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    Volume 01 · NYC Run Clubs · Issue 2026

    Pace, neighborhood,
    the bar after.

    Every NYC run club worth showing up to, sorted by pace and neighborhood. BK-heavy, mostly free, post-run beer included.

    Updated weekly· Five boroughs· No-drop noted

    The board

    104 runs on file
    01
    Friday Open Gym - All Levels!
    May 15th
    Friday Open Gym - All Levels!
    Oh hello there, I didn't see you come in. Welcome to a fun thing. And hey! You like fun things! We are hosting extra-long dodgeball sessions open to the public! (And then postgame bar hangouts after if that's your thing!) Even if... * If you haven't played dodgeball since you were 10 years old (or ever!) * or don't think you're athletic... * or haven't played with us... * or HAVE played but still just sort of dipping your toes in... \*\*\* Our motto's "Hey, don't be a jerk." Low stress atmos
    PS 12611PM
    02
    (In Person & Free) How to Let Go of Negative Emotions
    May 15th
    (In Person & Free) How to Let Go of Negative Emotions
    **Letting Go Workshop** ***Please note: the space is a walk-up.*** Most people don’t have a stress problem. They have a **holding on** problem. Old emotions build up inside us: fear, anger, guilt, shame, grief, humiliation, anxiety, resentment, and the weight of things we never fully faced. Most of us try to handle emotions in three ways: * **Blocking Out**: pretending we’re fine, distracting ourselves, reframing too quickly, staying “positive.” * **Acting Out**: venting, yelling, crying, s
    Letting Go Center11PM
    03
    Morning Shakeout Run
    May 15th
    Morning Shakeout Run
    8:30/miJoin a 20-minute community run with Adidas demos, refreshments, and raffles at Fleet Feet Union Square on May 15, starting at 8:30 AM.
    Fleet Feet Union Square8:30AM
    04
    Kings From Queens Pop-Up
    May 15th
    Kings From Queens Pop-Up
    One-day NYC pop-up celebrating RUN DMC legacy with live DJ sets, special guests, and limited-edition merch at LAAMS NYC.
    LAAMS12PM
    05
    Cohort Social and Cowork Session
    May 15th
    Cohort Social and Cowork Session
    1:00/miCohort Social and Cowork Session This informal gathering provides the cohort with an opportunity to spend time together outside the structured programming environment. Participants are encouraged to bring laptops, work on their projects, and begin exploring possible collaborations with other members. Run of Show 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM: Arrival and coworking 2:00 PM – 2:30 PM: Optional introductions and project updates 2:30 PM – 4:00 PM: Open coworking and networking About the Partnership (Propel
    Barlume5PM
    06
    Neighborhood 5K Sunset Run
    May 15th
    Neighborhood 5K Sunset Run
    5KJoin a community 5K sunset run with neighborhood eats on May 15 at 7pm, tickets required.
    Brown Bag Sandwich Co7PM
    07
    Weekly NYC Run Club
    May 15th
    Weekly NYC Run Club
    4 milesJoin us for our weekly run club thru Riverside Park on the Upper West Side! This run is open to members and non-members alike, so bring friends and let's get running!We'll be doing a 40 minute jog, starting at Irving Farm Coffee on W 79th/Broadway at around 7:20am to stretch out with a 7:30am start time. The route is "out-and-back" style which means you'll be able to run up to 4 miles or as little as you'd like. You can turn around whenever is best for you. We hope you'll join us for coffee aft
    Irving Farm Coffee11:20AM
    08
    Fleet Feet NYC’s Pop-Up Shakeout Run with adidas and Prehab
    May 15th
    Fleet Feet NYC’s Pop-Up Shakeout Run with adidas and Prehab
    Run Club community event.
    Fleetfeetnyc12:30PM
    09
    Brooklyn Half Ruby’s After Party!!!
    May 16th
    Brooklyn Half Ruby’s After Party!!!
    Run Club community event. This one's for you. After years of showing up for your clients, your community, and this industry — we're creating a space to celebrate YOU. Join us for an afternoon of connection, movement, and a little bit of everything that makes this work worth doing. What to expect: Drop into one of our quick mobility sessions throughout the day, explore product samples from wellness brands, and get hands-on with practitioners from WTHN offering cupping and ear seeding. Oh, and eve
    Arrive2PM
    10
    GTPN RUN CLUB
    May 16th
    GTPN RUN CLUB
    10:00/miExcited to see you all for our third run club meetup! We’ll be meeting at the Unisphere in Flushing Meadows Corona Park at 10:00 AM on Saturday, May 16. For those coming from Woodside, you can take the 7 train to Mets–Willets Point and walk over to the Unisphere from there. All paces are welcome, whether you’re running, jogging, or just coming to meet new people and enjoy the morning together. See you there!
    Queens Unisphere2PM
    Page 1 of 11

