Wings for Life World Run 2026 Raises Record €9.2 Million for Spinal Cord Injury Research as 346,527 Participants Across 173 Countries Run for Those Who Can’t

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Participants seen during the Wings for Life World Run in Vienna, Austria on May 10, 2026 // Philip Platzer for Wings for Life World Run

Spinal Cord Injury Records Up to 500,000 New Cases Every Year and Remains One of Medicine’s Most Neglected Research Frontiers – Today’s Participants Moved to Change That.

SALZBURG, Austria: On 10 May 2026, the Wings for Life World Run concluded its 13th global edition, raising a record €9.2 million for spinal cord injury research across 173 Countries.

A record 346,527 participants of 192 nationalities took part across seven official Flagship Runs, 648 App Run Events and the Wings for Life World Run App, starting simultaneously at 11:00 am UTC (13:00 CEST Local Time) across all continents and time zones and pursued by a Catcher Car finish line that commenced at 11:30 am UTC. Fifty-nine per cent of participants took part in organised events.

Participants included Oracle Red Bull Racing driver Yuki Tsunoda, alpine skiing’s overall World Cup champion Marco Odermatt, HYROX World Champion Alexander Rončević and the oldest participant ever at 100 years of age – Austrian Paula Attwenger.

The furthest distance recorded by a male finisher was a huge new world record 78.95 km by Japan’s Jo Fukuda competing in Fukuoka, Japan while the furthest distance recorded by a female finisher was a new world record 62.24 km by Mikky Keetels of the Netherlands competing in Breda, Netherlands.

One hundred per cent of all entry fees and donations raised go directly to the Wings for Life Foundation whose mission is finding a cure for spinal cord injury.

Context

Spinal cord injury sees up to 500,000 new cases reported each year (WHO, 2013; Wei et al., 2025), yet receives a fraction of the funding allocated to other major medical conditions. The condition sits in what the pharmaceutical industry calls the Funding Valley of Death, the gap between laboratory discovery and clinical trial investment where commercial funders withdraw because no viable market return exists. That gap is wider for spinal cord injury than most: it lacks the commercial pull of chronic lifestyle diseases, making private funding from foundations like Wings for Life its primary driver of innovation rather than a supplement to industry funding.

Wings for Life Foundation exists to bridge that gap directly, through a 100% guarantee model that guarantees every entry fee and donation reaches peer-reviewed research in full. For anyone evaluating where their race participation creates the most durable change, the Wings for Life World Run presents a case rooted not in sentiment but in the compounding return of scientific progress. The unique and inclusive format of the race – with the Catcher Car delivering the finish line to each participant – means that whether you ran, walked, or competed in a wheelchair, and whether you completed 1km or 50km, every participant is a race finisher.

Participants seen during the Wings for Life World Run in Omiya, Japan on May 10, 2026 // Keisuke Kato for Wings for Life World Run

Race Results Breakdown

1. At 11:00 am UTC (13:00 CEST local time) on May 10, 2026, the Wings for Life World Run global start signal activated participants across 7 Flagship Runs and the Wings for Life World Run App simultaneously.
2. Participants in Flagship Run locations in Vienna, Munich, Zug, Breda, Poznan, Ljubljana and Zadar departed their designated start lines.
3. App Run participants began simultaneously using the Wings for Life World Run App, which tracks pace and simulates the Catcher Car mechanic digitally across 173 countries without an official race location. 648 App Run Event locations around the world happened in cities like New York, Paris, Brasilia, Tokyo, Taipei, Izmir, Budapest, Nairobi, Sydney, Milano, Mexico City, Stockholm, Mumbai, etc
4. 59% of participants took part in organised events.
5. Thirty minutes after the global start both the physical Catcher Car and the App-based finish line began moving at 11:30 am UTC, starting at 14 km/h and increasing speed incrementally – progressively eliminating participants until a final participant remained at each location.
6. The furthest distance recorded by a male finisher was a huge new world record of 78.95 km by Japan’s Jo Fukuda competing in Fukuoka, Japan.
7. The furthest distance recorded by a female finisher was a new world record of 62.24 km by Mikky Keetels of the Netherlands competing in Breda, Netherlands. The Wings for Life World Run participants recorded a combined 2,889,278.26 km across 600+ cities and 173 countries, contributing to the global distance total.
8. The 2026 Wings for Life World Run concluded with a confirmed global fundraising record total of €9.2 million. One hundred percent of all entry fees and donations raised go directly to the Wings for Life Foundation whose mission is finding a cure for spinal cord injury.

