The Riga Marathon (also known as the Rimi Riga Marathon) is an annual road marathon held in Riga, Latvia, since 1991. A flat, single-lap marathon course in the Baltic states' largest city. The marathon course has been measured and certified by AIMS, the Association of International Marathons and Distance Races and is categorized as a Gold Label Road Race by World Athletics. All courses are traffic-free. Rimi Riga Marathon is one of the fastest-growing marathons in Northern Europe. In 2025, there were 40,122 participants across all distances from 109 countries.
The marathon starts and finishes near Riga Castle, and runs through Old Riga as well as across the Daugava. In the marathon weekend it is also possible to run 42,195 kilometer distance, 21,095 kilometer half marathon, 10 kilometer, 5 kilometer and mile course distances.
The track was measured according to the international standards of the time, using a 50 m-long measuring tape and pegs. 735 participants took part in the first Riga Marathon, a third of which were local runners, around 30 representatives of Western countries, and the rest from the Soviet Union.
However, in the next few years after the successful start, the number of participants in the Riga Marathon rapidly decreased. Runners from the Eastern Bloc were deterred from participating by the new visa regime, while Westerners might find the trip to Latvia too risky. Serious difficulties were caused by hyperinflation and repeated changes in the national currency. In 1993, it was possible to pay for participation in the marathon in three currencies - locals could pay both in Latvian ruble and newly issued Latvian lats, and foreigners - in Deutsche Mark.
The organizers lacked the sponsors and funds to be included in the AIMS international marathon calendar (at the time it would cost $1,000 per year) to attract western marathon tourists. During this time, local runners also became fewer and fewer, and the running culture and, consequently, the interest of sponsors gradually decreased, reaching the lowest point in 1999, when only 53 Latvian runners finished the 42 km distance.
To increase the number of participants, the Riga Marathon was moved to the spring, attracting school youth to the 5 km distance, however, there were still relatively few runners in the marathon distance and the results could not surpass the performance of the first year.
In 2007, the Riga Marathon got its second wind. After 16 years of work, the original organizer of the marathon, Jānis Karavačiks, entrusted the organization to Aigars Nords, who was full of ambition to turn Riga into a running megalopolis with an ambitious city marathon.
The Riga City Council has entrusted the organization of the marathon to NECom or Nords Event Communications, the new organizers already achieved ambitious growth of the event in the first year. With the help of the new title sponsor Nordea and the slogan "This time for real!" the track was officially certified for the first time following the standards of the International Marathon Association (AIMS). The marathon was included in the international calendar, the usual marathon and 5 km satellite distances were supplemented by a new half-marathon, and the Kenyan Johnston Changwoni broke the Riga Marathon record set in 1991.
Under the auspices of the new organizers, the marathon became one of the fastest-growing and most prestigious running festivals in Northern Europe - from 1300 participants in 2007 to Gold Label gold status and more than 38 thousand participants from 82 countries of the world in 2019.
In 2020, due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Latvian Cabinet of Ministers canceled the in-person competition the day before the marathon weekend and moved the marathon to a virtual mode.
Similarly, the 2021 edition of the race was postponed from the weekend of to the weekend of due to the pandemic.
2023 Rimi Riga Marathon was a track rehearsal for the World Championships, allowing recreational runners to try out the World Championship courses.
The World Athletics Road Running Championships and the Rimi Riga Marathon, the two biggest running events in the Baltics, had a combined economic impact of €11,803,000 on Latvia in 2023, according to a study that examined their effects on the country's economy.
For the first time since the epidemic, the two major running competitions, the Rimi Riga Marathon and the World Athletics Road Running Championships, brought together a record-breaking 38,660 participants from more than 100 nations in the capital of Latvia.
According to a study, the 2025 Rimi Riga Marathon had an economic impact of €16,759,900 on Riga, including €7,460,700 directed to the accommodation and catering sectors and €2,481,800 in tax revenues from foreign visitors.
All of the courses are single-lap courses and are fairly flat and mostly features the center of the city.
The 33rd edition of Riga Marathon was a rehearsal for the first World Athletics Road Running Championships, which took place in Riga in 30 September – 1 October. On that occasion, the marathon was held over two laps of the official World Championships half marathon course. The 35th edition in 2025 returned to a single-loop course.
