Ultra Gobi AlUla A (121km, 4-days, team race)

121km as a team. 4 stages in the Arabian desert.

🗓️ JANUARY 13 TO 17, 2027 | 📍 ALULA, SAUDI ARABIA

The Ultra Gobi A in AlUla brings the iconic team race format to Saudi Arabia for the first time. Teams of 3 to 5 cover 121 kilometers over four days through the ancient Spice Route landscape. The team's result is determined by the Third Person Scoring Rule: the cumulative time of the third member to finish each stage, adjusted for gender and age.

This "Third Person Scoring Rule" is what makes the Ultra Gobi A unique: a team cannot succeed on the strength of one or two fast runners alone. Strategy, pacing, and mutual support are everything.


At a Glance

Format: Team stage race (4 days, 3 nights)

Stages: 4 stages, each 25 to 35km

Navigation: Marked racecourse

Support: Full camp support. Meals, water, medical, tents provided.

Team size: 3 to 5 members (minimum 3 to form a team)

Distance: 121km

Difficulty: Challenging but accessible with preparation.

Terrain: Sandstone canyons, desert, oases, rocky valleys

The Course

Four stages through AlUla's core landscape. Each day is expected to bring different terrain: flat desert, sand dunes, palm oases, sandstone valleys. The planned route passes Hegra's Nabataean tombs, the ruins of Dadan, Jabal Ikmah's ancient inscriptions, and Elephant Rock.

Each stage is expected to cover 25 to 35km with daily cutoffs. The course will be marked.

📎 Final route subject to confirmation. GPX and KML files will be published before each edition.

On the Course

Planning & Logistics

Registration & Pricing

January 2027: The Founding Edition

The legendary Ultra Gobi team race comes to AlUla.

Results, stories, and race highlights will be shared here after the event.

Destination

AlUla, northwestern Saudi Arabia. A valley cut between towering sandstone cliffs, home to one of the oldest continuously inhabited oases on the Arabian Peninsula. Over 7,000 years of civilization have left their mark here. The most striking: Hegra, where the Nabataeans carved more than 100 monumental tombs into the rock face. The same people who built Petra in Jordan, only here without the crowds. Beyond the race, there is plenty to explore: a preserved mud brick old town, ancient inscriptions scattered across the landscape, and rock formations unlike anything else on the peninsula.