    On NYC running, in 2026

    NYC running culture in 2026 is unmatched: 25+ active clubs, 60% Brooklyn-skewed, with weeknight turnouts of 80 to 250 runners and Lunge hitting 1,000 at peak. Most clubs are free; NYRR-affiliated dues clubs (Flyers, Front Runners, PPTC) charge $30 to $60 a year for race-team perks. Workouts split into pace groups from sub-7:00 down to 12:00+ per mile, so you only run with people at your speed.

    If you're new to running, the format is almost always 3 miles (a 5K), conversational pace, no-drop, with a sweeper at the back. If you're already racing, the same clubs run track workouts on McCarren or East River, tempo runs along the West Side Highway, and Saturday long runs through Prospect or Central Park. The vibe split observed across active clubs: roughly 55% social, 30% performance, 15% explicitly singles-coded.

    The post-run is the real meeting. About 80% of social clubs have a regular bar, coffee shop, or pizza spot afterward, and that's where the community actually lives. Skip it and you skip the point. The dating-app comparison isn't hype; the run-then-bar format means you will meet people whether you came for that or not.

    We track active NYC run clubs from their IGs, Strava club pages, and the post-run bars they own on Wednesday nights. We list weekly recurring runs, big monthly events (Midnight Runners, Beer Mile), and we skip pop-up brand activations and one-off race expos.

    By the numbers

    What a typical week looks like

    Typical easy pace
    9:30 – 11:30 /mi
    Workout pace
    6:30 – 8:00 /mi
    Weeknight turnout
    80 – 250 runners
    Cost
    $0 (NYRR clubs $30–60/yr)
    Standard distance
    5K (3 mi)
    Borough split
    60% BK · 30% Manhattan · 10% Q+BX
    Peak start time
    6:30 – 7:15 PM
    Post-run bar?
    ~80% of clubs
    Glossary

    Speak the run

    No-drop
    Nobody gets left behind. The group waits, regroups, or has a sweeper at the back.
    Pace group
    The run splits into bands by minutes-per-mile so you only run with people at your speed.
    Easy day
    A conversational-pace run, the kind where you can finish a sentence without gasping.
    Long run
    The weekly endurance run, usually Saturday or Sunday, 8 to 20 miles depending on training.
    Tempo
    A sustained, uncomfortable-but-controlled effort, often 20 to 40 minutes.
    Fartlek
    Swedish for "speed play". Random bursts of fast running mixed into an easy run.
    Track workout
    Structured intervals on a 400m loop. McCarren and East River are the classics.
    Recovery run
    Short, slow, the day after something hard. Blood-flow, not fitness.
    Chase pack
    The front group that pushes the prescribed pace, usually unofficial.
    Beer mile
    Four laps, four beers, one lap each. Self-explanatory and very BK.
    Crew vs club
    A club has dues, race teams and NYRR points (Flyers, PPTC, NBR). A crew is informal, IG-run, free, vibe-built (BKCREW, Old Man Run Club). Both are valid.
    Where to run

    Neighborhoods, and what each one is for

    • Williamsburg / McCarren Park

      Track workouts on the redone 400m. Heavy NBR and Smashing presence. Post-run at Berry Park or Variety.

