North America United States In the United States, Thoroughbred flat races are run on surfaces of either dirt, synthetic or turf. Other tracks offer
Quarter Horse racing and
Standardbred racing, on combinations of these three types of racing surfaces. Racing of other breeds, such as Arabian horse racing, is found on a limited basis. American Thoroughbred races are run at a wide variety of distances, most commonly from ; with this in mind, breeders of Thoroughbred race horses attempt to breed horses that excel at a particular distance (see
dosage index). Horse racing in the United States and on the North American continent dates back to 1665, which saw the establishment of the
Newmarket Course in Salisbury, New York, a section of what is now known as the Hempstead Plains of
Long Island, New York. This first racing meet in North America was supervised by New York's colonial governor,
Richard Nicolls. The area is now occupied by the present
Nassau County, New York, a region of Greater
Westbury and East Garden City. The South Westbury section is still known as Salisbury. The first record of quarter-mile length races dated back to 1674 in
Henrico County,
Virginia. Each race consisted of only two horses, and they raced down the village streets and lanes. The Quarter Horse received its name from the length of the race. Tracing back the history of horse racing in the United States to its earliest inception in 1665, this sport has become an industry contributing approximately $15 billion to the U.S. economy in 2019. The
Pleasanton Fairgrounds Racetrack at the
Alameda County Fairgrounds in California is the oldest remaining horse racing track in America, dating from 1858, when it was founded by the sons of the Spaniard Don Agustín Bernal.
Belmont Park is located at the western edge of the Hempstead Plains in New York. Its mile-and-a-half main track is the largest dirt Thoroughbred racecourse in the world, and it has the sport's largest
grandstand. One of the latest major horse tracks opened in the United States was the
Meadowlands Racetrack in New Jersey, opening in 1977 for Thoroughbred and Harness racing. It is the home of the
Meadowlands Cup. Other more recently opened tracks include
Remington Park,
Oklahoma City, opened in 1988,
Sam Houston Race Park in the
Houston metro area, opened in 1994, and
Lone Star Park in the
Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex, opened in 1997; the latter track hosted the prestigious
Breeders' Cup series of races in 2004.
Thoroughbred horse racing in the United States has its own
Hall of Fame in
Saratoga Springs, New York. The Hall of Fame honors remarkable horses, jockeys, owners, and trainers. The traditional high point of US horse racing is the
Kentucky Derby, held on the first Saturday of May at
Churchill Downs in
Louisville, Kentucky. This race is known to be the "Most Exciting Two Minutes Sports" attracting the largest television audience of any American horse race. The Kentucky Derby, along with the
Preakness Stakes (held two weeks later at
Pimlico Race Course in
Baltimore, Maryland) and the
Belmont Stakes (held three weeks after the Preakness at
Belmont Park on Long Island), form the
Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing for three-year-olds. They are all held through May and the beginning of June. In recent years the
Breeders' Cup races, run at the end of the year, have challenged the Triple Crown events as determiners of the three-year-old champion. The Breeders' Cup is normally held at a different track every year; however, the 2010 and 2011 editions were both held at Churchill Downs, and 2012, 2013 and 2014 races were held at
Santa Anita Park.
Keeneland, in Lexington, Kentucky, hosted the 2015 Breeders' Cup. The corresponding Standardbred event is the
Breeders Crown. There is also a
Triple Crown of Harness Racing for Pacers and a
Triple Crown of Harness Racing for Trotters. American betting on horse racing is sanctioned and regulated by the state where the race is located. Simulcast betting exists across state lines with minimal oversight except the companies involved through legalized
parimutuel gambling. A takeout, or "take", is removed from each
betting pool and distributed according to state law, among the state, race track and horsemen. A variety of factors affect takeout, namely location and the type of wager that is placed. One form of parimutuel gaming is
Instant Racing, in which players bet on video replays of races.
Advanced Deposit Wagering (ADW) is a form of gambling on the outcome of horse races in which the bettor must fund his or her account before being allowed to place bets. ADW is often conducted online or by phone. In contrast to ADW, credit shops allow wagers without advance funding; accounts are settled at month-end. Racetrack owners, horse trainers and state governments sometimes receive a cut of ADW revenues.
Canada The most famous racehorse from Canada is generally considered to be
Northern Dancer, who after winning the
Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Queen's Plate in 1964 went on to become the most successful Thoroughbred sire of the twentieth century; his two-minute-flat Derby was the fastest on record until
Secretariat in 1973. The only challenger to his title of greatest Canadian horse would be his son
Nijinsky II, who is the last horse to win the English
Triple Crown.
