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Best Boston Marathon Qualifiers for 2026

Best Boston Marathon Qualifiers

It's here! Our annual list of the year's
best marathons to help you qualify for the Boston Marathon.

2026 IS HERE!


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Long Beach Marathon

Long Beach, CA
Sunday, October 11, 2026


  4 Stars from 2 Reviews

Course Description
The Long Beach Marathon course is relatively flat and fast with a few elevation changes that break up the otherwise mostly flat route.

Starting in Downtown Long Beach, runners head towards the historic Queen Mary and then through Shoreline Village. After running next to the Pacific Ocean on the flat beach path, marathoners head through Belmont Shore toward Marine Stadium. Cheerleaders, sororities, fraternities, clubs, student organizations, faculty, and the school mascot Prospector Pete come out full-force to cheer as runners complete a 5K loop around the California State University, Long Beach campus. With 6.2 miles to go, runners head back towards Ocean Boulevard toward the finish.





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Race Information

Race Dates

2026: Sunday, October 11, 2026
2025: Sunday, October 5, 2025

Course Information

Profile: Mostly Flat
Type: Loop
Surface: Road/Pavement

Boston Qualifier?: Yes
World Marathon Major Qualifier?: Yes


Race Day Weather

Mean Temp.: 69°F (20°C)
Average High: 79°F (26°C)
Average Low: 58° F (14°C)





PR Score & Course Score

PR Score: 96.79
Course Score: 98.89


Race Size

2025: 4,722 Finishers
2024: 3,437 Finishers
2023: 2,527 Finishers
2022: 1,936 Finishers
2021: 1,344 Finishers
2020: No Results

BQ Percentages

2025: 4.8%
2024: 3.8%
2023: 8.9%
2022: 4.9%
2021: 5.2%
2020: N/A


Miscellaneous Information

Pace Groups?: Yes

Weather Averages for Last 15 Years


Race Day Temperatures

High: 77°F  (25°C)
Low: 61°F  (16°C)

Race Start Conditions

62°F  (17°C)
Humidity: 86%

Clear
SE 2 mph

PR Score

96

Course Score

98.91









Long Beach Marathon Rankings, Course Speed & Boston Qualifier Statistics

The Long Beach Marathon was the 17th largest marathon in the U.S. in 2025 based on the number of finishers. In 2024, it ranked as the 24th largest marathon in the U.S..

In 2026, 9.3% of Long Beach Marathon finishers have achieved Boston Marathon qualifying times. In 2025, 4.8% of finishers qualified for the Boston Marathon.

Based on its percentage of Boston Qualifiers (BQs), the Long Beach Marathon ranked 290th among marathons in the U.S. in 2025 and currently ranks 73rd so far in 2026. In California, it ranked 19th in 2025 and 4th so far in 2026. These rankings provide a useful benchmark for comparing the Long Beach Marathon with other Boston Marathon qualifying races.


The Long Beach Marathon has a Course Score of 98.89, ranking it as the 235th fastest marathon course in the U.S. and the 19th fastest marathon course in California.

Typical race-time temperature and humidity levels are above the ideal range for optimal marathon performance. Combined with the course profile, this gives the Long Beach Marathon a PR Score of 96.79. The PR Score ranks the Long Beach Marathon as the 367th best marathon in the U.S. for running a Personal Record (PR) and the 30th best marathon for a PR in California.

Together, these rankings provide a quick snapshot of how the Long Beach Marathon compares with other marathons in the U.S. and California for speed, PR potential, Boston Marathon qualifying success, and overall participation.

Long Beach Marathon Marathon Rankings Summary
Course Speed235th fastest marathon course in the U.S.
Ranked 19th fastest marathon course in California
Top 51% Nationally#19 of 34 in California
PR Potential367th best marathon for a Personal Record in the U.S.
Ranked 30th best marathon for a PR in California
Top 80% Nationally#30 of 34 in California
Boston Qualifier Rate290th highest BQ percentage in the U.S.
Ranked 19th highest BQ percentage in California
Based on 2025 Boston Marathon qualifying results
Top 61% Nationally#19 of 34 in California
Race Size17th largest marathon in the U.S.
Ranked 5th largest marathon in California
Based on 2025 results
Top 3% Nationally#5 of 49 in California

Learn more about PR Scores and Course Scores on the FAQ page.




