Running Sponsorship - Sponsor Runners & Influencers (page 8)

Running is the most affordable endurance category to sponsor, with posts from $520 to $1,300 and runners averaging a 30K following. The roster pairs a few elite names like Olympic sprinter Allyson Felix with a deep bench of everyday running and fitness creators, and 365 of the 476 athletes sit in the niche tier, the high-engagement micro-creator pool that running-shoe, apparel, and nutrition brands hunt for. Browse 476 running athletes and influencers open to brand partnerships on OpenSponsorship.

Top Running athletes ranked by followers
NameFollowersEngagement
Charity Miles profile photoCharity Miles
18.5K85
Ellie Stevens profile photoEllie Stevens
18.0K480
daniel allende profile photodaniel allende
17.4K349
Matthew Hansen profile photoMatthew Hansen
17.2K435
David Martinez profile photoDavid Martinez
17.0K1.7K
Iris Silva profile photoIris Silva
16.3K865
Rhys Jenkins profile photoRhys Jenkins
16.1K533
CT Matsumura profile photoCT Matsumura
15.4K146
Issy Boffey profile photoIssy Boffey
15.0K1.2K
Sachin Latti profile photoSachin Latti
14.8K169
Dana Giordano profile photoDana Giordano
13.9K1.1K
Jason Willis profile photoJason Willis
13.3K563

Why sponsor Running athletes on OpenSponsorship

From discovery to signed deliverables, brands use OpenSponsorship to run measurable creator campaigns with less overhead. Here is how this category stacks up — plus platform-wide benchmarks from 2,500+ brand users and 25,000+ creator profiles.

  • 451 athletes

    Browse and filter running athletes on OpenSponsorship — audience, location, platform, and more.

  • Typical social post range

    $530–$1,400 among creators in this list (from listed pricing).

  • Average audience size

    About 32K followers on average across this list — use filters to go bigger or smaller.

  • Strongest platform

    Instagram leads this category.

  • Top markets

    United States, United Kingdom, Canada.

  • 7x average ROI

    Brands use OpenSponsorship for discovery, proposals, and contracts — 8,000+ deals across 40+ countries.

Connect with more Running athletes on OpenSponsorship

Sign up to message Running athlete

Frequently Asked Questions

Most running athletes on OpenSponsorship price a single social post between $520 and $1,300, the lowest band of any major sports category on the platform. Because the roster skews toward micro-creators, a large share sit well below that range, which is what makes running a high-volume option for brands working to a tight cost per post. Every profile lists its own rates so you can compare before you reach out.

Instagram is the core platform with 387 of the 476 athletes active there, followed by TikTok at 58 and YouTube at 22, where long-form training and race vlogs do well. The audience skews health-conscious and habit-driven, which suits nutrition, hydration, apparel, and wearable brands. Engagement tends to climb around the spring and fall marathon calendar, from Boston in April to New York and Chicago in the fall, plus the January resolution surge.

Running footwear and apparel brands lead, alongside energy-gel and nutrition companies, hydration and electrolyte products, GPS watches and fitness apps, and recovery tools. The content that performs is authentic and practical: training-block diaries, race-day coverage, gear and shoe reviews, and progress posts tied to a goal race. Brands often run these as ongoing ambassador relationships rather than one-off posts, since runners document the same products across a full training cycle.

Use the location filters to target by country, state, or city. The roster is led by the United States with 271 athletes, then the United Kingdom at 37 and, unusually for the platform, India at 20. Running has strong city-level scenes, so you can build a campaign around a specific marathon market or local run club, the way brands search for NYC or Austin running creators.

The average following is about 30K, the smallest of any major category here, and that is the point: running is a micro-creator category. 365 of the 476 athletes sit in the niche band and another 80 in the local band, so 445 of 476 are small, highly engaged accounts rather than national names. Only 24 are regional and a handful national or international, which is why running rewards brands that prioritize engagement and cost efficiency over raw reach.

Create a free athlete profile, connect your social accounts, and set your own rates, then brands can find you through search or you can pitch their open campaigns directly, with no agent required. It works whether you are an elite or collegiate competitor, a dedicated amateur racer, or a running content creator. A complete profile with current follower data and clear pricing draws the most interest.
Running Sponsorship - Sponsor Runners & Influencers · Page