Are Marathons More Valuable To Host Cities Than The Super Bowl?

New data shows races like New York, Boston, and London now match or exceed the economic impact of the biggest game in American sports.

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Jessy Carveth
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Jessy is our Senior News Editor, pro cyclist and former track and field athlete with a Bachelors degree in Kinesiology.

Senior News Editor

For decades, the Super Bowl has been the gold standard for sports-driven economic impact. One game, one weekend, hundreds of millions of dollars flowing into a host city.

But a deep dive into the data shows that major city marathons are no longer trailing behind. In cities like New York, Boston, and London, marathon weekend now delivers economic returns on par with, and in some cases greater than, the biggest game in American sports.

And it does so in a very different way.

Are Marathons More Valuable To Host Cities Than The Super Bowl? 1

The Super Bowlโ€™s Short, Powerful Surge

This yearโ€™s Super Bowl, played at Leviโ€™s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, is expected to generate between $370 million and $630 million in economic output for the Bay Area, according to a report commissioned by the Bay Area Host Committee.

Last yearโ€™s game in New Orleans drew about 115,000 visitors and produced $658 million in local spending. State officials reported more than $80 million in tax revenue tied to the event.

Spending spikes sharply around the stadium. Bank of America estimates a 77 percent jump in consumer spending in nearby areas on game day, driven largely by food, drinks, and parking.

Still, hosting the game is expensive. Santa Clara expects to spend about $6.3 million on security and logistics. Other cities have paid far more. Atlantaโ€™s Super Bowl in 2019 cost local governments an estimated $46 million.

โ€œThe economic benefits are relatively short-term, not just in duration, but also in scope,โ€ said Michael Edwards, a professor of sport management at North Carolina State University. โ€œTheyโ€™re limited to certain industries and specific locations.โ€

Are Marathons More Valuable To Host Cities Than The Super Bowl? 2

New Yorkโ€™s Marathon Brings Bigger Numbers

By contrast, the TCS New York City Marathon now delivers economic impact on a similar scale, spread across more neighborhoods and over more days.

According to New York Road Runners, the 2024 New York City Marathon generated $692 million for the cityโ€™s economy. That figure matches or exceeds the economic impact of recent Super Bowls.

The race drew more than 55,000 finishers and over one million visitors. About $425 million came from visitor spending, including $178 million on hotels, $109 million on dining, and $51 million on shopping. Nearly two million spectators lined the course across all five boroughs.

Mayor Eric Adams compared the marathonโ€™s impact directly to the Super Bowl, saying the race now sits alongside the cityโ€™s largest single-sport events.

Are Marathons More Valuable To Host Cities Than The Super Bowl? 3

Bostonโ€™s Long Weekend Effect

Boston offers a similar picture, scaled to a smaller city but with deep regional reach.

The Boston Marathon generates more than $509 million in state and local economic activity during marathon weekend, according to data from the Boston Athletic Association and regional tourism groups. The event supports roughly 2,900 jobs and produces more than $206 million in labor income.

More than two-thirds of participants travel from outside New England, and the median stay is three nights. Nearly 87 percent of visitors go out for food and drinks during their stay. EconomicImpact

Unlike the Super Bowl, which is concentrated in and around one stadium, Bostonโ€™s race spreads spending along the entire course, from Hopkinton to downtown Boston.

Are Marathons More Valuable To Host Cities Than The Super Bowl? 4

London and the Global Marathon Boom

This shift is not limited to the United States.

A 2025 report from Brand Finance found that the worldโ€™s 50 largest marathons generated $5.2 billion in economic impact in 2024, with more than half of that coming from the Abbott World Marathon Majors.

The report ranked the London Marathon as the strongest marathon brand globally and found that the New York City Marathon is the most valuable marathon brand, with an estimated value of $292 million.

Marathons also have a major charitable footprint: across the worldโ€™s top events, runners and organizers raised an estimated $425 million for charity in 2024.

The London Marathon in particular has become a fundraising phenomenon: the 2025 race set a new world record for the largest annual one-day fundraising event, generating ยฃ87.3 million for charity and bringing its cumulative total over its history to about ยฃ1.4 billion for charitable causes.

โ€œMarathons are simultaneously elite athletic competitions and public mass participation events,โ€ said Hugo Hensley, valuation director at Brand Finance. โ€œThat unique position is evident in the economic impact they have on the cities where they run.โ€

Are Marathons More Valuable To Host Cities Than The Super Bowl? 5

Different Models, Different Tradeoffs

The Super Bowl remains unmatched in global television reach and cultural attention.

But when it comes to sustained, citywide economic impact, major marathons are no longer playing second fiddle. In New York, Boston, London, and beyond, marathon weekend has become one of the most reliable economic drivers in sports.

For host cities, that makes marathons less of a spectacle and more of a long-term strategy.

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Jessy Carveth

Senior News Editor

Jessy is our Senior News Editor and a former track and field athlete with a Bachelors degree in Kinesiology. Jessy is often on-the-road acting as Marathon Handbook's roving correspondent at races, and is responsible for surfacing all the latest news stories from the running world across our website, newsletter, socials, and podcast.. She is currently based in Europe where she trains and competes as a professional cyclist (and trail runs for fun!).

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