10K races near Lafayette-West Lafayette
Upcoming 10K races near Lafayette-West Lafayette
Recurring 10K races near Lafayette-West Lafayette
Races that repeat — weekly, monthly or yearly
Looking for something else near Lafayette-West Lafayette?
Other races in the next 90 days
Coyote Kids Week 5
8th Annual Megan's Ride and Walk 2026 Benefiting Nine13sports
Iron Eagle Paddle & Run
2026 Subaru CASA Cycling Challenge
Zionsville Sprint Triathlon
Zionsville Harvest 50 Gravel Ride & Race
Wabash Miles And River Roads
Lafayette-West Lafayette hosts 3 10K races in 2026 within 80 km of the city centre — upcoming dates, recurring series, and other races nearby, all in one place.
Locals run the Wabash Heritage Trail when they want steady base miles without overthinking it. The Wabash Heritage Trail gives you about 18 miles along Burnett Creek and the Wabash River, with crushed stone, asphalt, and boardwalk underfoot. The trail has 5 miles of paved pathways. Cattail Trail runs four paved miles through marsh and woodlands into the Celery Bog Nature Trail. Run With Us - Fleet Feet West Lafayette brings people out for weekly social runs and Sunday coffee jogs. Purdue Boilermaker Half-Marathon & 5K feels like the anchor event, with Water Drop 5K Run/Walk and Turkey Trot filling the calendar.
Locals ride a lot of quiet country roads, then come back through campus when they need easy spins or intervals. West Lafayette has 157 cycle routes, and the Ft Ouiatenon Loop is 29 km with 132 m of ascent. Wabash River Cycle Club has been around since 1978, and the Wabash River Ride is the big August anchor. The Wabash River Ride starts and ends at Fort Ouiatenon, with paved routes up to 101 miles and gravel routes up to 100 miles. Climbs show up closer to the river, and 3rd Street can feel absolutely brutal. Grant Street Hill, Northwestern Hill, and Switchback Hill also keep the legs honest.
August and September are the best months to be on a bike here, and runners get plenty of warm daylight for Z2 miles, workouts, and race prep. Summer riding feels simple because bike lanes cover campus and the main urban roads, and most drivers tend to give you room when passing. Smaller streets still mean sharing the road, so locals usually pick familiar loops and quieter country roads. Winter changes the whole routine for both sports because snow and ice decide what makes sense. Runners keep routes flexible, and cyclists usually need thicc or cleated tires before winter riding feels realistic.