The Spine Race is an ultramarathon held over a distance of around 268 miles (431 km) from Edale, England, to Kirk Yetholm, Scotland, along the Pennine Way. Participants are allowed seven days to complete the course. The race has been held annually since 2012. Initially held in the winter only, a summer version was introduced in 2017. The events are now known as the Winter Spine Race and Summer Spine Race.

The series have subsequently been expanded to five concurrent events held twice a year:

The Spine Races
EventDistanceStartFinishTime allowed (hours)Notes
Winter/Summer Spine Race268 miles (431 km)EdaleKirk Yetholm168 (winter) 156 (summer)
Winter/Summer Challenger South108 miles (174 km)EdaleHardraw60Challenger South was originally called the Spine Flare
Winter/Summer Challenger North160 miles (260 km)HardrawKirk Yetholm108 (winter) 90 (summer)The time limit for the summer event was reduced from 108 to 90 hours from 2023 onwards.
Winter/Summer Sprint South46 miles (74 km)EdaleHebden Bridge18
Winter/Summer Sprint North43 miles (69 km)Brown RiggKirk Yetholm18

History

The event was devised by Arctic expedition guides Scott Gilmour and Phil Hayday-Brown. The inaugural race took place in 2012 when there were only three finishers from a small field of eleven competitors.

The 2013 event was promoted as the Dare 2b Spine Race but later that year it was announced that Montane would take on sponsorship of the event.

In the 2014 and later editions, participants carried GPS trackers for safety reasons and so that the progress of the race could be publicly followed online as it took place. Starting in 2016, daily video summaries were made available during the race.

Due to the time of year and race location, the majority of the winter event takes place in darkness. Snow, ice and strong winds are common. Severe weather was a factor in 2015 in particular, when racers were held at various checkpoints for significant amounts of time until it was considered safe for them to continue. Some competitors that year were also redirected between Middleton and Alston to avoid sections of high ground, including Cross Fell, during the inclement weather.

Participants wear or carry mandatory clothing and equipment over the full course and have access to an additional drop bag which is transported along the route for them and made available at checkpoints. Individual support crews for the runners were allowed in the past but from 2018 were no longer permitted.

The 2019 race received considerable media attention when the overall win was taken by British women's fell running champion Jasmin Paris.

Runners were taken by motorised transport between Bellingham and Byrness in Northumberland during the 2022 race, due to many trees on or near that section of the route having been blown down by Storm Arwen. This reduced the course distance by about 15 miles (24 km).

The Summer Spine Race was formerly known as Spine Fusion and is a summer version of the Spine Race, covering the full route from Edale to Kirk Yetholm.

Route

The Spine Race closely follows the Pennine Way but involves some slight deviations such as the access to and departure from the Hebden checkpoint. The runners are not required to complete the out-and-back section of the Way to The Cheviot. Racers generally follow the lower-level Pennine Way route option on the approach to Kirk Yetholm rather than the alternative over White Law.

The route has approximately 13,300 metres (43,600 ft) of ascent. The timing points and approximate distances of the main checkpoints along the route are as follows.

LocationDistance
Torside
Harrop
Hebden74 kilometres (46 mi)
Malham
Hawes172 kilometres (107 mi)
Tan Hill
Middleton226 kilometres (140 mi)
Dufton
Alston289 kilometres (180 mi)
Greenhead
Bellingham353 kilometres (219 mi)
Byrness
Hut 2
Finish421 kilometres (262 mi)

Results

Winter

The winners have been as follows.

YearMenTimeWomenTime
2012Gary Morrison and Steve Thompson151:02:00None
2013Eugeni Roselló Sole124:52:00Annabel Gates172:59:00
2014Pavel Paloncy110:45:00Debbie Brupbacher153:17:00
2015Pavel Paloncy81:34:00Beth Pascall90:59:00
2016Eoin Keith95:17:00Anna Buckingham and Zoe Thornburgh166:38:00
2017Tom Hollins99:25:36Carol Morgan109:54:00
2018Pavel Paloncy109:50:22Carol Morgan130:37:22
2019Eoin Keith98:18:23Jasmin Paris83:12:23
2020John Kelly87:53:57Sabrina Verjee108:07:17
2021Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2022Eoin Keith92:40:30Debbie Martin-Consani104:08:22
2023Damian Hall84:36:24Claire Bannwarth97:39:58
2024Jack Scott72:55:05Claire Bannwarth92:02:23
2025Kim Collison82:46:32Lucy Gossage87:41:38
2026Sebastien Raichon95:43:52Anna Troup106:19:12

Summer

The winners have been as follows.

YearMenTimeWomenTime
2017Mark Kromeich and Olivier Lidec128:54:24Stephanie Le Men143:59:22
2018Mark Denby78:04:14Brigitte Daxelhoffer131:07:13
2019Esteban Díaz89:57:48Sabrina Verjee81:19:07
2020Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021Eoin Keith77:34:52Anna Troup80:28:35
2022Tiaan Erwee70:46:50Anna Troup78:57:49
2023Dave Phillips76:59:33Jenny Yeo101:39:50
2024Chris Cope79:10:14Sue Straw122:43:49
2025Shane Morgan91:45:56Anna Troup84:56:37

Spine Challenger South

Originally call the Spine Challenger, the event is a shorter version of the Spine Race and follows the first 108 miles (174 km) of the route, starting in Edale and finishing in Hawes or in neighbouring Hardraw in North Yorkshire in some years. It starts the day before the full Spine Race. There is also a version of the Challenger specifically for members of mountain rescue teams, held in winter only.

