There are no world records in rowing due to the huge variability that weather conditions can have on times. Instead, there are world best times, which are set over the international rowing distance of 2,000m.

On-water records

Rowing times are strongly affected by weather conditions, and to a lesser extent by water temperature – the majority of these times were set in warm water with a strong tailwind. World best rowing times have also decreased because of improvements in technology to both the boats and the oars, along with improvements in the conditioning of the rowers.

Because environmental conditions have a strong impact on boat speed, World Rowing recognizes world best times instead of world records. A world best time is one recorded on a regatta course that has previously held the World Championships, Olympic Games, or World Cup since 1980. A number of record times were set at the 2005 World Rowing Championships held on the Nagara River at Kaizu, Gifu Prefecture, Japan, but due to a fast current caused by heavy rainfall from the remnants of Typhoon Mawar, World Rowing declared that the race results were not eligible to be considered as world best times.

There is a category for lightweight rowing. For men, the crew average, wearing racing kit, cannot exceed and no rower may be over . For women, the limits are and .

Hamish Bond and Eric Murray hold the record for most consecutive wins with 69.

Men

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

!Width=120pt|Boat

!Time

!Crew

!Nation

!Date

!Event

!Location

!Ref

|-

|M1x <br/>Single sculls

|6:30.74

|Robbie Manson

| New Zealand

|2017

|Final <br/> World Cup II

|Poznań, Poland

|

|-

|M2- <br/>Coxless pair

|6:08.50

|Hamish Bond<br/> Eric Murray

| New Zealand

|2012

|Heat<br/> Olympic Games

|Dorney, United Kingdom

|

|-

|M2+ <br/>Coxed pair

|6:33.26

|Hamish Bond<br/> Eric Murray<br/> Caleb Shepherd (cox)

| New Zealand

|2014

|Final<br/>World Championships

|Amsterdam, Netherlands

|

|-

|M4- <br/>Coxless four

|5:37.86

|Andrew Triggs Hodge<br/> Tom James<br/> Pete Reed<br/>Alex Gregory

| Great Britain

|2012

|Heat<br/> World Cup II

|Lucerne, Switzerland

|

|-

|M4+ <br/>Coxed four

|5:58.96

|Matthias Ungemach<br/> Armin Eichholz<br/> Armin Weyrauch<br/> Bahne Rabe<br/> Jörg Dederding (cox)

| Germany

|1991

|Final<br/>World Championships

|Vienna, Austria

|

|-

|M4x <br/>Quadruple sculls

|5:32.03

|Dirk Uittenbogaard<br/> Abe Wiersma<br/> Tone Wieten<br/> Koen Metsemakers

| Netherlands

|28 July 2021

|Final<br/>Olympic Games

|Tokyo, Japan

|

|-

|M8+ <br/>Eight

|5:18.68

|Johannes Weißenfeld<br/> Felix Wimberger<br/> Max Planer<br/> Torben Johannesen<br/> Jakob Schneider<br/> Malte Jakschik<br/> Richard Schmidt<br/> Hannes Ocik<br/> Martin Sauer (cox)

| Germany

|2017

|Final <br/> World Cup II

|Poznań, Poland

|

|-

|LM1x <br/>Lightweight single sculls

|6:39.56

|Niels Torre

| Italy

|18 August 2024

|Heat <br/>World Championships

|St. Catharines, Canada

|

|-

|LM2- <br/>Lightweight coxless pair

|6:22.91

|Simon Niepmann<br/> Lucas Tramèr

| Switzerland

|2014

|Final<br/>World Championships

|Amsterdam, Netherlands

|

|-

|LM2x <br/>Lightweight double sculls

|6:05.33

|Fintan McCarthy<br/> Paul O'Donovan

| Ireland

|28 July 2021

|Semi-final<br/>Olympic Games

|Tokyo, Japan

|

|-

|LM4- <br/>Lightweight coxless four

|5:43.16

|Kasper Winther Jørgensen<br/> Jacob Larsen<br/> Jacob Barsøe<br/> Morten Jørgensen

| Denmark

|2014

|Semi-final<br/>World Championships

|Amsterdam, Netherlands

|

|-

|LM4x <br/>Lightweight quadruple sculls

|5:42.75

|Georgios Konsolas<br/> Spyridon Giannaros<br/> Panagiotis Magdanis<br/> Eleftherios Konsolas

| Greece

|2014

|Final<br/>World Championships

|Amsterdam, Netherlands

|

|-

|LM8+ <br/>Lightweight eight

|5:30.24

|Klaus Altena<br/> Christian Dahlke<br/> Thomas Melges<br/> Bernhard Stomporowski<br/> Michael Kobor<br/> Uwe Maerz<br/> Michael Buchheit<br/> Kai von Warburg<br/> Olaf Kaska (cox)

| Germany

|1992

|Heat<br/>World Championships

|Montreal, Canada

|

|}

The greatest distance rowed in 24 hours is 342&nbsp;km (212.5 miles) by Hannes Obreno, Pierre de Loof, Tim Brys, Mathieu Foucaud, Thijs Obreno, Giel Vanschoenbeek, Arjan van Belle and Thibaut Schollaert (all Belgians) on the Watersportbaan in Ghent, Belgium, on 2–3 October 2014. All eight participants were members of a student rowing club called VSR (Vlaamse Studentenvereniging der Roeiers [translates to Flanders Student Rowing Club]).

