"With 5,000 finishers, London Triathlon Olympic is one of the biggest triathlons in the world."
🏊 Swim
River swim in London
🚴 Bike
Flat and fast bike course through London region
🏃 Run
Run course through London
Transition Details
T1/T2 are in the same location · Surface: gravel
Weather
Typical race-day conditions: 13°C with 37% humidity.
Registration
https://www.example.com/london-triathlon-olympic
The Story
The London Triathlon is not a boutique race. It is not intimate, curated, or exclusive. It is enormous — one of the largest triathlons in the world, with upwards of 13,000 participants across the weekend, racing through the beating heart of a capital city that doesn't slow down for anyone.
The race is based in and around the ExCeL centre in London's Docklands, the same venue that hosted Olympic weightlifting and wrestling in 2012. The swim takes place in the Royal Victoria Dock — a broad, calm stretch of enclosed water that was once one of the busiest commercial docks in the world. The water is fresh-ish, dark, and surprisingly swimmable. It won't win beauty contests, but it's sheltered from wind and current, which makes it an honest swim — your time reflects your ability, not the conditions.
The bike leg takes riders out onto the closed roads of Docklands and through the Limehouse Link tunnel — an experience unique to this race. Riding through a tunnel during a triathlon is disorienting, exhilarating, and slightly absurd. The roads are flat and fast, running past Canary Wharf's glass towers and along the Thames-adjacent industrial heritage of east London. The course is technical enough to reward good bike handling but forgiving enough for nervous first-timers.
The run loops around the ExCeL centre and along the dockside, with the city's skyline — the Shard, the Gherkin, the towers of the City — visible across the water. The atmosphere is what makes this race. Thirteen thousand athletes means thirteen thousand stories: the charity runner in a tutu, the corporate team in matching jerseys, the dad who trained for six months and is now running faster than he has since school. The London Triathlon doesn't pretend to be anything other than what it is: a massive, inclusive, brilliantly organised celebration of multi-sport, in one of the world's great cities.
"You ride through an actual tunnel. On a closed road. In central London. It's completely surreal."
"I've raced in 20 countries. London has the best crowd energy of any Olympic-distance race I've done."
What It Feels Like
The London Triathlon is a big-city race that delivers big-city energy. The course is flat, fast, and forgiving — ideal for first-timers and PB-hunters alike. What it lacks in scenic drama it makes up for in atmosphere, logistics, and the simple thrill of racing through London on closed roads.
🏊 The Swim
1,500m in the Royal Victoria Dock — enclosed, calm, no current. The water is dark but clean, and the dock's straight walls give you natural sighting lines. It's one of the fairest open-water swims in triathlon: no waves, no drift, just swimming. The mass start can be hectic with this many athletes, so seed yourself honestly.
🚴 The Bike
40km of flat, closed Docklands roads. The Limehouse Link tunnel is the signature feature — a surreal underground section that changes everything about the ride's character. Out of the tunnel, the route passes Canary Wharf's towers. The surface is good, the roads are wide, and the flat profile rewards aerodynamic position. Wind off the Thames can be a factor on exposed sections.
🏃 The Run
10km around the ExCeL centre and along the Victoria Dock. Flat, well-marshalled, with the city skyline across the water. The crowd support is thick here — 13,000 athletes means thousands of supporters. The out-and-back format means you're constantly passing other runners, which creates energy even when your legs are empty.
Legendary Moments
The First London Triathlon
The inaugural race in London's Docklands draws a few hundred athletes. Nobody predicts it will become one of the world's largest triathlons.
Post-Olympic Boom
A year after the London 2012 Olympics put triathlon on British television, entry demand explodes. The London Triathlon weekend exceeds 13,000 entries for the first time.
💡 Insider Tips
- → The dock swim is calm but dark — you can't see the bottom. If open-water visibility bothers you, practice in murky water before race day. Once you're in rhythm, you won't notice.
- → The Limehouse Link tunnel is cold and echoing. Your eyes take a moment to adjust from bright daylight. Stay in your aero position and don't panic — it's over in a few minutes and it's genuinely fun.
- → With 13,000 athletes across the weekend, logistics matter. Arrive early, know your wave start time, and walk the transition area the day before. The ExCeL centre is large and easy to get lost in.
Prepare for This Race
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FAQ
What distance is the London Triathlon Olympic? +
The London Triathlon Olympic is a Olympic Distance distance triathlon: 1500m swim, 40km bike, and 10km run (51.5km total) in London, United Kingdom.
When is the London Triathlon Olympic? +
Typically held in August on a Saturday.
Water temperature and wetsuit rules? +
River water at 15°C average. Wetsuits are allowed.
How hilly is the bike course? +
100m of climbing over 40km. Profile: flat. Drafting not allowed.
What's the weather like on race day? +
5–18°C, 37% humidity, 15% rain chance, 10 km/h winds.
Average finish time? +
Approximately 2h 30m. Varies with conditions and athlete experience.
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