Here's What You Need to Know About the 2026 IRONMAN New Zealand Race

Kat Matthews takes second at the 2025 IRONMAN World Championship in Kona, Hawaii on her way to winning a second IRONMAN Pro Series title. Photo: Ezra Shaw/Getty Images for IRONMAN

The IRONMAN Pro Series kicks off this Saturday at the second-oldest IRONMAN qualifier in Taupo, New Zealand. Both defending IRONMAN Pro Series champions – Kat Matthews and Kristian Blummenfelt – will be on hand for this weekend’s race, but both will face some tough competition as they look to begin their title defenses in 2026. Here’s a preview of this weekend’s racing.

IRONMAN Pro Series

The third year of the IRONMAN Pro Series will feature 16 races between March and October, a US$1.7 million bonus prize pool – the winners of the series will each taking home a $200,000 bonus check. All told there will be over US$6 million in total prize money within the series, with this weekend’s race in New Zealand offering a prize purse of $125,000. The race also features four pro qualifying slots per gender for the IRONMAN World Championship in Kona.

The Pro Series includes six IRONMAN and eight IRONMAN 70.3 races, along with the IRONMAN and IRONMAN 70.3 World Championships. Here’s the full list of races:

Saturday, 
Mar. 7, 2026
ANZCO Foods IRONMAN New Zealand
WPRO & MPRO
Taupō, NZL
Sunday, 
Mar. 22, 2026
IRONMAN 70.3 Geelong
WPRO & MPRO
Geelong, Victoria, AUS
Saturday, 
Mar. 28, 2026
Athletic Brewing IRONMAN 70.3 Oceanside
WPRO & MPRO
Oceanside, California, USA
Saturday, 
Apr. 18, 2026
Memorial Hermann IRONMAN Texas North American Championship
WPRO & MPRO
The Woodlands, Texas, USA
Sunday, 
May 17, 2026
IRONMAN 70.3 Aix en Provence
WPRO & MPRO
Aix-en-Provence, FRA
Sunday, 
Jun.7, 2026
IRONMAN Hamburg European Championship
WPRO
Hamburg, DEU
Sunday, 
Jun. 14, 2026
IRONMAN 70.3 Pennsylvania Happy Valley North American Championship
WPRO & MPRO
Happy Valley, Pennsylvania, USA 
Sunday, 
Jun. 21, 2026
IRONMAN 70.3 Elsinore
WPRO & MPRO
Elsinore, DEN
Sunday, 
Jun. 28, 2026
Mainova IRONMAN Frankfurt European Championship
MPRO
Frankfurt, DEU
Sunday, 
Jul. 12, 2026
IRONMAN 70.3 Swansea
WPRO & MPRO
Swansea, GBR
Sunday, 
Jul. 19, 2026
Athletic Brewing IRONMAN Lake Placid
WPRO & MPRO
Lake Placid, NY, USA
Saturday, 
Jul. 25, 2026
IRONMAN 70.3 Boise
WPRO & MPRO
Boise Idaho, USA
Saturday, 
Aug. 15, 2026
IRONMAN Kalmar
WPRO & MPRO
Kalmar, SWE
Sunday, 
Aug. 30, 2026
IRONMAN 70.3 Zell am See-Kaprun
WPRO & MPRO
Zell am See, AUT
Saturday, 
Sep. 12, 2026
IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship Nice
WPRO
Nice, FRA
Sunday, 
Sep. 13, 2026
IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship Nice
MPRO
Nice, FRA
Saturday, 
Oct. 10, 2026
IRONMAN World Championship
WPRO & MPRO
Kona, Hawaii, USA

Live Coverage

This year fans around the world will be able to tune into the live coverage on the IRONMAN YouTube channel. Coverage starts at 7:15 am local time on Saturday, March 7, which is Friday, March 6 at 1:15 pm EST and 6:15 pm GMT.

Women’s Pro Field

Photo: IRONMAN

As mentioned, Great Britain’s Kat Matthews highlights the women’s field as she looks to continue her streak as the only woman who has ever won the IRONMAN Pro Series. She’ll face a tough field that includes defending champion, Australia’s Regan Hollioake (pictured above), last year’s fourth-place finisher in Kona, Kiwi Hanna Berry, and two-time Taupo champion, Jocelyn McCauley (USA).

After spending some time in Lanzarote, Matthews travelled to Noosa, Australia to prepare for this weekend’s race. While the focus of the season will be Kona, Matthews said she is “deeply motivated to retain the Pro Series title.”

“The training block in Noosa has gone exactly to plan, super smooth and with the added bonus of great company and really relaxed fun atmosphere,” Matthews said. “Coming over to Oceania well ahead of IRONMAN New Zealand allows me to feel totally in-line with the time zone shift. I often find big travel hits my hormonal stability and the sleep disturbance coincides with my mood, gut health and general tolerance for positivity! It is also nice to enjoy the heat of Australia after a pretty miserable [weather] UK winter.”

