The Goa Ultra runs along the Konkan coast in December. The course design rewards the runner who reads it before race day. Beaches. Headlands. Coastal roads. This guide walks you through the sections in order, with a clear protocol for each. Follow it. The route is generous to runners who arrive prepared.
Step 1. Read the course before you run it
A coastal ultra is not a flat ultra dressed in palm trees. The Konkan coast is shaped by headlands. The route winds along beaches, climbs over rocky promontories, and connects through narrow coastal roads. Each section has a different surface, gradient, and pacing demand.
The single most important rule for the Goa Ultra is this. The course is varied. Your effort should not be. Hold steady effort. Let pace drift across surfaces. Most blow-ups happen because a runner tries to chase a flat-road pace through sand.
What changes when you race on the coast
Three things. Sand robs energy from every step. Wind comes from the sea and shifts through the day. Sun reflects off water and white surfaces. Each one adds load. None of them appear on an elevation map.
Step 2. Section by section
The Goa Ultra route varies by edition and distance, but the broad pattern holds across coastal ultras. Use this as a planning template and confirm specifics on the official race page closer to your race date.
Section A: The early flat coastal stretches
The first 5 to 10 km usually run on flat coastal roads or hard-packed beach. Your job is patience.
- Hold effort 30 seconds per kilometre slower than goal pace. You will feel fresh. You are not.
- Drink at the first aid station even if you are not thirsty.
- Eat the first gel at kilometre 5 or 6.
- Settle into a cadence between 170 and 180 steps per minute.
Section B: The first headland
Somewhere between kilometre 10 and 15, the route climbs its first headland. Expect a short, rocky climb and a similar descent on the other side. Your job is to manage effort.
- Walk briskly on the climb. Shorten stride. Hands on knees if it helps.
- Run controlled on the descent. Lean slightly forward. Do not brake.
- Eat or drink at the top, not the bottom. The crest is a natural transition point.
Section C: The beach sections
Sand running is the most overlooked challenge of the Goa Ultra. Soft sand near the high tide line is energy-expensive. Hard wet sand near the waterline is faster but uneven.
- Run on firmer wet sand close to the waterline. Shorter stride. Higher cadence.
- Walk briskly through soft dry sand. Trying to run wastes 30 percent more energy per kilometre.
- Watch for surface transitions. Twisted ankles cost the most time.
- Sand sticks to sunscreen and shoes. Brush feet off when you change socks at the aid station.
Section D: The middle coastal road
Between the early beach sections and the back half, expect a long stretch of coastal road. This is your engine room. Hold pace. Hold effort.
- Drink at every aid station. Coastal sun is deceptive in December.
- Eat on the clock. 60 to 90 grams of carbohydrate per hour.
- Add a salt capsule or electrolyte tablet each hour.
- Cover exposed skin with a light layer of sunscreen reapplied every 90 minutes.
Section E: The second headland and final beach
The closing sections often combine a second headland with one last beach stretch before the finish. By now the legs are tired and the sun is high. Your job is execution.
- Walk the climb. Save the legs for the last 2 km.
- Drink and eat at the top of the headland.
- Run the final beach on firm wet sand.
- Lift cadence in the last kilometre. Pick a runner. Reel them in.
Step 3. Surface-specific training
If you live near the coast, run on sand once a week. If you do not, find a sandy patch in a city park or at a sports ground and use it for drills. Twenty minutes of barefoot or minimalist running on dry sand builds foot strength. Twenty minutes of shod running on wet sand teaches stride adjustment.
Add headland simulation with bridge climbs, overpass repeats, or stadium ramp work. Eight to twelve short climbs at threshold effort, once a week.
Use the calculators
Use the STRIDD pace and effort calculators to model surface-adjusted pace targets. A typical coastal ultra runs 8 to 12 percent slower per kilometre than a flat road ultra at the same effort.
Step 4. December coastal weather plan
Goa in early December is warmer than most of the country. Daytime highs often touch 30 degrees. Humidity is high. The sun is strong. Read our heat and monsoon guide for hydration and pacing adjustments.
- Start hydration 48 hours out. Drink to clear urine.
- Wear a cap and sunglasses from the start.
- Apply sunscreen 30 minutes before the gun. Reapply every 90 minutes.
- Use a buff dunked in cool water at aid stations to manage core temperature.
Step 5. Aid station and drop bag protocol
Every coastal ultra runner needs a plan for aid stations. Plan before you arrive at the first one.
- At every aid station, drink one full cup of water or electrolyte fluid.
- Every second aid station, eat a piece of solid food. Banana, boiled potato, salted biscuit.
- Once per hour, take a salt capsule if you are a heavy sweater.
- At drop bag stops, change socks, reapply lubricant, replenish gels.
- Spend a maximum of 90 seconds at any aid station unless it is a planned drop bag stop.
Step 6. Build the rest of your plan
A course guide is a map. A plan is the vehicle. Use our STRIDD plan generator to build a Goa Ultra training block tuned to your distance choice, base, and weekly schedule. Or start from the ultramarathon plan template. For more reading on Indian races, browse the Running Lab archive. December will arrive faster than you think.
A small kit reminder for first-timers
If this is your first coastal ultra, write your kit list in two columns. Left column for the night before. Right column for race morning. Tick each item as you pack it. Forgotten items at a coastal ultra cost more than they would at a city race. The nearest sports shop may be 30 km away. Plan like there is no second chance.