Woodbine Racetrack (1956) in Toronto is home of the
King's Plate (1860), Canada's premier Thoroughbred stakes race, and the
North America Cup (1984), Canada's premier Standardbred stakes race. It is the only race track in North America which stages Thoroughbred and Standardbred (harness) meetings on the same day. The
Canadian International and
Woodbine Mile (1981) are Canada's most important Grade I races worth
Can$1,000,000 each, and have been won by many renowned horses such as Secretariat and
Wise Dan respectively. Other key races include
Woodbine Oaks (1956),
Prince of Wales Stakes (1929),
Breeders' Stakes (1889) and
Canadian Derby (1930). at
Pole Mokotowskie Race Track in 1891
Europe Belgium Horse racing in Belgium takes place at three venues –
Hippodrome Wellington in
Ostend (opened in 1883 in honour of
Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington),
Hippodroom Waregem in
Waregem in Flanders and
Hippodrome de Wallonie in
Mons,
Wallonia.
Czech Republic There are
15 racecourses in the Czech Republic, most notably Pardubice Racecourse, where the country's most famous race, the
Velka Pardubicka steeplechase, has been run since 1874. , an undefeated British racehorse and outstanding sire. Horse racing in Great Britain is predominantly thoroughbred
flat and
jumps racing. It was in Great Britain in the 17th to 19th centuries that many of the sport's rules and regulations were established. Named after
Edward Smith-Stanley, 12th Earl of Derby,
The Derby was first run in 1780. The race serves as the middle leg of the British
Triple Crown, preceded by the
2000 Guineas and followed by the
St Leger. The name "
Derby" has since become synonymous with great races all over the world, and as such has been borrowed many times in races abroad. The
Grand National is the most prominent race in
British culture, watched by many people who do not normally watch or bet on horse racing at other times of the year. Many of the sport's greatest jockeys, most notably Sir
Gordon Richards, have been British. The sport is regulated by the
British Horseracing Authority. The BHA's authority does not extend to Northern Ireland; racing in Ireland is governed on an
All-Ireland basis.
Greece Despite having an ancient tradition with well-documented history, all racetracks in Greece have ceased operation due to the
Greek government-debt crisis.
Hungary Hungary has a long-standing horse racing tradition. The first horse racing in Pest was noted on June 6, 1827. Although racing in Hungary is neither as popular nor as prestigious as it is in Western Europe, the country is notable for producing some fine international racehorses. Foremost of these is
Kincsem, foaled in 1874 and the most successful Thoroughbred racehorse ever, having won 54 races in 54 starts. The country also produced
Overdose, a horse who won his first 12 races, including
group races in Germany and Italy, and finished fourth in the
King's Stand Stakes at
Royal Ascot.
Ireland Ireland has a rich history of horse racing;
point to pointing originated there, and even today,
jump racing is more popular than racing on the flat. As a result, every year Irish horse racing fans travel in huge numbers to the highlight event of the National Hunt calendar, the
Cheltenham Festival, and in recent years Irish owned or bred horses have dominated the event. Ireland has a thriving Thoroughbred breeding industry, stimulated by favorable tax treatment. The world's largest Thoroughbred stud farm,
Coolmore Stud, has its main site there (in addition to major operations in the U.S. and Australia). In recent years, various Irish bred and trained horses achieved victory in one or more of the
British 2000 Guineas,
The Derby and the
Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, considered the three most prestigious races in Europe. In the six runnings of the Epsom Derby between 2008 and 2013, Irish horses filled 20 of the first 30 placings, winning the race 5 times.
