

The Brooklyn Half Marathon is one of the most popular races in NYC.

You can also qualify by running 9 qualifying New York Road Runner races and volunteering at one NYRR race, or fundraising for an approved charity. You can qualify by meeting a specific qualifying time. The New York City Marathon is not easy to get into, but it is possible. The race finishes along Central Park in Manhattan (epic cheering!). Then you will run through Brooklyn (and hear bands, boomboxes, cheering, and see creative signs), then cross over into Long Island City, Queens (more cheering!) before hitting the Queensboro Bridge and running in Manhattan up to the Bronx. The race begins in Staten Island and crosses the Verrazano Bridge to Brooklyn. The NYC Marathon is the biggest race in NYC and the most epic event, with the whole city of New York behind you. (You can read more about my NYC Marathon experience here). It feels like the whole city comes out to cheer for the marathon runners every November, and it’s a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I’ve never seen so much energy and support for runners. The New York City Marathon is always an amazing event. I’ve run the NYC Marathon, coached runners for the marathon, and cheered for runners in the race. The NYC Marathon is one of the World Marathon Majors, which includes 6 high-profile marathons around the world. The international race draws people from around the world to come and run 26.2 miles through all five boroughs of New York City. The New York City Marathon is the world’s largest marathon, with over 50,000 runners.