1 | 1991 | Vladimir Kalenkovich | 2:28:27 | Alla Doudayeva | 2:43:53 | ||
2 | 1992 | Gusman Abdulin | 2:21:29 | Olga Youdenkova | 2:47:28 | ||
3 | 1993 | Aleksandrs Prokopčuks | 2:26:41 | Svetlana Șepelev-Tcaci | 2:55:07 | ||
4 | 1994 | Normunds Ivzāns | 2:43:09 | Laila Ceika | 3:19:56 | ||
5 | 1995 | Ziedonis Zaļkalns | 2:32:44 | Galina Bernat | 3:02:11 | ||
6 | 1996 | Aleksandrs Prokopčuks | 2:31:46 | Inita Drēziņa | 3:30:42 | ||
7 | 1997 | Normunds Fedotovskis | 2:33:05 | Kaja Mulla | 3:12:26 | ||
8 | 1998 | Ziedonis Zaļkalns | 2:33:41 | Laila Ceika | 3:27:49 | ||
9 | 1999 | Arūnas Balčunas | 2:37:10 | Laila Ceika | 3:37:21 | ||
10 | 2000 | Ziedonis Zaļkalns | 2:30:59 | Aušra Kavalauskiene | 3:12:11 | ||
11 | 2001 | Ziedonis Zaļkalns | 2:27:25 | Laila Ceika | 3:11:45 | ||
12 | 2002 | Arūnas Balčunas | 2:31:25 | Anita Liepiņa | 3:12:16 | ||
13 | 2003 | Arūnas Balčunas | 2:28:07 | Aušra Kavalauskiene | 3:05:26 | ||
14 | 2004 | Dmitrijs Sļesarenoks | 2:27:09 | Modesta Drungiliene | 2:58:29 | ||
15 | 2005 | Vjačeslavs Bambāns | 2:45:58 | Kaja Mulla | 3:11:09 | ||
16 | 2006 | Yuri Vinogradov | 2:41:57 | Laura Zariņa | 3:04:31 | ||
17 | 2007 | Johnstone Changwony | 2:18:30 | Ludmila Rodina | 2:50:07 | ||
18 | 2008 | Sammy Rotich | 2:16:42 | Kaja Vals | 3:13:54 | ||
19 | 2009 | Oleg Gur | 2:18:35 | Katsiaryna Dziamidava | 2:47:30 | ||
20 | 2010 | Slimani Benazzouz | 2:17:33 | Maryna Damantsevich | 2:38:16 | ||
21 | 2011 | Julius Kuto | 2:15:48 | Desta Tadesse | 2:37:14 | ||
22 | 2012 | Titus Kurgat | 2:16:53 | Iraida Aleksandrova | 2:37:37 | ||
23 | 2013 | Duncan Koech | 2:15:34 | Aberash Nesga | 2:40:30 | ||
24 | 2014 | Yu Chiba | 2:13:44 | Tigist Teshome | 2:36:51 | ||
25 | 2015 | Haile Tolossa | 2:12:28 | Meseret Eshetu | 2:37:03 | ||
26 | 2016 | Dominic Kangor | 2:11:45 | Shitaye Gemechu | 2:38:40 | ||
27 | 2017 | Joseph Munywoki | 2:12:14 | Bekelech Bedada | 2:31:22 | ||
28 | 2018 | Tsedat Ayana | 2:11:00 | Georgina Rono | 2:28:22 | ||
29 | 2019 | Andualem Shiferaw | 2:08:51 | Birke Debele | 2:26:18 | ||
30 | The marathon was held virtually due to the global pandemic. No comparisons with previous years have been made due to the results' dubious legitimacy. | ||||||
31 | 2021 | Kristaps Bērziņš | 2:38:36 | Amanda Krūmiņa | 3:07:17 | ||
32
![]() | Deribe Robi | 2:12:07 | Aberu Mekuria | 2:30:53 | |||
33
![]() | Aleksandrs Rascevskis | 2:25:42 | Amanda Krūmiņa | 2:49:59 | |||
34
![]() | Daviti Kharazishvili | 2:21:46 | Jaana Strandvall | 2:55:08 | |||
35
![]() | Melikhaya Frans | 2:13:20 | Ayantu Kumela Tadesse | 2:28:24 |
2006 | Viktors Sļesarenoks | 1:15:20 | Anita Liepiņa | 1:33:43 | ||
2007 | Dainius Saucikovas | 1:09:17 | Ilona Marhele | 1:22:21 | ||
2008 | Pavel Loskutov | 1:05:52 | Helen Decker | 1:20:00 | ||
2009 | Joel Komen | 1:06:49 | Daniela Fetcere | 1:23:05 | ||
2010 | Valērijs Žolnerovičs | 1:05:40 | Irene Chepkirui | 1:14:04 | ||
2011 | Sergei Lukin | 1:06:28 | Lyubov Morgunova | 1:15:01 | ||
2012 | Valērijs Žolnerovičs | 1:06:04 | Jeļena Prokopčuka | 1:10:27 | ||
