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Dubai Marathon

Annual race in the United Arab Emirates since 1998

Dubai Marathon

Annual race in the United Arab Emirates since 1998

FieldValue
bgcolourblue
dateSunday February 1, 2026
est
locationDubai, United Arab Emirates
typeRoad
recordMen: 2:03:34 (2019)
ETH Getaneh Molla
Women: 2:16:07 (2024) Tigist Ketema
participantsUp to 30,000 participants
homepage

Two years missed during Covid ETH Getaneh Molla Women: 2:16:07 (2024) Tigist Ketema

The Dubai Marathon is an annual road-based marathon hosted by the emirate of Dubai, United Arab Emirates, since 1998. The marathon is categorized as a Gold Label Road Race by World Athletics.

History

Initial era

The inaugural Dubai Marathon was held on . The marathon started outside the Al Wasl Club, and ended inside the Al Wasl Stadium. About 150 runners participated, with 48 of them finishing the race.

The Association of Road Racing Statisticians (ARRS) has no record of a marathon occurring in Dubai in 1999.

The event changed management in 1999 for the first edition of the event officially measured and moved to January 2000 with no event in 1999 moving for better weather conditions when the IAAF Officially Measured route was measured by Grade A Course Measurer, Paul Hodgson and became a fully recognised edition for results from 2000 when held starting and finishing outside the Al Wasl Club in Dubai on Friday, January 14, 2000.

Current era

The 2000 edition of the marathon was held on ; the event has usually been held on a Friday in January since.

In 2006, the marathon was postponed from to due to the sudden death of Sheikh Maktoum, Emir of Dubai, on . The postponement meant that temperatures were higher than usual during the race, approaching 30 C. Winner was originally only meant to pace the first 30 km, but broke away from the pack once race organizers gave approval.

In April 2007, it was announced that the prizes for the 2008 race would be one million dollars offered for a world record and $250,000 for first place for both men and women, making this the long-distance running event with the greatest cash prizes in history.

The 2008 race was won by Haile Gebrselassie with a time of 2:04:53. This was the second fastest recorded time for a marathon at that point, not fast enough to claim a world record or the million dollar prize.

The 2012 race proved to have one of the fastest finishing fields at that point: a record of four athletes finished in under two hours and five minutes. Ayele Abshero won with a course record time of 2:04:23 hours, which was the fourth fastest on the all-time lists and the fastest time ever run by an athlete running his first marathon. The other podium finishers also entered the all-time top ten: runner-up Dino Sefir became the eighth fastest man with a time of 2:04:50 hours, while Markos Geneti became the ninth fastest with a time of 2:04:54 hours. Getaneh Molla became the 13th fastest man with a time of 2:04:56 hours, and Tadese Tola became the 16th fastest with a time of 2:05:10 hours.

The women's side was also fast; for the first time in history, the top three runners of a race all finished in under two hours and twenty minutes. Aselefech Mergia finished with a time of 2:19:31 hours to win, setting an both a course record and an Ethiopian record and becoming the seventh fastest recorded woman. In her first marathon, runner-up Lucy Wangui Kabuu became the eighth fastest woman with a time of 2:19:34 hours, and Mare Dibaba became the 15th fastest woman, finishing in 2:19:52 hours. Fellow Ethiopians Bezunesh Bekele and Aberu Kebede moved up to the 16th and 17th fastest women of all time.

The 2013 event, run under a heavy fog, was also very fast. The Ethiopian winner Lelisa Desisa, won in a sprint finish of the last 200 meters with a time of 2:04:45, leading four other runners who also finished in under 2 hours, 5 minutes. On the women's side, Ethiopian Tirfi Tsegaye won with a time of 2:23:23. The top four runners on the men's side and the top six on the women's side were all Ethiopians.

In 2020, the race organizers stated that they would "not be staging a marathon/mass participation event of any format in Dubai in January 2021" due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The 2022 edition of the race was postponed to due to the 2022 FIFA World Cup hosted by Qatar, after marathon organizers realized that a shortage of accommodation in Qatar would mean that many football fans were planning to stay in Dubai during the football tournament, limiting accommodation and travel options for marathoners if the race were to be held during the tournament.