Elevation Chart


Max Elevation: 83 feet (25m)
Min Elevation: 5 feet (1m)

Elevation Gain: 470 feet (143m)
Elevation Loss: 462 feet (140m)


Long

Course updated 06/12/2026





Hotel & VRBO Accommodations for the Long Beach Marathon

View available accomodations around the Long Beach Marathon Finish Line and Course. Book your Reservation now before the best places are sold out.

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Compare the Long Beach Marathon to other Marathons

Use tools below to compare races and convert times across courses.

Do you want to see how the Long Beach Marathon stacks up against other marathons?

Compare the details of the Long Beach Marathon side-by-side with other marathons with our Comparison Tool.


If you ran the Long Beach Marathon in 4:36:00, what would your time in other marathons be?

See how your finish time would compare on other marathon courses with our Time Conversion Tool.




Race Reviews


4.0
Based on 2 reviews
Write Your Own Review

Full Review:

The first ten miles of the course is spectacular and beautiful, along the marina and beach. There are less than 2000 participants in the full marathon, so it never feels overly crowded. But then the full marathon course breaks off inland where it;s uphill, "ugly" and spectators are sparser. Then at Mile 23 or so, the course rejoins the half marathon course and it gets considerably more crowded (there are 7000+ half marathoners). Tons more spectators, but you're also surrounded by people who've only run 10 miles which can affect your positive attitude as you struggle towards the finish.

Race Tips:

The course is mostly flat, especially the first half. The hills between Miles 10 and 23 are not particularly steep or grueling, just seemingly never-ending. There's one climb at Mile 22 (when you're supposed to be going downhill back towards the coast) that can catch you off guard. The last miles when you rejoin the half marathon course can be a struggle. It's flat and straight and long, and you're surrounded by people generally running faster than you (because they've only run ten miles to your 20+). Try not to get distracted by all that, focus on yourself.

Full Review:

MY FIRST MARATHON!!! I can now sport the 26.2 logo with pride! I signed up for the marathon for my 30th birthday which was 4 days after the race! 30th anniversary - 30th birthday... a perfect combo! Running a marathon is a true accomplishment and I felt such a wave of emotions crossing the finish line. It made all the months of training and preparation worth it.

I highly recommend the Long Beach International City Bank Marathon and here's why:
-Great crowd support all along the course - many thanks to the volunteers and the local residents who passed out water, Gu packets, Gatorade, oranges, watermelon, bananas, bagels and the like!
-Fast, flat course - for the full marathon, the elevation gain was 383 ft and the elevation loss was 377 ft.... this is the lowest elevation gain/loss you will find for a 26.2 mile course!
-Beautiful views including the Queen Mary, Rainbow Harbor, Shoreline Beach path with miles of ocean views, Marine Stadium, Belmont Shore, CSULB, Recreation Park and Downtown Long Beach.
-The expo was well organized, efficient and had lots of great vendors and merch.
-Separate starts for the marathon and half marathon. The half marathon has 4x the number of participants in it so I was very pleased the race organizers started the half marathoners a full 90 minutes later. The full marathon started at 6AM and the half started at 730 AM. -I loved the 6 AM start time.... I had finished running a marathon by 10 AM! Sweet!
-Post race finish line with separate finish lanes for the half and full marathons -Great bands, cheerleaders and supporters along the way! I loved the energy of the Poly HS Track Team!
-Pacers provided - I ran with the 4 hour pace group for the first half of the marathon and the pacer was encouraging, fun and talked to the group throughout the course. Every mile he had a trivia question related to running, Long Beach and the like! I got the 4 mile trivia right... Long Beach is known as the Aquatic Capital of America, thank you very much!
-Lots of treats at the finish line - Power Bars, fruit, cookies, Gatorade, water, coconut water, Michelob Ultra, etc.
-Race results were posted within hours with numerous splits provided so you could analyze your performance over the full 26.2 miles!
-The 30th anniversary medals are heavy, high quality and the shell design is awesome! Excellent medals!

Thank you, Long Beach, for helping me accomplish something I've always dreamed of doing! Yes, miles 20-25 were tough, but just remember your mind will quit 100x before your body ever will! Don't let your mind trick you into immediate satisfaction (walking, stopping, etc.) and instead remember your goal... which is to finish and finish strong! Keep running and just remember, YOU CAN DO IT! We are capable of more than we know! I'm already looking forward to next year! RUN LBC!