After being forced out of the IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship in Marbella due to a calf injury, Matthews has taken more control over her training, and has added some additional work in hopes of avoiding similar issues this year.

“My husband Mark and I are now taking total ownership over all my training programs, and we are both loving the flexibility of this so far,” Matthews continued. “We are communicating really well. Loosely I’d say in Jan and Feb I am doing less volume to last year and loading the threshold zone more across the bike and run. We will, of course, periodize through the year towards the primary focus of the IRONMAN World Championship in Kona. Some extra little things I have added in are surrounding muscular health; some toe and foot exercises and single leg weighted loading.”

Like Matthews, the defending champ is, first and foremost, focused on Kona, so the first priority is to nail one of the four qualifying slots this weekend.

“All roads lead to Kona so that is my main priority,” Hollioake said. “It would be ideal to grab a world championship slot at the first race of the season, which to do so would have to be a solid result in itself. It would be excellent to start the year off with some solid Pro Series points, too. A solid result early on would be a big advantage and lead to some flexibility later in the year for me. Lots to fight for come race day.”

Berry would dearly love to take another IRONMAN New Zealand title this weekend in front of the home-town crowd. (She’s from nearby Tauranga.) After finishing fourth in the Pro Series in 2024 and ninth last year, Berry was thrilled that the Taupo race is part of the series after having to skip the event for a couple of years.

Hannah Berry takes fourth in Kona. Photo: Ezra Shaw/Getty Images for IRONMAN

The day promises to feature some “cat-and-mouse” racing with fast swimmers like Rebecca Clarke (NZL), Lotte Wilms (NLD) and Fenella Langridge (GBR) looking to break clear of the pre-race favourites, while running speedsters including Tamara Jewett (CAN) and Danielle Lewis (USA) will look to move to the front during the final leg of the race.

Here’s the pro women’s start list:

Bib First Name Last Name Country
F1  Regan  Hollioake  AUS 
F2  Kat  Matthews  GBR 
F3  Hannah  Berry  NZL 
F4  Jocelyn  McCauley  USA 
F5  Lotte  Wilms  NLD 
F6  Maja  Stage Nielsen  DNK 
F7  Danielle  Lewis  USA 
F8  Nina  Derron  CHE 
F9  Gabrielle  Lumkes  USA 
F10  Rebecca  Clarke  NZL 
F11  Steph  Clutterbuck  GBR 
F12  Tamara  Jewett  CAN 
F14  Fenella  Langridge  GBR 
F15  Chloe  Lane  AUS 
F16  Alexia  Bailly  FRA 
F17  Hannah  Knighton  NZL 
F18  Rhianne  Hughes  GBR 
F19  Line  Bonde  DNK 
F20  Katie  Treston-Torney  USA 
F21  Mizuki  Hirayanagi  JPN 

All Eyes On Blummenfelt

Kristian Blummenfelt wins the 2025 IRONMAN Frankfurt European Championship. Photo: Alexander Koerner/Getty Images for IRONMAN

As with Matthews, Norway’s Kristian Blummenfelt is looking to defend his IRONMAN Pro Series title with a win. As we learned during our conversation with Blummenfelt and his countrymen Gustav Iden and Casper Stornes last month, Blummenfelt heads from Taupo to the next race in the pro series, IRONMAN 70.3 Geelong, with he and the rest of the Norwegian crew heading to Texas in April, where Blummenfelt hopes to defend his title. All that early season racing will hopefully put Blummenfelt in a good position to defend the pro series title despite his heading to Challenge Roth in early July.

“Hopefully I can cross out one solid IRONMAN already in early March, which gives me more space for planning and combining the Pro Series with hopefully racing better in the World Championship in comparison to what I did last year,” said Blummenfelt. “I would like to show to myself that I’m riding better over the 180km distance early in the season compared to what I did last year. There are some really strong cyclists turning up here, especially Rasmus Svenningsson, and I’m interested to see how I compare to him, and how my run legs will be off the bike. Pierre Le Corre is a dark horse for the run. He smashed me on the run last time we raced together in Paris 2024, and I’m looking forward to seeing what he can do. But, of course, I’m going for the win and the 5,000 points that comes with it.”

Mike Phillips takes the 2025 title. Photo: IRONMAN

Among that list of strong cyclists is defending champion and course-record holder (7:45:47) Mike Phillips (NZL), who is in the hunt for a third title in Taupo. He’s all too aware of how strong the field is, though, and with Blummenfelt in the mix, realizes his course record could be in jeopardy on Saturday.

“I started the season really well last year, but ended up with a number of setbacks and broken bones which resulted in having to constantly pivot,” Phillips said. “I hope to start the year strongly again and then pursue the IRONMAN Pro Series with eyes back on Kona.”

