistake you can make. The first 40% of the course should feel almost too easy. The pace that feels like you could hold it forever is probably the right pace.

The ultra community is unlike any other. At Portuguese ultra events, the solidarity between participants is remarkable. Experienced athletes support first-timers, conversations happen at aid stations, and the finish line carries an emotional weight that road races rarely reach.

Discover Ultra and Endurance Races in Portugal

Find all ultra trail, long-distance and endurance events in Portugal with open registrations at racefinder.pt.

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