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Ultra Lozère Trail

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ABOUT

About Ultra Lozère Trail

The Ultra Lozère Trail is a 110-kilometer race with 5,600 meters of elevation gain that crosses the Lozère, France's least populated department, a territory of grandiose solitudes where nature reigns as absolute master. Starting from Chanac, a small town in the Lot valley nestled between the causses and the gorges, runners embark on a monumental traverse of Lozère's four iconic landscapes: the vast limestone causses, the deep gorges of the Tarn and Jonte rivers, the granite massif of Mont Lozère, and the dark forests of the Margeride.

Lozère is a land of striking geological contrasts, shaped by the meeting of the granite Massif Central and the limestone plateaus of the Grands Causses. The Ultra Lozère Trail course exploits this diversity with remarkable topographic mastery. Runners first cross the immensities of the Causse de Sauveterre, a near-desert karst plateau dotted with dolines, lavognes (natural water holes), and cazelles — the dry-stone huts that once sheltered shepherds. Then the trail plunges abruptly into the Tarn gorges, a vertiginous canyon with golden limestone cliffs rising 500 meters, before climbing back up the wooded slopes of Mont Lozère.

Mont Lozère, the course's high point at 1,699 meters at the summit of the Pic de Finiels, is a granite massif of rounded forms covered with peat bogs, high-altitude meadows, and granite boulder fields that evoke the landscapes of the Scottish Highlands. It is a transhumance territory where sheep flocks still ascend each summer to the "montagnettes," accompanied by shepherds carrying on agropastoral traditions inscribed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list. The draille paths — broad transhumance routes bordered by stone walls — are the guiding thread of the course through this section.

Lozère's wildlife is exceptionally rich, the fruit of decades of reintroduction and protection policies. Griffon vultures and black vultures soar above the Tarn and Jonte gorges, successfully reintroduced since the 1970s. Wolves, having returned naturally from Italy, roam the forests of Mont Lozère. Beavers populate the banks of the Tarn, and red deer bugle in the Margeride forests in autumn. Night runners sometimes have the fortune of spotting the genet, a small Mediterranean carnivore, or the Eurasian eagle-owl in the gorge cliffs.

For international runners, the Ultra Lozère Trail is a deep dive into a wild and remote France, a territory where population density falls below 15 inhabitants per square kilometer and where the night sky, free of light pollution, unfurls the Milky Way in all its splendor. Chanac is accessible from Mende (15 minutes), itself connected to Paris by train via Clermont-Ferrand or Nîmes. Lozérien gastronomy — aligot, fouace bread, pélardon goat cheese, Lozère lamb — is a reward commensurate with the effort. This is an ultra for lovers of solitude and wide-open spaces, a race where one can run for hours without encountering another soul, accompanied only by the song of skylarks and the breath of wind across the causses.

BLOCK 2 · COURSE

110 km, 5,600 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.

GoodBorning estimator

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.

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Examples

Ballpark by profile. Compute yours in 2 min.

  • Trained runner

    Top 10 % of finishers

    ~15h13
  • Regular runner

    Around the median

    ~19h22
  • Conservative pace

    Comfortable margin

    ~24h54

BLOCK 4 · DATA & RESULTS

2025 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.

Edition20262025

No results yet for Ultra Lozere Trail 2026 2025.

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.

Race date: 23 May 2026

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 of Ultra Lozère Trail?

Ultra Lozère Trail features a 110 km course with 5,600 m of elevation gain, starting from Chanac in the Lozère department.

When does the 2026 edition take place?

The 2026 edition is scheduled for May 23, 2026.

What are the cut-off times?

Runners typically have 28 hours to complete the 110 km. Strict intermediate cut-offs are enforced at aid stations.

What mandatory gear is required?

Mandatory gear includes a waterproof jacket, emergency blanket, whistle, minimum 1.5L water reserve, fully charged mobile phone, two headlamps with spare batteries, and warm clothing.

Can I have a crew or personal assistant?

Yes, personal assistants are highly recommended for a 110 km ultra. They can meet you at life bases and accessible aid stations. goodborning. can help you find a local assistant in Chanac.

How do I register for Ultra Lozère Trail?

Registration opens on the official website. A medical certificate dated less than one year and qualifying races are required.

Do you organize this race?

23 May 2026