The 100th Comrades Marathon · June 2027

100 Clubs.
100 Countries.
Together.

The world's oldest ultramarathon turns 100. We're inviting 100 running clubs — one from every country — to send an ambassador to the start line. 24,000 runners. 90 kilometres. One road. The ultimate human race deserves the ultimate celebration.

What is this?

A global running movement

100 running clubs from 100 countries, each sending an ambassador to the 100th Comrades Marathon in South Africa. June 2027.

Why does it matter?

100 years of together

The world's oldest ultramarathon turns 100. One race, one road, 22,000 runners. A celebration of what happens when people move forward together.

How can I help?

There's a place for you

Apply as a club, nominate one, sponsor the journey, volunteer, or join the Race Village. You don't have to run to be part of this.

1921

Thirty-four men stood on a road in South Africa.

The Great War had just ended. Vic Clapham, a soldier who had marched through East Africa, believed that a long-distance race could honour the endurance of his fellow soldiers. People thought he was mad. He wrote to the papers. He begged for support. Eventually, thirty-four men lined up between Pietermaritzburg and Durban.

No entry fees. No sponsors. No medal designers or pace buses. Just a road, a distance that seemed impossible, and the stubborn belief that human beings are capable of extraordinary things when they move together.

All thirty-four finished.

The world changed.
The run didn't.

1921
34 runners. All men. All South African. A road between two cities and an idea that refused to die.
1945
The race returns after the Second World War. Runners carry the weight of a broken world on legs that still move forward.
1975
Women are finally allowed to run. Because the road doesn't care about your gender. It never did.
1981
Bruce Fordyce begins his run of nine victories. A skinny man from Joburg becomes a legend on the road between the cities.
1991
Apartheid is ending. The country is becoming something new. The race carries on — people of all colours on the same road. As it should have always been.
2000
International runners pour in. The world discovers what South Africans have known for 80 years: this race changes you.
2023
84 nations on the start line. 22,000 runners. The largest and oldest ultramarathon on Earth.
2027
The 100th edition. And we want 100 running clubs from 100 countries on that start line. Together.

Then and now

Everything changed. One thing didn't.

1921

The Spanish Flu had just killed 50 million people.

There were no commercial airlines.

Radio was a novelty. Television didn't exist.

Most people never left the country they were born in.

34 runners. 1 country. Dirt roads.

2027

A global pandemic is still in our rearview mirror.

You can fly anywhere on Earth in a day.

A phone in your pocket connects you to 8 billion people.

The world has never been more connected — or more divided.

22,000 runners. 100 countries. Same road.

The road is still 90 kilometres.

The hills are still steep. The sun still burns. Your legs still scream. And somewhere around kilometre 60, you still have to decide: do I keep going?

"The answer, for 100 years, has been yes."

Not because of prize money. Not for fame. Not for a time on a clock. But because something in us needs to know we can. And something in us needs to do it together.

Because nobody else will.

Get Involved.

You don't have to run 90 kilometres to be a vital part of this story. Comrades 100 is going to be huge — and there's a place for everyone.

"History is being made. Be part of it."

Together.

Your club nominates your champion. They qualify and get themselves to South Africa. We handle the Race Village, the experience, the celebration — accommodation, local transport, post-race adventures. All of it.

100 ambassadors carrying the flag of their running club and their country. 24,000 runners on the same road. The world watching. This is what 100 years of running looks like.

Apply for Your Club See the Full Journey →

Help us find the 100.

This only works if the running world knows about it. Share it. Send it. Forward it to someone who needs to see this.