“I think it will take a world-class performance to win and there are a number of guys capable of that,” Phillips continued. “The bike course looks slightly tougher, but with a hill removed from the run, I wouldn’t be surprised to see the record under pressure.”

Kyle Smith on his way to a fourth-place finish at the IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship in Taupo in 2024. Photo: Fiona Goodall/Getty Images for IRONMAN

Taupo’s own Kyle Smith is back to race in his hometown in what will be his first full-distance race since dropping out in Kona in 2022. Smith took third in his full-distance debut at IRONMAN New Zealand in 2021, but is returning after a tough 2025.

“Training is going really well since my shoulder break, and I feel like I’m in good shape,” Smith said. “So I’m excited to see how it goes. I’m coming back to IRONMAN because I feel like Kona is the big goal this season and I am really excited by the distance and I’m on a journey of discovery with my return to IRONMAN – especially kicking it off here in Taupo. It’s a place that is super special to me and it’s such an honour to race at home and bring some amazing athletes here to Taupo to race. I’m keen to build throughout this year, start here and build towards the IRONMAN 70.3 World Championship [in Nice, France] and IRONMAN World Championship in Kona with one eye looking at the Pro Series.”

As Blummenfelt suggested, Swede Rasmus Svenningsson will be one to watch on the bike, while American Trevor Foley looks to return to the top of an IRONMAN podium (he won Lake Placid in 2024) with one of his signature fast run splits. And, as Blummenfelt suggested, Le Corre will be a wildcard in the event as he takes on his first full-distance race. There are a few other podium contenders on the start list, too, including Kiwi Jack Moody (fresh off a win at Challenge Wanaka) and Germany’s Frederic Funk.

Here’s the full pro men’s start list:

Bib First Name Last Name Country
M1  Mike  Phillips  NZL 
M2  Kristian  Blummenfelt  NOR 
M3  Rasmus  Svenningsson  SWE 
M4  Trevor  Foley  USA 
M5  Henrik  Goesch  FIN 
M6  Matt  Hanson  USA 
M7  Jack  Moody  NZL 
M8  Ben  Hamilton  NZL 
M9  Kyle  Smith  NZL 
M10  Pierre  Le Corre  FRA 
M11  Frederic  Funk  DEU 
M12  Mitchell  Kibby  AUS 
M14  Sam  Osborne  NZL 
M15  Jack  Sosinski  AUS 
M16  Yvan   Jarrige  FRA 
M17  Andy  Krueger  USA 
M18  Nathan  Dortmann  AUS 
M19  Tom  Somerville  NZL 
M20  Matt  Kerr  NZL 
M21  Calvin  Amos  AUS 
M22  Jamie  Hayes  USA 
M24  Robert  Huisman  NZL 
M25  David  Martin  CZE 

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A Fighting Chance (Blummenfelt and Matthews)

Thorsten:

Dragging this across from the IM Pro Series thread:
Thorsten has superbly distilled all you need to know for Taupo, with his ‘seedings’ being a bonus. Posted this for @Jackets 'cos he has previously been surprised/confused by the pesky time zone - day ‘issue’. Get a beer or three in.
https://youtu.be/bAoly7Q9QuQ?

trirating insta

:trophy: Preview for @ironmannz in Taupō :new_zealand: — kicking off the 2026 long-distance season in style!
:eight_o_clock: Start Times (Saturday, March 7th):
7:45am – Male Pros
7:50am – Female Pros
8:00am – Age Groupers
:alarm_clock: Please note that New Zealand is ahead of most time zones — that means the race starts Friday [either side of] noon in the US :united_states: and Friday evening in Europe :european_union:.
:television: Live Broadcast: On IRONMAN channels (YouTube globally available for 2026 season)

:heavy_dollar_sign: Total Prize Purse: US$125,000 — $18,000 for each winner :money_bag:
:admission_tickets: Kona 2026 Slots: 4 men / 4 women
(Pre-qualified athletes @lotte_wilms @danilewistri @rasmusstri won’t count toward the slots, nor will “Auto Qualified” @kristianblu who has to validate.)
:bar_chart: IM Series Points: 5,000 for the winners, then one point less for every second behind :hourglass_not_done:
IM New Zealand is the first event of the 2026 Pro Series :rocket:

Fun fact..

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Do we know what the % for the Ironman is?? Only so many ladies to go around, perhaps more skipped the long race for the half??

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I have no doubt the numbers for IMNZ are around 25%’ish or less. I have said here for years that women,in general, have far better things to do with their time and money than the Ironman grind.

Edit: Just asked the internet and they tell me last year the number was 33%.’ish. Racecations from Oz must be a thing.:rofl:

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Have extracted (and edited) some of my pre-race comments on Taupo from the IM Pro Series thread.