A summer version of the Challenger called the Spine Flare was first held in 2017.

The events were renamed the Spine Challenger South in 2022 with the introduction of the Spine Challenge North in January 2022.

The Winter 2026 event was affected by death threats being made against humanitarian Sarah Porter who had entered the race. The race organisers felt it necessary to withdraw her from the race part way through due to the situation.

Winter results

The winners of the Spine Challenger South have been as follows.

YearMenTimeWomenTime
2012Mark Brooks36:30:00None
2013Philippe Gatta32:18:00Anne Green53:38:00
2014Marcus Scotney29:01:00Jacqueline Cooper42:13:00
2015Edward Catmur29:52:00Annabel Cremin41:59:00
2016Tom Hollins29:25:00Beth Pascall30:18:00
2017Dominic Layfield28:00:28Sarah Davies37:49:50
2018Wouter Huitzing25:42:21Emma Hopkinson29:39:35
2019Jim Mann22:53:28Carol Morgan31:47:37
2020Douglas Zinis29:00:32Elaine Bisson34:19:05
2021Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2022Josh Wade24:54:50Kendra Wedgwood46:09:30
2023Rory Harris26:25:30Sarah Hodgson33:26:44
2024Daniel Weller24:48:21Samantha Lissauer33:16:28
2025James Allen34:39:43Alice Kershaw43:14:43
2026Jack Scott25:12:00Sarah Page29:03:20

Summer

The winners have been as follows.

YearMenTimeWomenTime
2017Mark Denby23:53:36Lisa Wallis31:33:56
2018Michael Harrison27:45:02Beverley Clifford35:38:11
2019Benjamin Tyas27:38:21Saki Nakamura32:11:22
2020Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021Mark Potts24:34:24Victoria Morris32:20:14
2022Tim Pigott23:02:01Lauren Johnson30:04:31
2023Jon Shield27:53:52Mel Sykes32:22:19
2024Rupert Allison22:31:02Ursula Sullivan31:05:00
2025Chris Andrade24:19:46Eleanor Walker34:59:48

Spine Challenger North

Introduced in 2022 the Challenger North events start at Hardraw, the finishing point of the Challenger South events, and finish at Kirk Yetholm. A distance of 160 miles (260 km) are to be covered in a maximum of 108 hours (in winter) and 90 hours (in summer). Only run in winter in 2022, a summer event was added in 2023.

Winter results

The results have been:

YearMenTimeWomenTime
2022Simon Roberts43:48:17Victoria Morris52:51:38
2023G Brian Hutchinson61:13:59Irene Kinnegin72:16:52
2024Joe O'Leary44:37:20Nikki Arthur52:17:19
2025Paul Grundy48:03:07Nicky Spinks56:49:55
2026Harry Firth46:00:29Elaine Bisson and Nicky Spinks55:57:59

Summer Results

The results have been:

YearMenTimeWomenTime
2023Jovica Spajic and Tom Hill39:45:55Eloise Eccles56:04:04
2024Joe Horne44:52:01Emma Hopkinson50:24:02
2025James Hargreaves40:17:55Allie Bailey53:11:57

Spine Sprint South

Also new for summer 2021 was the Spine Sprint events. Starting at Edale, the races finish at Hebden Bridge, a distance of 46 miles (74 km). The time limit is 18 hours. A winter event was added for 2022. From summer 2025 the event was renamed the Spine Sprint South following the introduction of the Spine Sprint North.

Winter results

The winners have been:

YearMenTimeWomenTime
2022Jonathan Price10:03:03Alice Kershaw12:16:15
2023Jon Shield08:10:22Louise Venables11:39:21
2024Rupert Allison07:29:09Jessica Johnson10:04:42
2025Paul Brennan09:26:48Hannah Bruce12:53:47
2026Joe Leadley08:17:58Sophie Littlefair11:00:12

Summer results

The winners have been:

YearMenTimeWomenTime
2021Niki Worrall07:30:00Sara Abbott, Sue Straw, Lynne Murphy09:54:01
2022Michael Hyde07:55:58Hannah Slater09:33:31
2023Rupert Allison06:59:40Hannah Rickman08:41:39
2024Stephen Earle08:21:49Molly Browne08:30:29
2025Chris Cope06:36:41Victoria Thompson07:49:44

Spine Sprint North

The Spine Sprint North was introduced in summer 2025, a 43 mile race from Brown Rigg, Bellingham to Kirk Yetholm with a time limit of 18 hours. A winter event was introduced in January 2026.

Winter results

YearMenTimeWomenTime
2026Damian Hall and Jon Shield08:06:51Louise Goddard11:53:25

Summer results

The winners have been:

YearMenTimeWomenTime
2025Matias Morgan08:51:55Louise Goddard09:05:51

Notes

External links