The greatest distance rowed in 1 hour is 17,555 m (10.91 miles) by the Delftse Studenten Roeivereniging Proteus-Eretes during the Hour boat race on 17 December 2017.

Women

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

!width=120pt|Boat

!Time

!Crew

!Nation

!Date

!Event

!Location

!Ref

|-

|W1x <br/>Single sculls

|7:07.71

|Rumyana Neykova

| Bulgaria

|2002

|Final<br/>World Championships

|Seville, Spain

|

|-

|W2x <br/>Double sculls

|6:37.31

|Olympia Aldersey<br/> Sally Kehoe

| Australia

|2014

|Semi-final<br/>World Championships

|Amsterdam, Netherlands

|

|-

|W4- <br/>Coxless four

|6:14.36

|Grace Prendergast<br/> Kayla Pratt<br/> Kerri Gowler<br/> Kelsey Bevan

| New Zealand

|2014

|Final<br/>World Championships

|Amsterdam, Netherlands

|

|-

|W4x <br/>Quadruple sculls

|6:05.13

||Chen Yunxia<br/> Zhang Ling<br/> Lü Yang<br/> Cui Xiaotong

| China

|28 July 2021

|Final<br/>Olympic Games

|Tokyo, Japan

|

|-

|W8+ <br/>Eight

|5:52.99

|Magdalena Rusu<br/> Viviana Bejinariu<br/> Georgiana Dedu<br/> Maria Tivodariu<br/> Ioana Vrinceanu<br/> Amalia Beres<br/> Madalina Beres<br/> Denisa Tilvescu<br/> Daniela Druncea (cox)

| Romania

|28 July 2021

|Repechage <br/> Olympic Games

|Tokyo, Japan

|

|-

|LW1x <br/>Lightweight single sculls

|7:23.36

|Imogen Grant

| Great Britain

|9 July 2022

|Final <br/> World Cup III

|Lucerne, Switzerland

|

|-

|LW2x <br/>Lightweight double sculls

|6:40.47

|Emily Craig<br /> Imogen Grant

| Great Britain

|17 June 2023

|Semi-final <br/> World Cup II

|Varese, Italy

|

|-

|LW4x <br/>Lightweight quadruple sculls

|6:15.95

|Mirte Kraaijkamp<br/> Elisabeth Woerner<br/> Maaike Head<br/> Ilse Paulis

| Netherlands

|2014

|Final <br/> World Championships

|Amsterdam, Netherlands

|

::DIR Concept2

::DIR RP3

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

!Type

!Category

!Time

!Split

!Width=25%|Nation

!Date

!Name

!Ref

|-

|rowspan=2|SIR

|rowspan=2|Open Men

|5:34.7

|1:23.6

| Germany

|17 February 2026

|Oliver Zeidler

|

|-bgcolor=#CEF6F5

|5:33.4

|1:23.3

| Netherlands

|18 March 2026

|Simon Van Dorp

|

|-

|SIR

|Lightweight Men

|5:56.7

|1:29.2

| Denmark

|2012

|Henrik Stephansen

|-

|SIR

|Open Women

|6:21.1

|1:35.3

| United States

|2021

|Brooke Mooney

|-

|SIR

|Lightweight Women

|6:53.8

|1:43.4

| Canada

|2019

|Jennifer Casson

|-

|IRwS

|Open Men

|5:40.6

|1:25.1

| United States

|2024

|Marcus Cannon Lorgen

|-

|IRwS

|Lightweight Men

|6:06.0

|1:31.5

| United States

|2023

|Jamie Copus

|-

|IRwS

|Open Women

|6:46.8

|1:41.7

| United States

|2006

|Taliesin Davies

|-

|IRwS

|Lightweight Women

|7:29.7

|1:52.4

| United States

|2008

|Lynn Bender

|-

|DIR C2

|rowspan=2|Open Men

|5:41.8

|1:25.4

| New Zealand

|2012

|Eric Murray

|-

|DIR RP3

|5:25.5

|1:21.3

| Germany

|2023

|Oliver Zeidler

|-

|DIR

|Lightweight Men

|6:15.6

|1:33.9

| Great Britain

|2017

|Tom Foster

|-

|DIR

|Open Women

|8:00.6

|2:00.1

| United States

|2015

|Karen Alt

|-

|DIR

|Lightweight Women

|8:10.4

|2:02.6

| United States

|2013

|Elizabeth Sheldon

|}

  • Lwt Men: maximum weight
  • Lwt Women: maximum weight

Note: the standard machine for indoor records is the Concept2 indoor rower. "Split" refers to the average time to complete 500m (i.e., the 2,000m time divided by 4).

References

  • FISA – Best Times
  • Concept2 – World Records
  • Concept2 – British Records
  • Concept2 – Other Records