TRAIL TIMES
How long does a 90 km trail take?
On a 90 km trail, finish time depends far more on elevation gain than on distance. For a typical course around 5000 m of D+ (140 effort-km), expect the ranges below by level. Weather, terrain technicality, heat and race-day form can shift the result by ±15%.
Ultra-trail (80 to 100 km) is about endurance and consistency: 4 to 6 months of prep, often a night section, and tight management of aid stations and cut-off times.
Indicative time over 90 km (~5000 m D+)
| Level | Estimated time |
|---|---|
| Beginner | 18h00 – 23h00 |
| Regular | 14h40 – 18h45 |
| Experienced | 12h20 – 15h45 |
| Elite | 10h20 – 13h10 |
Indicative ranges based on effort-km. Your real D+ and profile change everything: use the estimator for a precise figure.
Elevation gain changes everything
At equal distance, D+ blows up the clock. For a regular runner over 90 km:
Rolling profile
~2500 m D+
13h20
Mountain profile
~6800 m D+
18h20
How this time is calculated
We use effort-km: effort-km = distance + D+ / 100. Each level covers a given amount of effort-km per hour. It's a robust benchmark, but a real estimate compares your ITRA, UTMB or B-Trail index to actual finishers — that's what our estimator does. Glossaire.
90 km trails to aim for
FAQ
What is the average time for a 90 km trail?
For a course around 5000 m of D+, a regular runner usually takes 14h40 – 18h45. A beginner will be closer to 18h00 – 23h00, an experienced runner around 12h20 – 15h45.
What pace should I hold on a 90 km trail?
In trail running we think in effort-km rather than raw pace: here about 140 effort-km. On flat, rolling sections pace nears road running; as soon as it climbs, power-hiking takes over.
How much elevation gain on a 90 km trail?
It varies wildly: from about 2500 m of D+ on a rolling course to 6800 m on a mountain route. The average sits around 5000 m.
How do cut-off times work on a 90 km trail?
Each organiser sets deadlines at checkpoints. Aim for a comfortable margin over your «conservative» time: that's exactly what the estimator computes, aid station by aid station.
How long does it take to train for a 90 km trail?
It depends on your base, but aim for the order of magnitude shown above for this distance category, with a progressive build-up and at least one long run representative of the D+.
Your precise time on YOUR race
Enter your race and your index: we compare your profile to real finishers for a ±15% estimate.
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