The Moab 240 is an annual ultramarathon and trail running race held in Moab, Utah, United States. The race is organized by Destination Trail and forms part of the Triple Crown of 200s, together with the Tahoe 200 and Bigfoot 200.[1][2]
| Moab 240 | |
|---|---|
| Date | October |
| Location | Moab, Utah, United States |
| Event type | Ultramarathon / Trail running |
| Distance | 239.66 mi |
| Established | 2017 |
| Course records | 55:49:58, Michael McKnight (2021) |
| Official site | www |
The race became widely known after its inaugural 2017 edition, when Courtney Dauwalter won the event outright, finishing ahead of all male competitors.[3][4]
Course
editThe current Moab 240 course is a 239.66-mile loop that begins and ends in Moab, Utah.[1][5] The route passes through desert, canyon country, slickrock, mesa terrain and two mountain ranges near Canyonlands National Park and Arches National Park.[1] The race has approximately 31,564 feet of ascent and a time limit of about 117 hours.[1][6]
The original 2017 course was listed as 238 miles and had a 112-hour cutoff.[7] Early descriptions characterized the race as a large counterclockwise loop from Moab, heading south within sight of Canyonlands, crossing the Abajo Mountains, moving north through the La Sal Mountains, and returning toward Moab near Arches National Park.[8] The course uses a mixture of trails, four-wheel drive roads, dirt roads, gravel roads and short paved sections.[8]
By the early-2020s, the race was listed as 239.66 miles, with a larger recorded elevation profile and a longer cutoff. The modern course retained the basic single-loop structure around the Moab region while formalizing the route, aid-station system, sleep stations, crew access points and mapping used for a growing field of 200-mile specialists.[1][5][6]
History
editOrigins
editThe Moab 240 was founded by race director Candice Burt and Destination Trail, and held its first edition in October 2017.[7][6] The race was created in honor of ultrarunner Stephen Jones, who had imagined a 200-mile race around Moab before his death in a backcountry skiing accident in 2016.[9][6]
Burt and Destination Trail had already helped develop the American 200-mile race format through events such as the Tahoe 200 and Bigfoot 200. The Moab 240 extended that format into the desert and mountain landscapes of southeastern Utah, a region associated with Colorado Plateau geology, canyon terrain and high-desert endurance events.[10][2]
Inaugural race and Courtney Dauwalter
editThe first Moab 240 was held from October 13 to 17, 2017.[7] The inaugural race drew major attention when Courtney Dauwalter won the event outright in 57 hours, 55 minutes and 13 seconds, finishing over ten hours ahead of the next runner.[3][4][11] GearJunkie described the performance as a decisive overall victory in a 238-mile race, while Trail Runner published a detailed account of how Dauwalter won the race outright.[3][4]
Dauwalter's performance became one of the defining results in the public recognition of modern ultrarunning. The result was later discussed in Runner's World, Athletes Quarterly, Trail Runner, and on The Joe Rogan Experience.[12][13][14]
Course development and later editions
editAfter the inaugural race, the event became a recurring fixture in the 200-mile ultramarathon calendar. In 2018, Piotr Hercog and Jessica Pekari won the men's and women's races. Michael McKnight won in 2019 and again in 2021, while Michele Graglia won in 2020.[11]
The race's distance and course specifications evolved from the original 238-mile listing to the current 239.66-mile format.[7][1] The cutoff also shifted from the original 112-hour description to the modern multi-day format of about 117 hours.[7][1] Coverage from runners and local media described the race as a single-loop route through the Moab and Indian Creek areas, using the combination of desert exposure, mountain weather, technical terrain, sleep deprivation and crew logistics that became characteristic of 200-mile trail races.[15][6]
In 2023, Sally McRae won the women's race at Moab 240 after completing Cocodona 250, Tahoe 200 and Bigfoot 200 earlier that year. Trail Runner described her Moab win as the culmination of four 200-mile and longer races in one season.[16] In 2025, Kilian Korth won Moab 240 and completed a sweep of the Triple Crown of 200s after earlier wins at Tahoe 200 and Bigfoot 200.[17][18][19]
Records
editThe overall course record is held by Michael McKnight, who won the 2021 race in 55:49:58; the women's course record is held by Courtney Dauwalter, who won the inaugural 2017 race outright in 57:55:13.[11][3]
Media coverage
editThe Moab 240 has received coverage from local Utah media, specialist ultrarunning publications, podcasts, and broader sports and outdoor outlets. Local coverage in The Times-Independent has described the experience of completing the race through the Moab and Indian Creek area.[15] GearJunkie and Trail Runner covered the 2017 inaugural race because of Courtney Dauwalter's outright win.[3][4]