Course

Initial course

The course used in the inaugural race in 1998 started outside the Al Wasl Club and ended inside the Al Wasl Stadium.

World Trade Center course

The course start and finish was moved to the Dubai World Trade Centre. During the marathon, runners crossed the Dubai Creek at one point by going under it via Al Shindagha Tunnel, and at another point by going over it via Al Garhoud Bridge.

Current course

The marathon starts on Umm Suqeim Street, a few blocks southeast of Madinat Jumeirah, and finishes about a few hundred metres further southeast. The vast majority of the race is run entirely on D 94 road that runs a few blocks away from the coast, including on King Salman bin Abdulaziz al Saud Street (formerly Al Sufouh Road) and Jumeirah Beach Road.

The course first heads briefly northwest before turning southwest for an out-and-back leg of roughly 6 km of length each way on King Salman bin Abdulaziz al Saud Street, running past the entrance to the Palm Jumeirah up to around the edge of Dubai Media City, and turning around before reaching the skyscrapers immediately southwest.

After returning to Umm Suqeim Street, marathoners then continue northeast for two repetitions of an out-and-back leg of roughly 7.5 km of length each way on Jumeirah Beach Road, passing Burj Al Arab and Jumeirah Beach Hotel, and turning around on Al Mehemal Street a few hundred metres past Sunset Mall.

Afterward, the marathon turns back southeast onto Umm Suqeim Street for about 500 m for the finish.

, the marathon course has a time limit of six hours.

Management

The event is organised by Pace Events FZ LLC,

Sponsorship

In 2001, Samsung became the title sponsor for four years.

In 2005, Standard Chartered became the title sponsor, up until the 2020 edition of the event. They chose not to renew during Covid and the pandemic in 2021.

Winners

Haile Gebrselassie on his way to winning the 2010 race

Key: Course record (in bold)

Initial era

Ed.DateMale WinnerTimeFemale WinnerTimeRf.
11998.11.27Alan Chilton2:23:08Barbara Young3:50:36

Current era

Ed.DateMen's winnerTimeWomen's winnerTimeRf.
12000.01.14{{illWilson Kibetnl}}2:12:21Ramilya Burangulova2:40:22
22001.01.12{{illWilson Kibetnl}}2:13:36Ramilya Burangulova2:37:07
32002.01.11{{illWilson Kibetnl}}2:13:04Albina Ivanova2:33:31
42003.01.10{{illJoseph Kahugunl}}2:09:33Irina Permitina2:36:26
52004.01.09Gashaw Melese2:12:49Leila Aman2:42:36
62005.01.07{{illDejene Gutanl}}2:10:49{{illDiribe Hundenl}}2:39:08
72006.02.17{{illJoseph Ngenynl}}2:13:02Delillah Asiago2:43:09
82007.01.12{{illWilliam Rotichnl}}2:09:53Askale Magarsa2:27:19
92008.01.18Haile Gebrselassie2:04:53Berhane Adere2:22:42
102009.01.16Haile Gebrselassie2:05:29Bezunesh Bekele2:24:02
112010.01.22Haile Gebrselassie2:06:09Mamitu Daska2:24:19
122011.01.21David Barmasai Tumo2:07:18Aselefech Mergia2:22:45
132012.01.27Ayele Abshero2:04:23Aselefech Mergia2:19:31
142013.01.25Lelisa Desisa2:04:45Tirfi Tsegaye2:23:23
152014.01.24Tsegaye Mekonnen2:04:32Mulu Seboka2:25:01
162015.01.23Lemi Berhanu2:05:28Aselefech Mergia2:20:02
172016.01.22Tesfaye Abera2:04:24Tirfi Tsegaye2:19:41
182017.01.20Tamirat Tola2:04:11Worknesh Degefa2:22:36
192018.01.26Mosinet Geremew2:04:00Roza Dereje2:19:17
202019.01.25Getaneh Molla2:03:34Ruth Chepngetich2:17:08
212020.01.24Olika Adugna2:06:15Worknesh Degefa2:19:38
2021not held due to coronavirus pandemic
2022postponed due to coronavirus pandemic in Jan 2022 and subsequently in Dec due to issues with staging at same of 2022 FIFA World Cup in Doha
222023.02.12Abdisa Tola2:05:42Dera Dida2:21:11
232024.01.07Addisu Gobena2:05:01Tigist Ketema2:16:07
242025.01.12Bute Gemechu2:04:51Bedatu Herpa (ETH)2:18:27