Four of the top 13 in Kona including #2 (Matthews), #4 (Berry), #7 (McCauley) and #13 (Hollioake).
Langridge is heading to IM New Zealand, but unsure/coy about the design of her season, given this is a ‘comeback’ from health tribulations of last year. Seeks a KQ, which I reckon she will struggle to achieve there, given the talent likely to race (4 slots). IM Pro Series: I suspect not - she needs to chase success in some second tier races. Most years she races the Challenge Champs, Samorin.

Le Corre is 36 this year so likely has decided to pull the WTCS plug - campaigning to stay top 3 in such a strong nation till 2028 would be a gamble. He was desperately unlucky not to get an MTR medal in Paris (thank you Wilde), indeed he was #4 in both individual and MTR so the Olympic bucket (and Rio) is well and truly ticked. I can’t remember what hindered him in 2025 but only finished one WTCS race. Might get a T100 start (5 wildcards for Singapore, 2 for San Francisco).

This’ll be the first IM for Smith since his #11 in the Ironman World Champs 2021 (May 2022 in St George). He doesn’t race full often, but entirely capable thereof: his fail at St George in 2022 must grate/unfinished business. Very local boy! T100 has had his complete attention for a lucrative two years: the 2026 4+1 non-contracted format affords him (and others) greater flexibility.

For athletes aiming to do well in the IM Pro Series the ‘early double’ of IMNZ and then Geelong is attractive (and in benign training weather season too). Opens Texas as second and done IM. This matters more for the women as Texas followed by Hamburg is tight whereas for the men they have long enough to Frankfurt for their second one. Hamburg (Philipp) creates risk for and Frankfurt certainly kiboshes Roth. Blummenfelt is signed up for Roth: on his ‘bucket list’ and the IMNZ & IM Texas combo fits nicely then a ‘spare’ 70.3 in a ten week block before Roth.

“Other Norges”
Both Iden and Stornes have had injury interruptions in the last few months but iirc Stornes was never planning to race IMNZ. Both are on the start list for IM Texas (Bjerkeset also) as their first full distance outing. I suggest that all three will value the IM Pro Series opportunity sufficiently to include two IMs and a 70.3 (maybe two) in their schedule. This is completely compatible with being “interested in those 2 big races at the end of the season” and exactly their approach last year. Not clear how Iden is going to square his second IM (after Texas) with Roth. Assume Stornes will race Frankfurt.

And (added) here’s Episode 2 of ‘A Fighting Chance’:

Live stream: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZXn-ThyTaQ

I forget which pod it was, but this was confirmed. He’s done with short course.

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The amateurs start 10 minutes behind the WPro mass start. The back third of the WPros will be caught in the water by Sam Askey-Doran
44 minutes-ish and only a minute behind the ‘main pack’ (with 5 out in front). His bike is about the same as Matthews’ and Berry’s.
https://www.instagram.com/p/DVhk88IEnIw/
Live coverage is ‘live’! Rinny and McCloy!

Wouldn’t he catch most of the women pros? Unless he isn’t starting exactly 10 minutes behind, suppose AG’s are a staggered start? Be interesting to see him in that mix, should be riding with money contenders at some point, and not likely to be strong enough to just ride through.

I’m going off Thorsten’s swim predictions (there are another 6 slower than these):

Athlete Nation Swim time
Rebecca Clarke NZL 00:49:27
Lotte Wilms (KQ) NED 00:49:58
Fenella Langridge GBR 00:50:14
Stephanie Clutterbuck GBR 00:50:53
Hannah Berry NZL 00:51:38
Gabrielle Lumkes USA 00:53:26
Kat Matthews GBR 00:53:52
Nina Derron SUI 00:54:12
Chloe Lane AUS 00:54:35
Maja Stage Nielsen DEN 00:54:46
Tamara Jewett CAN 00:56:49
Danielle Lewis (KQ) USA 01:01:33

Ahhh wish I could sit around and watch this, but Wolves Vs Liverpool is calling, nice surprise seeing this on my YouTube when I put it on.

I’ve put zero research into this race and kept right away from anything triathlon for a couple of months so my blind predictions for this race going off the start list above..

Kat for the women..

  1. Blum
  2. Foley
  3. Funk

Blu
Phillips
Smith

Going with the local boys coming good..

Kat
Wilms
Clarke

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McCloy on the broadcast!!! FUCK YEAH! I hope it’s for the whole year…

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Be interesting seeing/hearing how he gets on over the longer stuff, bit different to Supertri!

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Jesus, they made a mess of that start coverage.

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Well it’s great to see the broadcasting has pulled its socks up.

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WHY are they so fucking shit at this?

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IRONMAN get away to a great 2026 start. Every second counts. To miss one start is just one of those things: to miss both M and W starts is quality.

Le Corre #2 in Bani Yas

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