Anchorage · United States

Half Marathon races near Anchorage

2 races in 2026 next one in 18 days
Running
5K10KHalf MarathonMarathon
Race calendar

Upcoming Half Marathon races near Anchorage

JUL 1
19JUL
Run · road · Half Marathon
Skinny Raven Half & 10K
Anchorage · 1 km away
AUG 1
16AUG
Run · road · Half Marathon
Anchorage RunFest
Anchorage
Anchorage · 80 km
2 races mapped View on map →

Other races in the next 90 days

All sports & distances →
About Half Marathon races in Anchorage

Anchorage Training Notes

Anchorage hosts 3 Half Marathon races in 2026 within 80 km of the city centre — upcoming dates, recurring series, and other races nearby, all in one place.

Locals run straight from downtown onto the Tony Knowles Coastal Trail, and that 11-mile line follows Cook Inlet toward Kincaid Park with mountains hanging out there forever. Another route runs 5 miles by Taku Lake and Campbell Creek. Kincaid Park keeps the trail crowd busy with nearly 40 miles of routes under tree cover and over steep hills. Skinny Raven Sports anchors the week with AKtive Soles Happy Run, Raven Run Club Workout, and Healthwise TNR. Anchorage Running Club keeps the race calendar honest with Anchorage RunFest, Mayor's Midnight Sun Half Marathon, Zombie Half Marathon, and Trent Waldron Half-Marathon & 10K.

Locals ride the paved multiuse trail system like it is one big warmup loop. The Lanie Fleischer Chester Creek Trail, Tony Knowles Coastal Trail, Campbell Creek Trail, and Ship Creek Trail connect into the Moose Loop, and that bike loop runs 32 miles around town. Arctic Bicycle Club gives riders Road Racing, Mountain Racing, and Cyclocross Racing Divisions, so a season can hold a crit, a fondo, gravel, hill climbs, and cross without leaving Anchorage. Kincaid Park has rolling dirt trails, and Chugach State Park has the actual climbs. The urban trails connect east into alpine tundra where the Chugach mountains range from 2,000 ft to 8,000 ft.

May through September gives Anchorage its cleanest training block, with long days, mild air, and enough rain to make fenders feel smart. Summer daytime temperatures usually sit around 55 to 65°F, so locals stack base miles, trail runs, and evening intervals without cooking. July still gets rain, August still gets rain, and September can flip fast because summer can be over in an Alaska minute. Winter changes the setup more than the attitude. Runners stay on packed routes and snowy races like Snow Globe Run, while cyclists keep rolling with studded tires or fat bikes from sometime in November until sometime in March.