27th–28th June 2026
The 360 is live.
Follow the riders around London in real time.
Open full tracking map ↗How to follow
Every rider has a tracker.
Each rider on The 360 carries a live GPS tracker throughout the event. The map above updates in real time — you can watch every rider move around the orbit, stop at cafés, push through the night and slowly work their way back towards Greenwich.
Riders spread out surprisingly quickly. Some move fast and barely stop. Others settle into longer rhythms, riding through the night or pausing for an hour before continuing the orbit.
If you have never watched live tracking before — give it ten minutes. Watching tiny dots cross the North Downs at 2am is oddly compelling. People who swear they will "just check quickly" are usually still watching an hour later.
The route
360 km. One relentless circle.
The 360 is a self-supported gravel orbit of London: 360 km and 4,400 m of climbing, starting and finishing at Greenwich. The route uses bridleways, towpaths, chalk ridges, woodland singletrack and old railway lines to circle the capital.
Riders head east along the Thames Path, south through the North Downs and Surrey Heaths, west across the Chilterns, then north and back through the Lee Valley and Epping Forest in the middle of the night. London is always nearby, which is precisely what makes finishing difficult.
360 km
Distance
4,400 m
Climbing
~24 hrs
Target time
Self-sup.
Format
The recce series
Follow the route as the riders do.
Three blogs covering every sector of the orbit. Read them while you watch the dots move.
What comes next
The Wrecker.
740 km. Land's End to London. Self-supported.
If The 360 has caught your attention, The Wrecker is what happens when you take the same idea and point it at the whole country instead. 740 km from Land's End to London on bridleways, byways and gravel connectors. £90 entry. No hand-holding.
Find out more about The Wrecker →