Italy Historically, Italy has been one of the leading European horse-racing nations, albeit in some respects behind Great Britain, Ireland, and France in size and prestige. The late Italian horse breeder
Federico Tesio was particularly notable. In recent years, however, the sport in the country has suffered a major funding crisis, culminating in its 2014 expulsion from the European
Pattern. The world-famous
Melbourne Cup, the
race that stops a nation, has recently attracted many international entries. In country racing, records indicate that Goulburn commenced racing in 1834. Australia's first country racing club was established at Wallabadah in 1852 and the Wallabadah Cup is still held on New Year's Day (the current racecourse was built in 1898). In Australia, the most famous racehorse was
Phar Lap (bred in New Zealand), who raced from 1928 to 1932. Phar Lap carried to win the 1930 Melbourne Cup. Australian
steeplechaser
Crisp is remembered for his battle with Irish champion
Red Rum in the 1973
Grand National. In 2003–2005 the mare
Makybe Diva (bred in Great Britain) became the only racehorse to ever win the
Melbourne Cup three times, let alone in consecutive years. Still more recently, another mare,
Winx. won the prestigious
Cox Plate four straight times, and set a modern-era world record for most consecutive race wins by a Thoroughbred, winning the last 33 races of her career. In
harness racing, Cane Smoke had 120 wins, including 34 in a single season,
Paleface Adios became a household name during the 1970s, while
Cardigan Bay, a pacing horse from New Zealand, enjoyed great success at the highest levels of American harness racing in the 1960s. More recently,
Blacks A Fake has won four
Inter Dominion Championships, making him the only horse to complete this feat in Australasia's premier harness race. Competitive endurance riding commenced in Australia in 1966, when the Tom Quilty Gold Cup was first held in the Hawkesbury district, near Sydney. The Quilty Cup is considered the National endurance ride and there are now over 100 endurance events contested across Australia, ranging in distances from 80 km to 400 km. The world's longest endurance ride is the
Shahzada 400 km Memorial Test which is conducted over five days traveling 80 kilometers a day at St Albans on the
Hawkesbury River,
New South Wales. In all endurance events there are rigorous checks by veterinarians, conducted before, during, and after the competition.
New Zealand Racing is a long-established sport in New Zealand, stretching back to colonial times. Horse racing is a significant part of the New Zealand economy which in 2004 generated 1.3% of the GDP. The indirect impact of expenditures on racing was estimated to have generated more than $1.4 billion in economic activity in 2004 and created 18,300 full-time equivalent jobs. More than 40,000 people were involved in some capacity in the New Zealand racing industry in 2004. In 2004, more than one million people attended race meetings in New Zealand. There are 69 Thoroughbred and 51 harness clubs licensed in New Zealand. Racecourses are situated in 59 locations throughout New Zealand. The bloodstock industry is important to New Zealand, with the export sale of horses – mainly to Australia and Asia – generating more than $120 million a year. During the 2008–09 racing season 19 New Zealand bred horses won 22 Group One races around the world. Notable thoroughbred racehorses from New Zealand include
Carbine,
Nightmarch,
Sunline,
Desert Gold and
Rising Fast.
Phar Lap and
Tulloch were both bred in New Zealand but did not race there. The most famous New Zealand standardbred horse is probably Cardigan Bay.
Stanley Dancer drove the New Zealand bred horse, Cardigan Bay to win $1 million in stakes in 1968, the first harness horse to surpass that milestone in
American history. Other horses of note include
Young Quinn,
Christian Cullen, Lazarus and the trotter
Lyell Creek.
Africa Mauritius On 25 June 1812, the
Champ de Mars Racecourse was inaugurated by The
Mauritius Turf Club which was founded earlier in the same year by Colonel
Edward A. Draper. The Champ de Mars is situated on a prestigious avenue in
Port Louis, the capital city and is the oldest racecourse in the
Southern Hemisphere. The Mauritius Turf Club is the second oldest active turf club in the world. Undeniably, racing is one of the most popular sports in
Mauritius now attracting regular crowds of 20,000 people or more to the only racecourse of the island. A high level of professionalism has been attained in the organization of races over the last decades preserving the unique electrifying ambiance prevailing on race days at the Champ de Mars. Members of the
British royal family, such as
Queen Elizabeth II,
Princess Margaret or
Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother have attended or patronized races at the Champ de Mars numerous times. Champ de Mars has four classic events a year such as the Duchess of York Cup, the Barbé Cup, the Maiden Cup, and the Duke of York Cup. Most of the horses are imported from South Africa but some are also acquired from Australia, the United Kingdom and France.
South Africa Horse racing is a popular sport in South Africa that can be traced back to 1797. The first recorded race club meeting took place five years later in 1802. The national horse racing body is known as the
National Horseracing Authority and was founded in 1882. The premier event, which attracts 50,000 people to Durban, is the
Durban July Handicap, which has been run since 1897 at
Greyville Racecourse. It is the largest and most prestigious event on the continent, with betting running into the hundreds of millions of Rands. Several July winners have gone on to win major international races, such as Colorado King, London News, and Ipi Tombe. However, the other notable major races are the Summer Cup, held at
Turffontein Racecourse in
Johannesburg, and The Sun Met, which is held at
Kenilworth Racecourse in
Cape Town.
