Inside AIRC25: How Australia's Indoor Rowing Champs Are Evolving

AIRC25 is bigger, longer, and more accessible than ever. Here's what's changed for the 2025 Australian Indoor Rowing Championships and how to get involved.

The 2025 Australian Indoor Rowing Championships are back with more days, more inclusivity, and more ways to compete. Here's how it's evolving.

The Australian Indoor Rowing Championships (AIRC25) return from 25 October to 2 November with a bigger footprint and clearer pathways for participation. Whether you're a first-time rower, a seasoned club athlete, or training solo at home, this year’s hybrid format and expanded support options make it easier than ever to get involved. With Early Bird tickets already on sale and registrations opening 16 September, here’s what’s different about 2025 — and why it matters.

More days, more chances to race

This year’s event runs over nine full days, giving competitors more flexibility to fit racing into their schedules. That includes time to reattempt efforts — because for the first time, unlimited attempts are allowed, with only your best verified result counting for medals and leaderboards. It’s a move designed to reduce pressure, encourage progress, and support broader participation.

Streamlined categories for fairness and clarity

AIRC25 has sharpened its competition structure. Juniors are split into U14, U16, and U19 bands. U23 now stands on its own, while Open splits into two groups (23–29 and 30–39). Masters go all the way up to 85+. Para classifications follow standard PR1–PR3 bands, and Lightweight rowers compete with strict weigh-in rules. The result: clearer expectations, better competition, and no ambiguity about where you fit.

One app, one process: Row Nation as the competition backbone

All results must now be submitted through the Row Nation app, even for open in-person hubs. That means every row is verified the same way: with a PM5 photo showing your time and Concept2 verification code. Lightweight entries require a weigh-in photo taken within two hours. It’s part of a stronger fairness and anti-cheating framework that ensures national leaderboards are genuinely comparable.

Two ways to train: Row Clubs and app-based programs

New in 2025, competitors are encouraged to prepare using two structured options. Row Clubs offer coached, group-based training at six locations nationwide. For those training solo, the Row Nation app features guided workouts and programs tailored for AIRC25 events. Whether you prefer a social setting or a self-paced plan, there’s now a clear path to get ready.

Built for scale, driven by community

While the structure is more polished, the core idea remains the same: connect people through rowing. AIRC25 continues to support open and closed hubs across clubs, schools, gyms, Defence bases, and workplaces. All participants row on Concept2 machines. All results flow into one leaderboard. The community remains national, but the vibe is local.

Ready to race?
Get your Early Bird ticket now and start training today with Row Clubs or the Row Nation app. More info and tickets: rownation.co/airc25

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