Stakeholder Quotes

“It was incredible, I had goosebumps all the way through. I’m proud of the amazing numbers we achieved together: 346,527 participants for this event helped us raise €9.2 million for spinal cord research. These are not just statistics and numbers; they represent people who care, who show up, and who support our mission. Every single cent will be invested in promising research projects and will bring hope to so many people. So thank you to everyone who took part, it was an amazing day.” Anita Gerhardter, Chair of the Executive Board, Wings for Life

“My motivation was to combine my work in the lab for patients with creating this atmosphere to keep helping all the people in wheelchairs. Running alongside them today – seeing them and thinking, they don’t surrender, you have to not surrender either – that’s what makes this more than just a race. The Wings for Life funding has enabled me to do my PhD thesis and allowed us to test our drug for spinal cord injury. Every rock can create the mountain, so every runner counts for spinal cord injury research.” Alejandro Arriero-Cabañero, PhD Researcher, Hospital Nacional de Paraplejicos

“Everything raised goes directly to the cause, nothing is wasted. As a researcher working on spinal cord injury every day, to see this level of support is incredibly powerful. Spinal cord injury cannot be solved alone – what makes this event so special is that everyone can take part, no matter their level, and every contribution truly counts.” Christian Göritz, PhD, Principal Investigator, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm – Wings for Life-funded researcher

Global Winner Quotes

“It was really tough, but I am so happy and I am proud. The audience helped me do my best. I hope more people will join this event next year.” Jo Fukuda, Men’s Global Champion

“At first we started off at a certain pace, but I think around 50km I just thought ‘don’t stop, just keep on running, this feels comfortable’. I was just thinking, ‘run for those who can’t’, and that kept me going… I tried to focus on feeling good remaining on pace, and feeling mentally focused.” Mikky Keetels, Women’s Global Champion

The Science of “Neglected” Impact

Rather than waiting for a singular “cure,” today’s fundraising supports incremental, life-changing milestones. Recent funds have already moved the needle on nerve regeneration and electrical stimulation research projects that can restore hand function and independence.

“The question is no longer whether spinal cord injury will be treatable, but when,” says Verena May, Executive Director Research Portfolio at Wings for Life. “Multiple therapies are now in clinical trials, some already showing positive results. So many more approaches are fuelling the preclinical pipeline.”

(L-R) Simon Ehammer, Marco Odermatt and Daniela Ryf with wheelchair athlete Joel Jung seen during the Wings for Life World Run in Zug, Switzerland on May 10, 2026. // Dean Treml for Wings for Life World Run

Why It Matters

Spinal cord injury remains one of the most structurally underfunded areas in global medical research – a gap that the Wings for Life Foundation’s founders encountered directly in 2003, finding a field too rare for commercial pharmaceutical investment and too complex for most government research priorities. The Wings for Life World Run is one of the few events in global sport where the financial structure of participation is itself a statement: there are no administrative overhead which dilute the research impact of a participant’s entry fee or donation, making the direct funding ratio a genuine 1:1 allocation. The Wings for Life World Run App participation, removes geographical barriers to contribution and ensuring that any person, anywhere, could direct capital to finding a cure for spinal cord injury. With multiple therapies now in human clinical trials and a preclinical pipeline that continues to grow, the compounding return on each edition of the run extends well beyond the distance covered on race day.

Technical Impact Profile: R&D Performance Metrics

Fundraising Efficiency: 100% of donations are channeled directly to research. All administrative and event overhead costs are covered independently of donations, ensuring zero friction loss for donor capital.
Portfolio Scale: Since 2004, The Wings for Life Foundation has funded 344 research projects worldwide, with 72 currently active across 15 countries spanning four continents. The foundation receives more than 250 applications annually from scientists all over the world, evaluated by a network of 737 independent expert reviewers and an internationally renowned Scientific Advisory Board.
Tractability Rate: A notable number of projects have been successfully translated into human clinical trials, marking significant progress in spinal cord injury research. As of 2025, 18 % of the 72 projects currently funded by Wings for Life have successfully translated from laboratory discovery and are already being tested in clinical settings.
Global Funding Rank: As of May 2026, Wings for Life is widely recognised as one of the world’s leading private funders of spinal cord injury research. It’s global reach, the number of supported projects, and the impact of our funding placed the Wings for Life Foundation in the top non-governmental organisations in this field. While there is no official ranking, this standing is supported by the breadth of their international collaborations, the volume of funded projects, and recognition within the scientific community. Evidence of this is the study on Vagus nerve stimulation by Michael Kilgard was co-funded by the Wings for Life Foundation with a total of €1.1M, and the NervGen study by Monica Perez received funding in the amount of €2.56M.

About Wings for Life

Wings for Life is a non-profit spinal cord research foundation established in 2004 and headquartered in Salzburg, Austria. Its mission is to find a cure for spinal cord injury. Since its founding, Wings for Life has funded 344 peer-reviewed research projects globally. All funded projects are selected through independent scientific peer review conducted by a pool of 737 expert reviewers who have participated in the process to date, alongside an internationally renowned Scientific Advisory Board.

About the Wings for Life World Run

The Wings for Life World Run is an annual global running event. It is distinguished by its simultaneous worldwide start, its Catcher Car format – in which the finish line pursues the participants rather than the reverse and its Wings for Life World Run App, which allows participants anywhere in the world to compete. One hundred percent of all entry fees and donations raised go directly to the Wings for Life Foundation whose mission is finding a cure for spinal cord injury. The event has been held across dozens of countries and has generated €69.71 million for spinal cord research since its inaugural edition in 2014.

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