Asia China in
Yunnan, 2024 Horse racing in one form or another has been a part of Chinese culture for millennia. Horse racing was a popular pastime for the aristocracy at least by the
Zhou dynasty – 4th century B.C. General
Tian Ji's stratagem for a horse race remains perhaps the best-known story about horse racing in that period. In the 18th and 19th centuries, horse racing and equestrian sports in China was dominated by
Mongol influences. Thoroughbred horse racing came to China with British settlements in the middle 1800s and most notably centered around the treaty ports, including the two major race courses in Shanghai, the
Shanghai Racecourse and the International Recreation Grounds (in Kiang-wan), and the racecourses of
Tianjin. The Kiang-wan racecourse was destroyed in the lead-up to the
Second Sino-Japanese War and the Shanghai Race Club closed in 1954. The former Shanghai Racecourse is now People's Square and People's Park and the former club building was the
Shanghai Art Museum. As
Hong Kong and
Macau are
Special Administrative Regions, they are exempted from the ban on gambling on mainland China. (See below) Horse racing was banned in the
Republic of China in 1945, and the People's Republic of China maintained the ban after 1949, although allowances were made for ethnic minority peoples for whom horse sports are a cultural tradition. Speed horse racing (速度赛马) was an event in the
National Games of China, mainly introduced to cater to minority peoples, such as the
Mongols. The racecourse was initially 5 km, but from 2005 (the 10th National Games) was extended to 12 km. The longer race led to deaths and injuries to participating horses in both 2005 and the 11th National Games in 2009. Also, with the entry into the sport of
Han majority provinces such as
Hubei, which are better funded and used Western, rather than traditional, breeding and training techniques, meant that the original purpose of the event to foster traditional horse racing for groups like the Mongols was at risk of being usurped. At the 2009 National Games, Hubei won both the gold and silver medals, with
Inner Mongolia winning bronze. As a result of these factors, the event was abolished for the 12th National Games in 2013. Club horse racing reappeared on a small scale in the 1990s. In 2008, the China Speed Horse Race Open in
Wuhan was organized as the qualification round for the speed horse race event at the National Games the next year, but was also seen by commentators as a step towards legalizing both horse racing and gambling on the races. In 2014, the Wuhan Jockey Club organized more than 80 races. Almost all Chinese trainers and jockeys stabled in Wuhan. However, with the demise of the event at the National Games and the government not relenting from the ban on commercial racing, various racecourses built in recent years are all in a state of disuse: The Nanjing Racecourse, which previously hosted National Games equestrian events, is now used as a car park; the
Beijing Jockey Club was shut down in 2008. The racecourse in
Inner Mongolia has not been active since 2012. Horse racing eventually returned to mainland China in 2014 as a one-day, five-card event for foreign horses, trainers and jockeys. Standardized horse racing events have gradually re-emerged in China.
Hong Kong in Hong Kong at night The British tradition of horse racing left its mark with the creation of one of the most important entertainment and gambling institutions in Hong Kong. Established as the
Royal Hong Kong Jockey Club in 1884, the non-profit organization conducts nearly 700 races every season at the two race tracks:
Happy Valley and
Sha Tin. All horses are imported, as Hong Kong has no breeding industry. The sport annually draws millions of dollars of tax revenue. Off-track betting is available from overseas bookmakers. Today, the Hong Kong Jockey Club is a cornerstone of modern Hong Kong. It donates all its profits to the Hong Kong government, charities and public institutions. It is the territory's largest taxpayer, contributing 11% of the government's revenues in 2000. In economic terms, the Hong Kong Jockey Club is an old-fashioned government-protected monopoly; all other forms of gambling are illegal in this industry.
Macau The
Macau Trotting Club started in 1980, shutting down in 1988. In 1989, the Jockey Club of Macau was established for flat racing, closing after an unsuccessful year, to be purchased again in 1990. Racing resumed in 1991, peaking in 2003–2004, when more races were run in Macao than in Honk Kong. Racing was discontinued in 2024.
India India's first racecourse was set up in Madras in 1777,
Guindy race course. Today India has nine racetracks operated by seven racing authorities.
Indonesia Indonesia has several local horse racing traditions including
West Sumatra's pacu kudo and
Bima's pacoa jara. Modern flats racing was first inroduced during the
Dutch colonial era. Post-independence, all equestrian sports are governed by the
Equestrian Association of Indonesia (PORDASI).
