
Set in Penafiel, Portugal, from May 1 to May 3, Lagares is famous for blending urban intensity with brutal natural terrain, creating a race that demands both technical precision and physical endurance.
Organised by Extreme Clube Lagares, the event is an official championship round and welcomes riders from the Championship, Junior, Women’s, Youth, and Senior categories.
Lagares remains one of the clearest expressions of what hard enduro really is: a relentless fight against terrain, time, and fatigue. Riders face a punishing mix of natural and man-made obstacles, including rock gardens, steep climbs, riverbeds, and tight technical bottlenecks.
After a dramatic opening round at 24MX Alestrem, the championship arrives in Portugal with the standings still extremely tight.
Billy Bolt leads the overall standings with 29 points, just one point ahead of Manuel Lettenbichler on 28. Teodor Kabakchiev sits third on 22 points, keeping the pressure on the leading pair.
Just behind them, Mitch Brightmore and Ashton Brightmore continue to build early-season momentum, while experienced names like Mario Román and Eddie Karlsson will look to use the technical nature of Lagares to their advantage.
Further back, riders such as Wade Young and Matthew Green will be aiming to make important gains before the championship expands even further with round three in the USA.
The FIM Hard Enduro Junior World Championship is also shaping up quickly.
Ashton Brightmore leads the class on 33 points, followed by James Moore on 26 and Toby Shaw on 25. With Lagares rewarding control, timing, and smart line choice, the junior category could once again produce some of the most exciting racing of the weekend.
Extreme XL Lagares is not a one-format race. It unfolds across three distinct stages, each bringing its own demands and points opportunities.
The weekend opens with a 60-kilometre Endurocode stage, where riders must navigate control points under time pressure. The rider who covers the most checkpoints in the shortest time takes the win. Championship points for this stage go 3-2-1 for the top three.
Later on Friday, the action moves into the city for the Night Super Special, a short, intense race under the lights that decides the starting order for Saturday.

Saturday delivers the heart of the event.
The 115-kilometre Extreme Penafiel is one of the longest race days of the season, combining long-distance endurance with brutal technical sectors. Once again, the winner is the rider who clears the most checkpoints in the shortest time. Points are awarded from 10 down to 1 for the top ten.
The event concludes with a high-intensity final race on a 5-kilometre lap, run over two hours plus one lap with a Le Mans-style start.
After two days of punishment, everything comes down to this last test. Sunday’s final is worth the most points of the weekend, with 20 points for the winner and points paying down to 15th place. It will also be streamed live on the championship’s YouTube channel and the Extreme XL Lagares Facebook page.
A maximum of 33 championship points are available across the weekend, making Lagares a major early-season turning point.
With round three taking the paddock across the Atlantic to the USA, riders and teams will want to leave Portugal with momentum, not questions.