Toronto Confirmed as Supertri Venue in New Unified 2026 Calendar

Canadians can look forward to the return of the Toronto Supertri event this summer, with the event scheduled to take place July 26th, 2026. The announcement comes as part of Supertri’s broader reveal this morning, where the organization shared its unified vision for 2026 competition.

The 2026 Calendar

Earlier today, Supertri announced its 2026 race calendar, confirming a streamlined series designed to bring elite and amateur athletes together under a single unified event structure, while also offering the biggest single-day prize purse in the sport.

The 2026 season will feature three Supertri Pro Series races followed by a Supertri Pro Series Final, which will award more than $800,000 in prize money on a single day. Winners of the Pro Series Final will earn $100,000 each, while all Pro Series events will pay ten deep – a structure intended to support athlete development and broader professional participation.

Importantly, professional racing will take place alongside amateur competition at three established Supertri festival events. The confirmed dates and locations are Ascension Seton Supertri Austin on May 25th, Supertri Blenheim Palace on June 6th, and Supertri Toronto on July 26th. The date and location of the Pro Series Final will be announced at a later time.

Amateurs Drawing Inspiration From the Pros

The new format represents a strategic evolution for Supertri, which has traditionally focused primarily on elite racing but has recently shifted toward a more blended age-group athlete approach. Under the 2026 calendar, professionals and amateurs will race the same sprint-distance, draft-legal courses at the Austin, Blenheim, and Toronto events.

The intent is to place elite athletes directly within mass participation environments, giving age-group athletes a rare opportunity to compete on identical terrain and formats as the world’s top short-course racers.

As CEO and co-founder Michael D’hulst explained: “Professional athletes are some of the most inspirational forces in the sport. Their efforts seem almost super human to most of us. To be able to see them up close, racing the same distances on the same courses, gives us a true yardstick and motivates us to push ourselves to our own limits as well.”

D’hulst added that unifying professional and amateur racing is intended to bring the short-course community closer together, while supporting elite development and advancing Supertri’s digital-first broadcast strategy for a global audience.

Further announcements are expected in the coming weeks, including the release of Supertri’s athlete roster. Supertri has also indicated that additional details specific to the Toronto event are still to come, with further updates anticipated in early March.

Registration information for amateur athletes and additional event details will be available on the Supertri website.