Dauwalter's 2017 win gave the race a wider media afterlife. Runner's World later profiled Dauwalter and highlighted the Moab 240 victory as a major part of her emergence in the sport.[12] Athletes Quarterly described the Moab 240 as a mental and physical test across desert, canyons and mountain terrain.[13] On October 24, 2017, Dauwalter appeared on The Joe Rogan Experience, where the episode description identified her as an ultramarathon runner who had recently won the Moab 240 in Utah in under 58 hours.[14]
Specialist running media continued covering the race through later winners and the growth of 200-mile racing. Trail Runner covered Sally McRae's 2023 Moab 240 win and her completion of four 200-mile and longer races in one year.[16] Canadian Running and BroBible covered Kilian Korth's 2025 Moab win and the record-setting Triple Crown of 200s season.[18][19] Marathon Handbook has covered the race through public-interest race reports, including David Goggins's 2025 finish.[20]
Winners
editThe overall course record is held by Michael McKnight, who won the 2021 race in 55:49:58; the women's course record is held by Courtney Dauwalter, who won the inaugural 2017 race outright in 57:55:13.[11][3]
| Year | Finishers | Men's winner | Time | Women's winner | Time | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | 98 | Sean Nakamura | 67:50:10 | Courtney Dauwalter | 57:55:13 | [11][3] |
| 2018 | 111 | Piotr Hercog | 60:14:47 | Jessica Pekari | 77:26:01 | [11] |
| 2019 | 86 | Michael McKnight | 59:30:12 | Sarah Emoto | 81:18:41 | [11] |
| 2020 | Michele Graglia | 61:43:15 | Jessi Morton-Langehaug | 80:09:42 | [11] | |
| 2021 | 168 | Michael McKnight | 55:49:58 | Annie Hughes | 68:50:02 | [11] |
| 2022 | 167 | Jeff Browning | 57:27:57 | Alyssa Clark | 73:12:29 | [11] |
| 2023 | 112 | Jesse Haynes | 70:47:49 | Sally McRae | 86:18:33 | [11][16] |
| 2024 | 129 | Max Jolliffe | 69:22:17 | Sarah Ostaszewski | 76:57:52 | [11] |
| 2025 | 150 | Kilian Korth | 58:45:00 | Rebecca Rick | 72:12:00 | [11][18][19] |
See also
editReferences
edit- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Moab 240 Trail Race". Destination Trail. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 "Triple Crown of 200s". UltraSignup. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Mitka, Nate (October 16, 2017). "238 Miles On Foot: Courtney Dauwalter Wins Moab Ultra". GearJunkie. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 3 4 "How Courtney Dauwalter Won the Moab 240 Outright". Trail Runner. October 19, 2017. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 "Moab 240 Official Race Map". CalTopo. Destination Trail. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "SMC Co-Founder takes on the Moab 240". Squak Mountain Co. October 5, 2023. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "1st Moab 240 Endurance Run". DUV Ultra Marathon Statistics. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 "The Moab 240". Virginia Happy Trails Running Club. October 25, 2017. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- ↑ Burt, Candice (February 4, 2016). "RIP Stephen Jones, Adventurer & Pioneer of 200s". Candice Burt. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- ↑ "Episode 191: Candice Burt: Finding the Right Distance For You". Fastest Known Time. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 "Moab 240 Race Results". UltraRunning Magazine. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 "There's No Stopping Ultrarunner Courtney Dauwalter". Runner's World. August 3, 2018. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 "Going the Distance". Athletes Quarterly. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 #1027 - Courtney Dauwalter. Apple Podcasts. The Joe Rogan Experience. October 24, 2017. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 "240 miles through the Moab desert". The Times-Independent. October 13, 2022. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 3 Gleason, David (November 1, 2023). "How Sally McRae Won the Moab 240 in Her Fourth 200+ Mile Race of the Year". Trail Runner. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- ↑ "Reflections from the 2025 Triple Crown Winners: Kilian Korth and Manuela Vilaseca". Destination Trail. November 11, 2025. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 3 Milne, Keeley (October 15, 2025). "200-mile Triple Crown records smashed at Moab 240". Canadian Running. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- 1 2 3 "History Made At Moab Ultra Marathon As Kilian Korth Sets New Record During Three-Race Sweep". BroBible. October 17, 2025. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- ↑ "David Goggins Moab 240: Results + Race Recap". Marathon Handbook. October 14, 2025. Retrieved May 22, 2026.