In 2024, on a humid October morning in Bengaluru, a friend of mine - a 36-year-old product manager who had never raced anything - signed up for a half marathon because someone at her office said the 5K was too short to count. She finished. She also did not run for nine months after. I have been thinking about her ever since. The question of which distance for your first race is not a question of capacity. It is a question of what you want running to mean in your life, and how much you are willing to risk to find out.
Let me tell you what I have learned, watching dozens of first-timers across India choose this. There is no single right answer. There is a right answer for you, depending on three things: how long you have been running, what your week looks like, and the kind of relationship you want to build with the sport.
The first race is rarely about the race
It is about whether you come back. Whether the next Monday morning, you put on your shoes again. The wrong first distance turns a Sunday into a small grief - of injury, of disillusionment, of "running is not for me." The right first distance turns it into the start of a habit.
The case for the 5K
A 5K is short enough to train for in 6-8 weeks from zero with three runs a week. It is short enough that a bad day costs you 30 minutes, not five hours. It is short enough that you remember it as one continuous experience, not a slow-motion erosion. Almost every Indian runner I respect now ran a 5K first. They did not skip steps. They built. The Tata Mumbai 5K, the Vedanta Delhi 5K, the TCS World 10K's 5K leg - all rooted in real city streets with crowds and music and the smell of marigolds at the finish.
The case for the 10K
A 10K asks more of you. 8-12 weeks of training, four runs a week, a long run that approaches 8 km. It is a real race. It hurts. It teaches pacing. It does not destroy you. If you have been running 2-3 times a week for six months and you can complete a 6 km easy run without walking, a 10K is a defensible first race. Our how to start running guide has the build-up week by week.
The case for the half marathon
I have seen this go right. I have seen it go very wrong. The half is a serious endurance event. Training is 12-16 weeks. The long run builds to 18-20 km. The race itself takes most people between 2:00 and 2:45. For a first race, the half makes sense only if you have been running consistently for at least nine months, ideally a year, with a solid base of 25-30 km a week. Otherwise it is an injury waiting for an excuse.
What changes when you choose each distance
The cost is not just race day. It is the four months before.
The 5K builds a habit
A 5K plan asks for three runs a week. 30-45 minutes each. You can do this with a full-time job, a one-year-old child, a thesis to finish, a startup to keep alive. The training fits in the margins. By the time you finish, running has become a thing you do, not a thing you are aiming at.
The 10K builds a base
The 10K requires four runs a week, a long run on weekend, some pace work. You are starting to track mileage, you are starting to think about shoes, you are starting to log your sleep. Running is becoming a small project in your life.
The half marathon takes over
Marathon-tier training - which the half nearly is - takes 8-10 hours a week including strength, mobility, recovery. Long runs eat your Sunday morning. Race week occupies your head. You start having opinions about gel flavours. Done well, this is wonderful. Done in a hurry, it is a grind that runs you off the road.
How to actually decide
Here is the conversation I have with first-timers when they ask. Try these questions.
How long have you been running consistently?
Under three months: 5K. Three to nine months: 5K or 10K. Nine to eighteen months: 10K or - if you have already raced a 10K - a half. Over eighteen months with a clean injury history: any of the three.
How many days a week can you train without your life falling over?
Three days: 5K. Four days: 5K or 10K. Five days: any of the three, with the half as the riskiest and the 5K as the safest. The training plan must fit your week, not the other way round.
What is your goal?
If you want to finish, do not get injured, and walk away with a desire to run more - choose the distance you can comfortably train for in your current life. If you have a specific time target, the longer distance gives you a richer canvas. If you want to use this race to anchor a year of running, the 10K is the sweet spot for most.
The Indian race calendar reality
Most Indian cities now have a race weekend within a 90-minute drive at least four times a year. The big ones - Tata Mumbai Marathon in January, TCS World 10K Bengaluru in May, Vedanta Delhi Half in October, IDBI New Delhi Marathon in February, Hyderabad Marathon in August - all offer 5K, 10K, and half distances on the same day. That is a gift. It means you can sign up for the 5K and your faster friend can sign up for the half, and you go through it together.
The cost
5K registration in 2025-26 is typically ₹500-1500. 10K is ₹800-2500. Half is ₹1500-4000. Bib transfer rules vary; check your race specifically. Local timed runs - 5K and 10K at parks like Cubbon, Sanjay Gandhi, Lodhi - are often free or under ₹200.
What you actually get
A bib. A finisher t-shirt. A medal. Photos. A timing chip on your shoe. A small crowd cheering you in at the finish. The thing nobody writes about: the long walk back to the car or the metro, wrapped in a foil blanket, smelling like the Indian morning. That is the part you remember. Visit the Running Lab for race-week prep, and our tips section for the bib-collection logistics most first-timers get wrong.
One more thing my coach said in 2022
She told me: "The race you run is not the one you signed up for. It's the one your body lets you run on that morning." I have thought about this often. The first-race distance is your bet on the body you will have in twelve weeks. Pick the bet you can afford to lose - because some part of you will lose, and that part needs to live to run another day.
The next step
Use our plan generator to build a training block that fits your current life, our calculators to estimate realistic finish times, and our 5K plans if you have decided the 5K is your honest first chapter. Pick the race. Pay the entry. Tell three people. Begin.