Manchester Marathon 2026 – What Runners Need to Know
Manchester Marathon typically runs in April and has developed a solid reputation among UK marathon runners. The course is flat – genuinely flat, not “flat with a few gentle inclines” like some race organisers claim. Start to finish elevation is minimal. If you’re aiming for a personal best, Manchester is a legitimate target race and has the finish times to prove it.
The Route
The race starts near Old Trafford and loops through south Manchester and into parts of Trafford, Stretford, Altrincham, and Sale before returning to Old Trafford for the finish. The Altrincham section around miles 18-22 is well-supported by spectators – the town centre streets are narrow and the crowd is vocal. The route through Sale at around mile 12-15 tends to be quieter, which can be useful for finding a rhythm mid-race. The last two miles back towards Old Trafford are where you’ll either hold together or start to see the wheels come off.
The finish line at Old Trafford is set up well – enough space for runners and spectators to find each other without the chaos that smaller city marathons can create at the end.
Getting There
Metrolink to Old Trafford. The tram runs frequently on race morning and the service is boosted. Get on early – the start area fills up fast and you want time to check your bag, warm up, and find your pen without rushing. Don’t drive. The roads around Old Trafford on race morning are closed or heavily disrupted; the tram is the straightforward option.
Where to Stay
City centre hotels, 3-4 nights before the race. The city centre is easy on the legs – flat, walkable, no need to travel far. Give yourself enough time to settle in: don’t arrive the night before expecting a race-day miracle. If you’re travelling from outside Manchester, flying or training in on Thursday or Friday for a Sunday race is the right approach.
The hotels around Piccadilly and Deansgate are the most practical – easy access to the Metrolink on race morning, close to the Expo if it’s held at Manchester Central (the race expo runs in the days before the race for bib collection). The Expo is mandatory for bib collection; you can’t pick up on race day.
The Night Before – Where to Eat
Carb-heavy, nothing adventurous. San Carlo on King Street West does pasta and the service is good enough that you won’t be waiting around. Franco Manca has multiple Manchester locations and the sourdough pizza base is sensible pre-race food. Avoid anything heavy, rich, or spicy. Don’t drink more than one glass of wine if you’re going to drink at all. Drink water throughout the day before, not just at dinner.
Spectator Spots
The best spectator spots are: the Old Trafford start/finish area (obvious, loud, well-organised), the Altrincham town centre section around miles 18-21 (the most atmospheric crowd on the whole route), and the Sale Moor stretch if you want to catch runners at a less-crowded point. If you’re spectating with a runner’s phone to track them, the Manchester Marathon app is reliable and updates frequently.
For spectators who want to see the runner multiple times: get to the start, then get the tram to Sale or Altrincham to catch them mid-race, then return to Old Trafford for the finish. The Metrolink makes this achievable with some planning.
After the Race
The finish area has the usual medals, foil blankets, and water. For post-race food with some quality to it: Mackie Mayor on Swan Street in the Northern Quarter is the right call once you’ve cleaned up. Burgers, bao, cheese – the food hall format means everyone in your group gets what they want. Nearby in the NQ, Elnecot or any number of the bars will accommodate a group of runners who want beer and something substantial to eat. You’ve earned it.




