Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne
ABOUT
About Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne
The Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne is a 38-kilometre trail race with 800 metres of elevation gain, starting from Auch, the préfecture of Gers and historic capital of Gascony. This generous and warm-hearted event takes runners through the rolling hills of the Gers, that land of plenty where undulating hillsides covered with vines, sunflowers, and golden wheat stretch as far as the eye can see beneath an immense sky, in the birthplace of Armagnac and foie gras.
Auch, an episcopal city perched on a promontory overlooking the River Gers, is one of the most endearing towns in southwest France. Its Cathedral of Sainte-Marie, a masterpiece of southern Gothic architecture listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site as part of the Routes of Santiago de Compostela, presides over a monumental staircase of 370 steps at the foot of which stands the statue of d'Artagnan, the most famous Gascon musketeer in literature. The pousterles — those medieval stairway lanes cascading down the hill — set the tone for the course: terrain made of constant climbs and descents between the hillsides.
The Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne course winds through the Gascon agricultural landscape in all its splendour. The trails thread between vineyard parcels of the Côtes de Gascogne and Saint-Mont appellations, cross sunflower fields that in summer form golden seas on the horizon, run alongside oak woods where black truffles ripen, and pass through Gascon villages of honey-coloured stone with the distinctive bell-walls of the Toulouse Midi. The paths often follow the ancient Jacobean routes, those pilgrimage trails to Compostela that have criss-crossed the Gers since the Middle Ages, lined with stone crosses and small Romanesque chapels.
With 800 metres of elevation gain over 38 kilometres, the Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne presents a rolling profile that offers no respite. The Gers is a department of hills, and the course relentlessly chains short but steep climbs to the crests of the coteaux, followed by rapid descents into the valleys where streams flow into the River Gers. This "corrugated iron" profile, with no flat sections whatsoever, is more demanding than it appears and tests runners' muscular endurance over the long haul. The terrain consists of agricultural dirt tracks, grassy paths, and stretches of clay-limestone soil that becomes sticky and slippery after rain — the notorious Gers "boulbène" that clings to soles and adds hundreds of grams to shoe weight.
The Gers is the quintessential department of French gastronomy, and the Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne is arguably one of the most gourmet races on the French trail calendar. The aid stations are legendary: foie gras, dried magret, duck rillettes, pastis gascon — that flaky apple and Armagnac tart — and of course floc de Gascogne and Armagnac for finishers. The Gascon welcome, as warm and generous as the land itself, turns every village crossed into a celebration. Runners finish this event with full bellies and light hearts, having traversed a terroir that embodies the art of living of southwest France with an infectious joie de vivre and a sense of hospitality that would do d'Artagnan himself proud.
BLOCK 2 · COURSE
38 km, 800 m climb
Course map, elevation profile, notable segments, aid stations and cutoffs.
BLOCK 3 · ESTIMATOR
Your real finish time
Link your data or your ITRA, we calibrate against the historical peloton.
What's your real finish time?
Link Strava, Coros, Garmin or Suunto — or use your ITRA. We compare your profile to thousands of finishers and compute your time with confidence interval.
Ballpark by profile. Compute yours in 2 min.
- ~5h51
Trained runner
Top 10 % of finishers
- ~7h12
Regular runner
Around the median
- ~8h33
Conservative pace
Beat the cutoff
BLOCK 4 · DATA & RESULTS
2026 edition — times and roll of honour
Winners, median time, finish rate, distribution. Claim your finish to reveal your full name.
Find your finish time
Search across all historical finishers.
No results yet for Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne 2026.
Results are added shortly after each edition.
BLOCK 5 · LOGISTICS
Pre-race essentials
How to get there (train, carpool), bib pickup, mandatory gear, and everything you need to know on-site.
How to get there
Pick your way in
Come by train
Get to the race by train
Type your nearest station — we'll send you to SNCF Connect.
Dates on SNCF Connect must be re-selected on the next page (their URL doesn't yet carry them).
Carpool
Share the ride with other runners
Soon: a per-race carpool thread with direct runner-to-runner listings. In the meantime, check BlaBlaCar or local Facebook groups.
Weather & conditions
Plan for what's coming up there.
Live forecast
Live forecast appears in the 2 weeks before the race.
BLOCK 8 · COMMUNITY
From finishers, for finishers
Ratings, race reports, photos, Q&A. What you won't read on the official site.
Frequently asked questions
What is the distance and elevation gain of the Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne?
The Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne covers 38 km with 800 m of elevation gain, through the Gascon hillsides starting from Auch.
How do I register for the Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne?
Registration is done online on the official website. A medical certificate or FFA license is required to validate registration.
What is the time limit for the Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne?
The time limit is generally 6h30 for the 38 km course, with intermediate checkpoints.
What mandatory gear is required for the Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne?
Mandatory gear includes a water reserve, a charged mobile phone, an emergency blanket, and a personal cup.
Can I have a crew or assistant during the Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne?
Assistance is allowed at official aid stations. The hillside terrain is accessible with several country roads.
When does the Trail des Coteaux de Gascogne take place?
The next edition is scheduled for April 19, 2026, starting from Auch in the Gers department.
Do you organize this race?
19 April 2026