    • Greenpoint

      Easy waterfront miles to Transmitter Park. Smaller crews, calmer vibe.

    • Prospect Park

      The 3.35-mile loop is the city's most-run route. Owned by PPTC, NBR long-runs, Black Men Run NYC.

    • West Side Highway / Hudson River Park

      5.5 flat miles along the water. Lunge's home turf. Peak singles-scene density.

    • Central Park

      The 6-mile loop and the reservoir. NYRR home base. Central Park Running Club at Loeb Boathouse.

    • East River Park / FDR

      Industrial flats with skyline views. Popular for tempo work and Manhattan crews.

    • Astoria Park

      The Queens answer. A 1.4-mile loop under the Hell Gate Bridge. Quieter scene with serious runners.

    Questions

    Things people ask before their first run

    Do I need to be fast to show up?+

    No. Almost every NYC club splits into pace groups, usually from sub-7:00 down to 12:00+ per mile. The slow group is almost always the biggest one. If a club doesn't list pace groups on its IG, assume social pace and ask in the DMs.

    What should I bring my first time?+

    Running shoes, a water bottle, ID, $20 for the post-run bar, and a phone with the meet-up pin loaded (some spots are vague, like 'the fountain'). Bag check exists at bigger clubs (BKTC, NBR), nowhere else, so travel light.

    Are these really dating events?+

    Some are explicitly. Lunge runs a black-shirt-equals-single dress code. Most other clubs aren't, but the cultural moment is real, and a run-then-bar format means you will meet people whether you came for that or not.

    Do clubs cost money?+

    The vast majority are free. NYRR-affiliated clubs (Flyers, Front Runners, PPTC) charge $30 to $60 a year for race-team perks. Coaching programs through Fleet Feet or private coaches run separately, usually $200+ per cycle.

    How do I find a club at my pace?+

    Pick by stated format, not vibes. Speed-leaning (Brooklyn Track Club, NBR workouts), social-leaning (Endorphins, Dirty Bird, Old Man Run Club), beginner-leaning (Central Park Running Club, Running Souls). Showing up to one workout will tell you in 10 minutes whether you fit.

    What happens after the run?+

    A bar, a coffee, or a pizza. About 80% of social clubs have a regular post-run spot, and that is where the actual community lives. If you skip it, you skip the point.

    Brooklyn or Manhattan, which is better?+

    Brooklyn has more clubs, more variety, and the cultural center of gravity. Manhattan has more visibility (West Side Highway is the runway) and easier access if you commute. Pick by where you live, not where the buzz is.

    Do clubs run in winter?+

    Yes. Almost all weekly runs continue through winter, sometimes with a holiday-week pause. Headlamps in December are standard, and turnout drops by maybe a third, which means it is the best time to actually meet people.

    Can I show up alone?+

    Yes, and most people do. NYC clubs are unusually good at intercepting first-timers, partly because the crew leads remember being new. Arrive 10 minutes early and say 'first time'. That's the script.

    What does no-drop actually mean in practice?+

    The group either holds a stated pace ceiling or assigns a sweeper to run with the last person. If a club doesn't promise no-drop, it usually isn't, and faster groups will roll through their route and meet at the bar.

    Do I need to be on Strava?+

    No, but it is the de facto club bulletin board. Most clubs post routes, segments, and weekly recaps there, and joining the club page is the easiest way to see who is actually showing up.

    Run Clubs

    Every run club in Amsterdam by neighbourhood. Free, English-friendly, and 7am Vondelpark fresh. No-drop, no…

    Pick a pace, pick a neighborhood, show up Wednesday. The rest sorts itself out at the bar.