Running Southie: A Guide to Run Clubs Around South Boston
If you’ve spent any time in South Boston lately, you’ve probably noticed it—groups of runners moving along Castle Island, the Harborwalk, or cutting through side streets at 7am. Running here isn’t just a workout, it’s a full-on social scene.
Southie (and the surrounding neighborhoods) is packed with run clubs—some structured, some chaotic, some very clearly anchored in post-run coffee or beer. Whether you’re training seriously or just trying to meet people, there’s something for you.
A handful of clubs basically define the neighborhood:
1.5 Star Run Club
Saturdays 9AM
Meets Saturdays, rain or shine, at Loco with 5K and 10K loop options. Equal parts run and brunch social. I’m partial to this one—I’ve been running with the group for four years and help lead it.Almost Friday Run Club
Thursdays 7AM
Thursday mornings, ~3 miles at an easy conversational pace, often with walk breaks—super approachable. Ends with coffee and a hang.Everybody Fights Run Club
Fridays 7AM
A fitness-driven run out of Seaport, starting from their 25 Drydock Ave location. Typically a 3–4.5 mile route at a conversational pace (around 10–10:30/mile), led by trainers Tyler and Shane—very accessible for most runners.L Street Running Club
One of the more established groups. Evening runs during the week, typically longer (5–7+ miles) and a bit more training-oriented.MyStryde Run Club (Southie Studio)
Tuesdays 6:30AM
Weekday morning loops around Castle Island (~3–3.5 miles), low barrier to entry, very all-level friendly.The Yahd Run Club
Saturdays 9AM
Saturday mornings, ~4.5-mile loop toward the Seaport and back. A bit more of a steady effort crowd.
The takeaway: most Southie clubs are free, casual, and built around consistency + community. Show up, run, grab coffee (or a drink), repeat.