Half or Full Marathon Registration for One on December 1 from Seattle Marathon Association (Up to 23% Off)
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Runners and walkers of all levels are encouraged to participate in a marathon or half-marathon
- Each participant receives: long-sleeved technical fabric shirt, goody bag, finisher medal
- Course length: 26.2 or 13.1 miles
- Check-in time and location: November 29, 11 a.m.–8 p.m. or November 30, 10 a.m.–8 p.m. at The Westin Seattle Hotel
- Race start time: 7 a.m.
- Timing method: ChronoTrack tag technology
- Award groups:
- Top 3 men and women overall
- Top Master Man and Woman and the top three active military men and women
- Top 10 in each age division in 5-year age groupings (19 and under, 20–24, 25–29, 30–34, 35–39, 40–44, 45–49, 50–54, 55–59, 60–64, 65–69, 70–74, 75–9, 80–84, and 85 and over.)
- Wheelchair participants
- Transportation:
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Free street parking and paid parking lots available nearby
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Metro Transit bus service
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Need To Know Info
About Seattle Marathon Association
In 1970, a group of friends from the University of Washington decided to hold their own running event: 38 of them participated, and 31 completed the full 26.2 miles that compose a marathon. It was a humble genesis for the Seattle Marathon, which has steadily grown into one of the largest and longest- running nonprofit marathon events in the Pacific Northwest. This year, thousands of participants will descend upon the Emerald City from all 50 states and even from beyond American borders when the marathon goes back to its UW roots, starting and finishing on the UW Campus at iconic Husky Stadium. The Seattle Marathon Association (SMA) nurtures the event's year-to-year success. Governed by a board of directors, this nonprofit organization strives to hold the best race possible—for the runners, sure, but also for the sponsors and local economy. That's part of the reason why each event's course—be it the full marathon in November or the Summer 10K—takes into account space for spectators, who can watch the race at several viewing posts in case they can't manage to sling a saddle over the back of a transport bird.