How we rank the courses
Each course gets a single difficulty number: the minutes it adds to a representative age-grouper's flat-course finish. That comes from three verifiable factors plus one optional one:
- Climbing — total bike and run ascent above a flat baseline (the biggest factor; ~6 min per 1,000 ft on the bike, ~5 on the run).
- Swim current — a down-current or downriver swim is genuinely faster; an exposed ocean swim slightly slower.
- Course distance — a couple of courses (e.g. Chattanooga's ~116-mi bike) aren't the standard length.
- Heat (toggle) — a planning-range estimate on the run, since heat affects every athlete differently.
It's a planning guide, not a verdict. Elevation numbers are approximate and GPS-derived, the model can't tell a gradual false-flat from a steep climb, and it leaves out wind (Arizona, Cozumel and Texas can be brutal in it) and altitude beyond a flag. Always check the official athlete guide.
Frequently asked questions
What is the fastest Ironman course?
Among these, the flat, down-current races model fastest — Ironman California (downriver swim, flat bike & run), Ironman Maryland, and Ironman Florida for fulls; Indian Wells 70.3 for halves. They're the classic PR-hunting courses.
What is the hardest Ironman course?
Of these, the big-climbing fulls top the list — Ironman Lake Placid, Coeur d'Alene, Wisconsin and Tulsa, plus Chattanooga (a long ~116-mi bike in the heat). For 70.3, St. George is widely considered the toughest.
Which course should I pick for a Kona/Worlds slot?
Faster courses mean faster times, but everyone in your age group races the same course — slots go by placing, not absolute time. Many athletes still pick a flatter race to chase a personal best. Use the course calculator to see your own projected time on each.