The rise of run clubs in the US

Image Credits: UnsplashImage Credits: Unsplash

On any given weekend in cities like Atlanta, Chicago, or Portland, you’ll find them: groups of runners in matching T-shirts or coordinated playlists, pacing their way through urban trails, suburban loops, or even downtown bars after a post-run drink. They’re not elite athletes. They’re not chasing PRs. They’re just...running. Together.

This isn’t your old-school solo jog with wired earbuds and a grim sense of duty. This is social, structured, and often photo-worthy. And it’s growing—fast. In 2024, the New York City Marathon welcomed over 55,000 finishers, a record-breaking crowd that mirrored a bigger movement: the reappearance of running as a communal ritual. And behind it? The quiet, determined spread of run clubs.

Running used to be personal. And sometimes, lonely. Think 5 a.m. pavement slaps, solo playlists, and that inner monologue that either kept you going or convinced you to stop. Now, it’s starting to look more like a group chat brought to life.

Run clubs like Atlanta Run Club, Good Vibes Run Club in Los Angeles, and Two Tides Running in Chicago don’t just offer routes—they offer belonging. They coordinate warm-ups, post-run hangs, and even mood boards. They’re part fitness, part identity anchor.

And it makes sense. After years of isolation, remote work, and algorithm-curated friendships, something about showing up in person, moving your body in sync with others, and finishing strong as a group just hits different.

Instagram didn’t invent the run club—but it did give it a vibe.

Matching gear. Candid-but-curated finish line shots. Morning light that hits just right. The look of running has evolved into its own kind of cool. Athletic but not intimidating. Gritty, but still photogenic.

It’s not performance art—but it is shared performance. Everyone’s moving for their own reasons: post-pandemic health checks, heartbreak processing, new city navigation. But doing it in a pack adds structure, visibility, and low-key accountability. This is effort with aesthetic. Cardio with community. Burnout recovery with a side of endorphins.

It’s easy to call this a trend. A COVID aftershock. A social wellness workaround. But look closer and you’ll see a more profound reset underway. Run clubs give people a way to reorient time (evenings that aren’t screens), space (public parks become “our route”), and emotion (loneliness transmuted into pacing rhythm). It's movement as a social map.

And that map looks different depending on where you are. In New York, it's pre-dawn bridge runs. In Austin, it’s tempo runs that end in tacos. In Atlanta, it’s music-infused routes through historic neighborhoods. Every city adapts it—because it’s not just about cardio. It’s about context.

The run club scene is also diversifying. Groups like Black Men Run, Latinos Run, and Native Women Running aren’t just creating safe spaces—they’re building visibility.

Historically, the public image of running has skewed white, thin, and elite. But these community-led initiatives are rewriting the narrative. They’re showing up at marathons, trail events, and local loops not just to participate but to be seen. To reclaim space. It’s also reshaping who sees running as “for them.” First-timers, women in hijabs, plus-sized runners—they’re all being welcomed, not tokenized.

There’s something primal about running. No gear needed. No team required. Just feet, ground, breath. In a post-pandemic world still processing isolation, grief, and existential fatigue, that simplicity matters. The body remembers motion even when the mind is overwhelmed. And motion, when repeated and shared, becomes ritual.

Run clubs turn that ritual into something sticky. Something that pulls you out of bed. Something that makes time feel more elastic and mornings feel more yours.

What distinguishes run clubs from personal trackers or Peloton-style virtual classes is the human factor. You’re not just logging miles—you’re keeping a promise. To show up. To move alongside others. To share space even if you’re not sharing pace. That kind of accountability isn’t about metrics. It’s about presence. And in a time when presence feels splintered across tabs, apps, and alerts, that’s surprisingly powerful.

The rise of run clubs in the US isn’t just about health. It’s about rhythm. Belonging. And the human need to sync up—not online, but on foot. So the next time you see a group of runners moving through your city like a pulse, know this: they’re not just running. They’re remembering what together feels like.


Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 8:00:00 PM

Why looking poor to build wealth is the quiet power move of 2025

In a world fueled by visual proof of success—filters, flexing, and fast credit—it’s never been easier to look rich. But increasingly, professionals are...

Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 8:00:00 PM

Why traffic lights are red yellow and green

Most of us drive or walk past traffic lights every day without thinking twice. We know the rules instinctively—red means stop, green means...

Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 7:30:00 PM

Why different types of mindfulness work better for different kinds of anxiety

Mindfulness isn’t new. But personalizing it? That’s where the science is heading. We now know mindfulness helps manage anxiety. But what’s becoming clearer...

Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 7:30:00 PM

What ‘Mickey Mouse degrees’ really say about us

In one corner of the internet, students are posting TikToks about their final exams in the "Science of Harry Potter." In another, commenters...

Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 7:30:00 PM

Turmeric and medication don’t always mix—Here’s why

Turmeric might look like a harmless spice. But concentrated as a supplement, it becomes something else entirely: a biochemical signal with real consequences....

Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 7:30:00 PM

Does salt make you gain weight? Here’s what the science shows

Sodium is essential. You need it to move muscles, fire neurons, and balance fluid in and out of cells. But in high doses—especially...

Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 6:30:00 PM

This new seawater-dissolvable plastic could reshape ocean waste

A shopping bag that vanishes into saltwater without a trace. A toothpaste sachet that breaks down before it ever clogs a reef. These...

Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 6:00:00 PM

What is sriracha sauce made of—and why people love it

Some sauces scream for attention. Others hum in the background. Sriracha does both. It offers a bold hit of garlic and chili but...

Singapore
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 6:00:00 PM

Why you need travel insurance for your Singapore trip

The countdown is on: your long-awaited escape to Singapore is just around the corner. A getaway meant to shake off work stress, mental...

Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 4:30:00 PM

Why Malaysia Airlines and AirAsia’s name entry rules reveal a deeper ops fix

While the headlines frame it as a customer data update, the new name entry rules from Malaysia Airlines and AirAsia reveal a deeper...

Image Credits: Unsplash
June 16, 2025 at 4:00:00 PM

What makes a storm a hurricane, typhoon or cyclone?

You might call it a hurricane. Or a typhoon. Or just a cyclone. But if you’re describing the same swirling monster of a...

Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege
Load More
Ad Banner
Advertisement by Open Privilege