Multiple wins

AthleteWinsYears
Wilson Kibet32000, 2001, 2002
Haile Gebrselassie32008, 2009, 2010
AthleteWinsYears
Aselefech Mergia32011, 2012, 2015
Ramilya Burangulova22000, 2001
Tirfi Tsegaye22013, 2016
Worknesh Degefa22017, 2020

By country

CountryTotalMen'sWomen's
331617
972
404

Notes

References

References

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  3. "Dubai Marathon has risen with the city | Sport – Gulf News".
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  6. [https://web.archive.org/web/20201223221635if_/http://www.dubaimarathon.org/dublinluas/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Dubai-Marathon-2020-Media-Guide.pdf Dubai Marathon Media Guide 2020]
  7. "Ml_1999".
  8. "Marathon list 2000".
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  13. (2007-04-14). "Dubai to stage $1 Million Marathon". [[IAAF]].
  14. (2007-04-14). "Dubai to stage world's richest-ever marathon". [[AMEInfo]].
  15. (2008-01-18). "Second fastest of all time for Gebre in Dubai Marathon". [[IAAF]].
  16. Butcher, Pat (2012-01-27). [http://www.iaaf.org/Mini/LRR12/News/NewsDetail.aspx?id=63419 Abshero stuns with 2:04:23 debut, Mergia clocks 2:19:31 in Dubai]. IAAF. Retrieved on 2012-02-04.
  17. (January 26, 2015). "Women set records on Dubai's superfast course".
  18. "Pace Events - Website Under Development".
  19. "Pace Events - Website Under Development".
  20. "Pace Events - Website Under Development".
  21. "Pace Events - Website Under Development".
  22. [https://web.archive.org/web/20201224031111if_/https://images.samsung.com/is/content/samsung/p5/nl/aboutsamsung/2017/pdf/about-us-sustainability-report-and-policy-annual-report-2004-en.pdf#page=34 About us]
  23. "Pace Events - Website Under Development".
  24. [https://web.archive.org/web/20011024055633/http://www.dubaimarathon.org:80/enter.htm Dubai marathon]
  25. [https://web.archive.org/web/20020208062710/http://www.dubaimarathon.org:80/enter.htm The Samsung Dubai Marathon]
  26. [https://archive.today/20201224023330/https://gulfnews.com/uae/the-fun-run-1.375326 The fun run] gulfnews.com
  27. "How the Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon is lasting the distance".
  28. [https://web.archive.org/web/20201224135955if_/https://www.sc.com/global/av/PR-Stan-Chart-Henry-Joseph-Marathon-English.pdf Standard Chartered]
  29. "Desert Road Runners | Desert Road Runners".
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  31. [https://archive.today/20201224192514/https://worldathletics.org/athletes/ethiopia/berhane-adere-14259948 Berhane Adere]
  32. "archive.ph".
  33. "Aselefech Mergia".
  34. "Records Smashed at Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon | Standard Chart…".
  35. "Ethiopian Clean Sweep in Foggy Dubai | Standard Chartered Dubai Marat…".
  36. "Asefa, Seboka Lead Ethiopian Whitewash | Standard Chartered Dubai Mar…".
  37. "Ethiopian Clean Sweep at Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon | Standard…".
  38. "Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon 2016".
  39. "Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon 2017".
  40. "Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon 2018".
  41. "Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon 2019".
  42. "Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon 2020".
  43. "2023 Dubai Marathon".
  44. "2023 Dubai Marathon".
  45. [https://archive.today/20220827131500/https://www.dubaimarathon.org/news/registration-now-open-for-december-10-races/ Dubai Marathon set for February 2023 Return]
  46. [https://archive.today/20220823015408/https://www.khaleejtimes.com/uae/dubai-marathon-postponed-after-qatar-world-cup-increases-demand-for-hotel-rooms-flights Dubai Marathon postponed after Qatar World Cup increases demand for hotel rooms, flights]
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