2013 | Jānis Girgensons | 1:07:24 | Jeļena Prokopčuka | 1:14:39 | ||
2014 | Ibrahim Mukunga | 1:05:56 | Jeļena Prokopčuka | 1:14:52 | ||
2015 | Jānis Girgensons | 1:06:20 | Jeļena Prokopčuka | 1:13:24 | ||
2016 | Ibrahim Mukunga | 1:05:26 | Jeļena Prokopčuka | 1:16:06 | ||
2017 | Robert Kimaru Magut | 1:05:04 | Inga Zālīte | 1:23:45 | ||
2018 | Aleksandr Matviychuk | 1:05:14 | Milda Vilčinskaite | 1:14:38 | ||
2019 | Jānis Višķers | 1:05:59 | Beatie Deutsch | 1:17:34 | ||
The marathon was held virtually due to the global pandemic. No comparisons with previous years have been made due to the results' dubious legitimacy. | ||||||
2021 | Jānis Višķers | 1:07:10 | Kadi Kõiv | 1:20:11 | ||
![]() | Sikiyas Misganaw | 1:00:30 | Beatrice Mutai | 1:09:12 | ||
![]() | Dmitrijs Serjogins | 1:05:02 | Ilona Marhele | 1:20:56 | ||
![]() | Samwel Mailu | 1:00:21 | Judy Kemboi | 1:07:13 | ||
![]() | Abera Mamo | 1:01:42 | Domenika Mayer | 1:09:50 |
11 |
4 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
Jeļena Prokopčuka | 5 | 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 | Half Marathon | |
Laila Ceika | 4 | 1994, 1998, 1999, 2001 | Marathon | |
Ziedonis Zaļkalns | 4 | 1995, 1998, 2000, 2001 | Marathon | |
Arūnas Balčunas | 3 | 1999, 2002, 2003 | Marathon | |
Aleksandrs Prokopčuks | 2 | 1993, 1996 | Marathon | |
Aušra Kavalauskiene | 2 | 2000, 2003 | Marathon | |
Valērijs Žolnerovičs | 2 | 2010, 2012 | Half Marathon | |
Jānis Girgensons | 2 | 2013, 2015 | Half Marathon | |
Jānis Višķers | 2 | 2019, 2021 | Half Marathon | |
Amanda Krūmiņa | 2 | 2021, 2023 | Marathon | |
Ilona Marhele | 2 | 2007, 2023 | Half Marathon | |
Ibrahim Mukunga | 2 | 2014, 2016 | Half Marathon |
Artists who have created designs for Riga Marathon shirts - Andris Vītoliņš, Ieva Iltnere, Ritums Ivanovs, Elita Patmalniece, Ella Kruļanska, Krišs Salmanis, Ilmārs Blumbergs, Raimonds Staprāns, Anna Heinrihsone, Maija Kurševa, Gustav Klutsis (the 2018 shirt design used the artwork of G. Klucis, which was bought at an auction on 18 November 2017, specially for the Latvian centenary marathon shirt), MARE&ROLS and Jānis Šneiders.
In 2019, the design of the marathon medals was created by Artūrs Analts, the recipient of the main award "Best Design" at the London Design Biennale. The design of the 30th anniversary medals of the marathon was created by the Japanese artist Junichi Kawanishi, who is also the author of the Tokyo Olympic Games medals.
The designs of the 2022 Riga Marathon shirts and medals were created by the head of the painting department of the Art Academy of Latvia, associate professor Kristiāns Brekte. In 2023 all finishers received medals designed by Latvia’s most famous graphic artist, Paulis Liepa.
For the 34th edition of the Riga Marathon the artist crafting both the marathon’s medals and the official running shirt is the globally recognized talent, Latvian artist Germans Ermičs.
In addition to the Rimi Riga Marathon, the same organizing team was in charge of the inaugural World Athletics Road Running Championships in Riga on October 1.
|
|