The New York City Marathon course
8 m net uphill (16 m → 24 m).
New York looks net-flat on a chart and races nothing like it. You start at the highest point on the course — atop the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge — climb to its apex, then drop steeply into Brooklyn, and that opening descent is the number-one mistake: it feels free, but it shreds quads you will need for the four bridges still to come. Brooklyn’s Fourth Avenue is gently rolling and fast, the place to settle into goal effort, before the Pulaski Bridge nudges you up at halfway. The decisive climb is the Queensboro Bridge at miles 15–16 — long, silent, closed to spectators — followed by the roaring descent onto First Avenue that tempts a reckless surge. The course saves its cruelest feature for last: a long, gradual rise up Fifth Avenue from mile 23 on emptied legs, then rolling Central Park roads with a final uphill kick to the line. Even-effort pacing slows your target on every bridge and only lets it run on the flats, so you arrive at Fifth Avenue with something left. Exposed bridge decks also amplify the wind, so a blustery year costs more than the elevation alone suggests.
Course segments
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Verrazzano Bridge climb (Start–1.2K) +2.8% · +33 m
The race starts uphill, climbing ~3.7% to the bridge apex amid the biggest crowd of runners on Earth. Do not fight it — let the pace go.
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Verrazzano descent into Brooklyn (1.2–3.3K) -2.0% · −41 m
A steep ~4% plunge off the bridge. The classic NYC trap: hammer this and you torch your quads 39 km from the line.
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Brooklyn — Fourth Avenue (3.3–19K) flat · −8 m
Where New York is won or lost — gently rolling, fast, and loud. Lock into goal effort and run the tangents; this is the biggest error zone.
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Pulaski Bridge into Queens (19–22K) +0.3% · +8 m
A short climb right at halfway. Let your pace drift up the bridge and hold your effort flat.
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Queensboro Bridge to First Avenue (22–27K) +0.1% · +6 m
The crux: a long, silent, spectator-free ~3.3% climb at miles 15–16, then a descent into the First Avenue wall of noise. Resist the urge to surge into the crowd.
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First Avenue, Willis & the Bronx (27–35K) flat
Fast and slightly downhill up First Avenue — stay disciplined. The Willis Avenue bridge at mile 20 is the steepest short pitch on the course.
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Fifth Avenue climb & Central Park (35–42.2K) +0.1% · +8 m
The deceptive killer: a long, gradual Fifth Avenue rise on dead legs, then rolling park roads with a final uphill bump to the line. Save effort for here.
Race-day weather
The New York City Marathon is run in November. A typical race morning is around 53 °F with a dew point near 40 °F (a temperature-plus-dew-point sum of 93), so no heat penalty in a typical year. If the forecast is warmer than usual, slow your goal with the heat-adjusted pace calculator before race day — heat is the most common reason a goal pace falls apart.
How this plan is built
Splits come from an even-effort, grade-adjusted model: your goal time is spread across the course by each segment's energy cost, so you hold the same effort up the hills and down them instead of chasing one flat clock pace. See the generic marathon pace calculator for a course-blind even pace, or browse marathon pace calculators by course for other majors.
Sources
- NYC Marathon course & elevation profile TCS New York City Marathon course guide (Marathon Handbook) — five-borough route, bridge grades and ~288 m total ascent.
- Metric elevation profile & bridge grades Run Ready — TCS NYC Marathon metric elevation analysis (Verrazzano ~3.7%, Queensboro ~3.3%, Willis Avenue ~6.5%).
- New York November climate (temperature & humidity) Weather Spark / NWS Central Park — average early-November weather for New York City (used to estimate race-morning temperature and dew point).
- Even-effort pacing (grade-adjusted cost) Minetti, Moia, Roi, Susta & Ferretti (2002), “Energy cost of walking and running at extreme uphill and downhill slopes”, J. Appl. Physiol. 93(3): 1039–1046.
- Race-day heat & humidity adjustment Mark Hadley / Maximum Performance Running — temperature + dew-point pace-slowdown method (air temp °F + dew point °F → % slowdown band).
FAQ
Is the New York City Marathon a hard course?
Yes — it is one of the toughest of the majors despite being roughly net-flat. Five bridges create real climbs (the Verrazzano at the start, the Queensboro at mile 15, the Willis Avenue bridge at mile 20) and the long Fifth Avenue rise into Central Park comes when you are most tired. Exposed bridge decks add wind. Even splits, not negative splits, are the proven strategy here.
How should I pace the Verrazzano Bridge at the start?
Easy up, easy down. The race climbs about 3.7% to the bridge apex, then plunges roughly 4% into Brooklyn. Let your pace slow on the climb and — crucially — do not hammer the descent; that early downhill pounding is the classic New York quad-killer that surfaces 20 miles later. The split table above slows your first kilometre and holds back the descent.
Where is the hardest part of the NYC Marathon?
Two places. The Queensboro Bridge climb at miles 15–16 is long, silent and spectator-free — a mental and physical low. Then Fifth Avenue from mile 23 is a deceptive, dragging uphill on dead legs just before Central Park. Runners who paced the bridges by effort have something left for both; those who chased even splits usually do not.
What is the weather usually like for the NYC Marathon?
The early-November start is typically around 53 °F with a low dew point near 40 °F — good racing weather most years. The bigger weather factor is wind on the exposed bridge decks, especially the Verrazzano and Queensboro, which can feel much colder and cost real effort. Check the forecast and, if it is warm, use the heat-adjusted pace calculator linked here.
Should I chase a Boston qualifier at New York?
You can — the course is certified — but it is a poor place to chase a fast BQ time because of the bridges, the Queensboro climb, the Fifth Avenue rise, the congestion of 50,000 runners and the wind. Flatter races like Chicago or Berlin are better for qualifying. Use New York for the experience and pace it by effort.
Estimates only. Segment elevations are approximate, drawn from public course profiles, and your real splits depend on fitness, fuelling, weather, wind and pacing discipline on the day. Not medical or coaching advice.