The Bhutan International Marathon is an annual road-running event launched in 2014, and the Snowman Race is a high-altitude ultra-marathon traversing the Laya–Lunana region, launched in 2022 by King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck as a climate-change advocacy event.
Bhutan International Marathon and the Snowman Race are the two best-known long-distance running events held in Bhutan. The marathon, established in 2014, is an annual road-running event held in central Bhutan; the Snowman Race, established in 2022 at the command of King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, is a high-altitude ultra-marathon along the Snowman Trek between Laya and Lunana, framed by the organisers as a climate-change advocacy initiative.
The two events occupy very different positions in Bhutanese sport. The marathon is a participatory road race aimed at residents and tourists; the Snowman Race is one of the most demanding endurance events in the world, with small fields and a strong publicity component. Both are administered through committees that report to the Bhutan Olympic Committee and the Royal Office.
Bhutan International Marathon
The Bhutan International Marathon was first held in 2014 along a course in Bumthang. The race comprises a full marathon, a half marathon and shorter community distances, all run on roads at altitudes of around 2,500–2,800 metres. The course passes monasteries, villages and dzongs in central Bhutan and is timed to the spring season to avoid the monsoon. Participation is small by international standards — typically a few hundred runners across all distances — but draws international ultrarunning and adventure-tourism participants alongside Bhutanese students, civil servants and members of the security services.
A second event, the Bhutan Half Marathon, has been held in different valleys including Paro and Punakha; the Bumthang event remains the principal annual marathon. Proceeds and registration fees support youth sport and community projects, and the events have drawn modest international press attention as among the highest-altitude road marathons regularly staged.
Snowman Race
The Snowman Race is an ultra-marathon held over the upper section of the Snowman Trek, the trekking route through the Laya, Lunana and northern Bhutanese Himalayas that is widely regarded as one of the world's most demanding multi-day trails. The race was inaugurated on 13 October 2022, on the King's command, with 29 invited runners — drawn from international ultrarunning, the Royal Bhutan Army, and Bhutanese mountain communities — competing over a five-day course from Gasa to Bumthang. Of the original field, at least 12 runners did not finish, principally due to altitude sickness.[1]
The course crosses several passes above 5,000 metres, including stretches at around 5,470 metres elevation, and is timed to the autumn weather window between the late monsoon and the onset of winter. A second edition was held in October 2024 over a 196-kilometre four-day course with a small invited field. Subsequent editions have been planned in line with weather and logistics.
Climate-change advocacy framing
The King has publicly framed the Snowman Race as a climate-change awareness event. The course passes glaciers and glacial lakes that are visibly retreating and that pose glacial-lake outburst flood risks downstream; race organisers have invited journalists, climate scientists and diplomats to observe stages of the event, and have used the race's photographs to illustrate the changing state of Bhutan's high-altitude cryosphere. The framing has been picked up by international press, including BBC and CNN features on the inaugural race.
This advocacy framing has been welcomed by environmental observers, although it has also drawn comment in development circles for the prominence given to a small invited field of elite runners while the everyday adaptation needs of high-altitude communities, including the herders of Lunana itself, remain comparatively under-funded. Independent assessments of the climate-advocacy effectiveness of the race are limited.
Practical information
- Bhutan International Marathon: annual; principal venue Bumthang; full + half + shorter distances; spring season.
- Snowman Race: approximately every two years; Laya–Lunana–Bumthang course; invitation-only field; October.
- Permits and entry: via the Bhutan Olympic Committee and the Snowman Race Secretariat.
- Snowman Race official site: www.snowmanrace.bt
References
See also
Bhutan Premier League
The Bhutan Premier League (BPL) is the top tier of professional association football in Bhutan, established in 2012 by the Bhutan Football Federation. The league's champions qualify for the AFC Cup or, more recently, the AFC Challenge League. Paro FC has dominated the competition since 2019, winning seven titles to 2025.
culture·4 min readKhur-le
Khur-le are thin buckwheat pancakes traditional to the central highland districts of Bhutan, especially Bumthang. They serve as a staple carbohydrate alternative to rice in areas where buckwheat is the principal grain crop, and are eaten for breakfast or as an accompaniment to main dishes.
culture·4 min readBon Religion in Bhutan
Bon, the pre-Buddhist spiritual tradition of the Himalayan region, shaped the religious and cultural landscape of Bhutan for centuries before the arrival of Buddhism in the seventh and eighth centuries CE. While Buddhism eventually became dominant, Bon beliefs and practices were extensively absorbed into Bhutanese Buddhist culture, creating a distinctive syncretic religious landscape that persists to this day.
culture·6 min readJambay Lhakhang Drup
Jambay Lhakhang Drup is an annual religious festival held at the 7th-century Jambay Lhakhang temple in Bumthang, Bhutan. Celebrated in October or November (on the tenth month of the Bhutanese lunar calendar), the festival is renowned for its dramatic fire ceremony (Mewang) and the sacred naked dance (Tercham), both performed at night and believed to bestow blessings of fertility and spiritual purification on participants and spectators alike.
culture·6 min readEzay
Ezay (Dzongkha: ཨེ་ཟས) is a Bhutanese chili condiment made from ground or chopped hot peppers mixed with tomatoes, onions, garlic, coriander, and cheese. Served as an accompaniment to virtually every Bhutanese meal, ezay is considered essential to the national palate and exemplifies Bhutan's intense relationship with chili peppers.
culture·6 min readSingchang and Bangchang
Singchang and bangchang are two stages of the same fermented-grain brewing process in Bhutanese drinking culture. Singchang is the first, lightly filtered yield drawn directly from the fermented mash, while bangchang is the more diluted, watered-down second pressing. Both are distinct from distilled ara and from the broader category of chang.
culture·5 min read
Test Your Knowledge
Think you know about this topic? Try a quick quiz!
Help improve this article
Do you have personal knowledge about this topic? Were you there? Your experience matters. BhutanWiki is built by the community, for the community.
Anonymous contributions welcome. No account required.