
Slovenia · Carinthia (Koroška)
K24 Ultra-Trail
Distance
100 km
Date
August 7, 2026
Entry fee
120 EUR
€ / km
€1.20
Slovenia’s cult ultra: steep climbs, rocky ridges, and the iconic 24-hour mountain challenge vibe.
Elevation and Terrain
Total Meters
5420m
D+/KM
54.2m/km
For context, the Tor des Géants 330 loop has 73 D+/km.
Avg Uphill Gradient
13.9%
Avg Downhill Gradient
-13.6%
Uphill gradient distribution
Route Profile
Analysed 2026-05-02Terrain breakdown
Terrain
Climbs
Top climbs
5.4 km · 1051 m gain
starts km 9 · avg 19.5% · max 41.8%
6.2 km · 758 m gain
starts km 36 · avg 12.2% · max 46.5%
3.8 km · 623 m gain
starts km 75 · avg 16.2% · max 39.6%
Top descents
9.5 km · 1090 m drop
starts km 79 · avg -11.5% · max -44.6%
5.5 km · 841 m drop
starts km 16 · avg -15.4% · max -47.6%
4.7 km · 554 m drop
starts km 31 · avg -12.0% · max -44.2%
What Makes K24 Ultra-Trail 100km Unique — 6.5km Running Through the 360-Year-Old Podzemlje Pece Mine Tunnels?
Q: What makes K24 Ultra-Trail 100km unique — 6.5km running through the 360-year-old Podzemlje Pece mine tunnels? A: The Podzemlje Pece (Peca Underworld) passage is the K24's global differentiator: 6 to 6.5km of the 100km route runs underground through an abandoned zinc and lead mine that operated for more than 360 years above Črna na Koroškem. Headlamps are mandatory; helmets available. The race describes this as 'a unique running event on a global scale,' and nothing comparable exists in the DTR database. The mine tunnels introduce conditions no other trail race in this database features: total darkness outside the headlamp beam, consistent underground temperatures regardless of surface weather, and a completely distinct psychological environment from the alpine ridge running above ground. Outside the mine section, the race is a technically demanding 100km mountain ultra with 5,420m D+, a rank-93/~390 opening ascent of 1,051m at 19.5% average from km 9.3, and a 13.94% DW average uphill (rank 119/~390 — top 30% steepest).
How Does the K24 Ultra-Trail 100km Course Work — the Opening 1,051m Climb at km 9, Back-to-Back Extremes, and the Late 1,090m Descent?
Q: How does the K24 Ultra-Trail 100km course work — the opening 1,051m climb at km 9, back-to-back extremes, and the late 1,090m descent? A: The K24 opens immediately into extreme terrain. The biggest single ascent (1,051m / 19.5% avg / 5.4km, rank 93/~390 — top 24% by size) begins at km 9.3; within 15km, runners have gained over 1,051m at near-constant extreme gradient. Descent 2 (841m / -15.4% avg / 5.5km) begins at km 15.5, directly after the top climb — creating a back-to-back that delivers nearly 1,900m of vertical change in the first 21km. After Descent 3 (km 31.2, 554m) and Climb 2 (km 36, 758m / 12.2% avg), the mine tunnel passage through the Podzemlje Pece arrives mid-race. The course then delivers a late back-to-back: Climb 3 (623m / 16.2% avg) at km 75 feeds immediately into the biggest descent (1,090m / -11.5% avg / 9.5km, rank 180/~390) at km 78.7 — over 1,700m of vertical change at 75–88% of race distance. The 19% flat terrain (~19km, rank 105/~390 — top 27% most mountainous) is distributed between these major blocks.
What Kind of Runner Does K24 Ultra-Trail 100km Suit — and How to Prepare for Mine Tunnels, a 19.5% Opening Climb, and 5,420m D+?
Q: What kind of runner does K24 Ultra-Trail 100km suit — and how to prepare for mine tunnels, a 19.5% opening climb, and 5,420m D+? A: The K24 suits mountain ultra runners who can handle extreme early-race gradient demand and genuinely unusual terrain. The 19.5% average opening climb (1,051m, km 9.3) requires specific training: opening long runs on maximum grade before the body has warmed up. The mine tunnel section requires comfort in enclosed, dark environments — headlamp familiarity matters. The 13.94% DW avg uphill (rank 119/~390 — top 30% steepest) warrants specific sustained-gradient training above 15% for 30+ minute blocks. The late back-to-back (Climb 3 at km 75 into Descent 1 at km 78.7, rank 180/~390) demands late-race vertical conditioning. With 19% flat terrain (rank 105/~390), the K24 is not a relentless grade machine, but its gradient blocks arrive at the worst possible moments: immediately from the start and at maximum accumulated fatigue late in the race. Poles are recommended.
Is K24 Ultra-Trail 100km Worth Entering — EUR 120 Entry, a 95-Person Field, UTMB Index Status, and How It Compares to Other European Ultras?
Q: Is K24 Ultra-Trail 100km worth entering — EUR 120 entry, a 95-person field, UTMB Index status, and how does it compare? A: At EUR 120 (AUTO EUR 1.20/km — last confirmed Jan–May 2026; check k24trail.si for current pricing), the K24 offers strong value for a UTMB Index 100km with a globally unique feature. The ~95-person finisher field [LOW CONFIDENCE] makes it one of the most intimate 100km events in Europe — part of the Alpe Adria Trail Cup and UTMB-indexed, yet with a small, specialist field. The mine tunnel passage is not replicated anywhere in the DTR database. The course is demanding (5,420m D+, rank 119/~390 avg uphill, extreme opening and late gradient blocks) but the 19% flat terrain (rank 105/~390) makes it more accessible than ultra-high-gradient events like Scenic Trail 120km (~9.5% flat) or MF100 (~9.7% flat). The race is not sold out. The 2026 edition runs August 7.
Race files
Logistics
Nearest airport
Ljubljana (LJU) / Klagenfurt (KLU) / Trieste (TRS)
Notes
Start: ~1.0–2.5 hrs to Črna na Koroškem area / Public transport: limited; buses to Slovenj Gradec/Ravne + taxi last-mile; car recommended / Accommodation: limited in Črna; book early; alternative base in Slovenj Gradec


