Strava Launches $300K Program to Support Running Moms With Childcare Grants

New โ€œStrive for Moreโ€ partnership with For All Mothers+ tackles structural barriers for racing mothers

Strava is putting serious money behind a growing movement to make running and racing more accessible to mothers.

On Tuesday, the fitness platform announced a new partnership with For All Mothers+, pledging $300,000 in research and grant funding as part of its Strive for Moreโ„ข initiative.

The bulk of the support will go toward a newly launched grant programโ€”aptly named โ€œChildcare So They Can Get Out Thereโ€โ€”which will give 50 moms $2,000 each to help cover the often-overlooked costs of childcare, travel, lodging, and training needed to get to the start line.

Strava Launches $300K Program to Support Running Moms With Childcare Grants 1

The goal? To tackle the Motherhood Penaltyโ€”the systemic disadvantages women face in career, health, and social mobility after having children. In sport, that penalty shows up in all kinds of ways, from rigid race deferral policies to a complete lack of support for breastfeeding runners.

โ€œFor moms, getting to the start line often means overcoming a mountain of invisible barriers,โ€ said Olympic medalist and For All Mothers+ founder Alysia Montaรฑo, a longtime advocate for maternal equity in sport. โ€œWe want every mother to see a clear, supported path not just to the start line, but to the finishโ€”and to the podium.โ€

What the Research Shows

The new grant program is backed by a recent study conducted by For All Mothers+ in partnership with Carleton Universityโ€™s Health & Wellness Equity Research Group. The numbers are sobering:

  • 83% of parents surveyed said pregnancy or parenting had prevented them from racing.
  • 66% pointed to lack of childcare as the biggest barrier.
  • 40% said they had skipped races because of breastfeeding or pumping concerns.
  • And a whopping 92% said they preferred to support events that offered lactation or childcare servicesโ€”even if they didnโ€™t need them personally.

In other words, the issue isnโ€™t just individualโ€”itโ€™s structural.

โ€œYou can have all the motivation and fitness in the world,โ€ Montaรฑo said. โ€œBut if youโ€™re a nursing mom with no childcare and no place to pump at a race, youโ€™re staying home.โ€

a marathon girl Running with a stroller and dog

What the Partnership Delivers

Beyond grants, Strava is helping improve the racing experience through platform features.

Its Waypoints tool now allows organizers to mark the location of lactation stations and family amenities directly on course maps, making it easier for participants to plan around caregiving needs.

The funding also expands the Family Forward Event Directory, a resource where runners can findโ€”and organizers can submitโ€”events that offer things like stroller-friendly courses, on-site childcare, or flexible deferral policies.

This partnership builds on years of advocacy work from athletes like Montaรฑo, who helped expose pregnancy-related contract issues in elite sponsorships back in 2019 and has pushed for reforms ever since.

While some progress has been made at the professional level, local races and amateur events often still fall short in supporting mothers.

โ€œThis isnโ€™t about special treatment,โ€ said Montaรฑo. โ€œItโ€™s about designing sport for the realities of the people who participate.โ€

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Avatar photo

Jessy Carveth

Senior News Editor

Jessy has been active her whole life, competing in cross-country, track running, and soccer throughout her undergrad. She pivoted to road cycling after completing her Bachelor of Kinesiology with Nutrition from Acadia University. Jessy is currently a professional road cyclist living and training in Spain.

Want To Save This Guide For Later?

Enter your email and we'll give it over to your inbox.