Important Reminder:The City Guide app will be sunsetting on December 15, 2024, with the web version to follow in early 2025. Please visit our FAQ to learn more or to download our Swarm app.
No matter where you watch, if you're looking for a specific runner, tell them in advance where you'll be--intersection AND side of the street. It's easier for your runner to find you than vice versa.
30 Lafayette Ave (btwn Ashland Pl & Saint Felix St), Brooklyn, NY
Opera House · Fort Greene · 81 tips and reviews
Runner's World Magazine: It’s near the 8-mile mark of the NYC Marathon, so you can make it back in time to meet your runner in Central Park. And, it’s easily accessible by a whole slew of subway trains via Atlantic Terminal.
Runner's World Magazine: The crowds in Queens tend to be less overwhelming than those in Manhattan during the NYC Marathon. See runners here before they tackle the big Queensboro Bridge.
Supermarket · Upper East Side · 32 tips and reviews
Runner's World Magazine: There's a retaining wall on the 59th Street side that you can stand on to watch runners coming off the bridge during the NYC Marathon.
Runner's World Magazine: There are far fewer crowds so you get a better view of the NYC Marathon. And if you're watching someone, you can easily jog over to Fifth Avenue and see them again.
Mt. Morris Park W & Madison Ave (btwn W 120th & W 124th St), New York, NY
Park · Central Harlem · 52 tips and reviews
Runner's World Magazine: The NYC Marathon route includes three of the four sides of the park, eventually rejoining Fifth Avenue. You can walk across the park to see friends or family members who are running a second time.
1000 5th Ave (btwn E 80th & E 84th St), New York, NY
Art Museum · 1961 tips and reviews
Runner's World Magazine: You often see the NYC Marathon being won behind the museum, where only one or two runners will be holding on at the front. The crowds aren't too thick, and you're not far from the family meeting area.
Runner's World Magazine: If you get here early enough, you can get a spot near the front to watch the elites finish the NYC Marathon. It gets crowded as the day goes on.