Japan in Funabashi, Japan
Japan has two governing bodies that control its horseracing – the
Japan Racing Association (JRA), and
National Association of Racing (NAR). Between them they conduct more than 21,000 horse races a year. The JRA is responsible for horseracing events at ten major racecourses in metropolitan areas, while the NAR is responsible for various local horseracing events throughout Japan. Racing in Japan is mainly
flat racing, but Japan also has
jump racing and a sled-pulling race known as
Ban'ei (also called Draft Racing). Japan's top stakes races are run in the spring, autumn, and winter. These include the country's most prominent race – the Grade 1
Japan Cup, a 2,400 m (about 1½ mile) invitational turf race run every November at
Tokyo Racecourse for a purse of ¥476 million (about US$5.6 million), one of the richest turf races in the world. Other noted stakes races include the
February Stakes,
Japanese Derby,
Takamatsunomiya Kinen,
Yasuda Kinen,
Takarazuka Kinen,
Arima Kinen,
Satsuki Sho,
Kikka Sho, and the
Tenno Sho races run in the spring and fall. Japan's top jump race is the
Nakayama Grand Jump, run every April at
Nakayama Racecourse.
Malaysia In
Malaysia, horse racing was introduced during the British colonial era and remains to the present day as a gambling activity. There are three race courses in Peninsular Malaysia, namely
Penang Turf Club, Perak Turf Club, and
Selangor Turf Club. Within and only within the turf clubs, betting on horse racing is a legal form of gambling. Racing in Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore is conducted and governed under the Rules of the Malayan Racing Association and betting in Malaysia is operated and organized by Pan Malaysian Pools Sdn Bhd. In East Malaysia, races are governed independently by the Royal Sabah Turf Club and the Sarawak Turf Club.
Mongolia Mongolian horse racing takes place during the
Naadam festival. Mongolia does not have Thoroughbred horse racing. Rather, it has its own Mongolian style of horse racing in which the horses run for at least a distance of 25 kilometers.
Pakistan Horse races are held in Pakistan at four clubs. In Lahore at
Lahore Race Club, Rawalpindi at Chakri, in Karachi at
Karachi Race Club, and in Gujrat at Gujrat Race Club.
Philippines Horseracing in the Philippines began in 1867. The history of Philippine horseracing has three divisions according to the breeds of horses used. They are the Philippine-pony era (1867–1898), the Arabian-horse era (1898–1930), and the Thoroughbred-era (1935–present).
Saudi Arabia Horce races are mainly held at the
King Abdulaziz Racetrack, which hosts the richest thoroughbred horse race; the
Saudi Cup.
Singapore Horse racing was introduced to Singapore by the British in 1843, and remained one of the legal forms of gambling after independence. It was a highly popular form of entertainment with the local Singaporean community for 181 years. Races were typically held on Friday evenings and Sundays at the
Singapore Turf Club in
Kranji. Horse racing also left its mark in the naming of roads in Singapore such as Race Course Road in
Little India, where horse racing was first held in Singapore, and Turf Club Road in
Bukit Timah where Singapore Turf Club used to be situated before moving to its final location in 1999. In-person attendance at horse races declined dramatically during the 2010s, and after the
COVID-19 pandemic the 30,000-seat grandstand was regularly filled to less than 10% capacity. The racetrack was finally closed in October 2024, its land reclaimed by the government to make way for public housing.
South Korea Horse racing in South Korea dates back to May 1898, when a foreign language institute run by the government included a donkey race in its athletic rally. However, it wasn't until the 1920s that modern horse racing involving
betting developed. The nation's first authorised club, the Chosun Racing Club, was established in 1922 and a year later, the
pari-mutuel betting system was officially adopted for the first time. and the
hippodrome of Constantinople built in AD 203. During the
Ottoman Empire in the 16th century, cross-country races of about 15 miles were run. The first modern horse racing dates to 1856 in
İzmir. After the
Republic of Turkey was established in 1923 by
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the number of breeding and racing Arabian and Thoroughbred racehorses accelerated rapidly, especially after the beginning of the 1930s. The Jockey Club of Turkey, founded in 1950, was the turning point of both the Turkish breeding and racing industries.
United Arab Emirates The big race in the
UAE is the
Dubai World Cup, a race with a purse of US$12 million, which was the largest purse in the world until being surpassed by
the Saudi Cup, a race in Riyadh with a $20 million purse that held its first edition in 2020. Other races include the
Dubai Kahayla Classic with a purse of US$250,000. The Meydan Racecourse in Dubai, reportedly the world's largest race track, opened on March 27, 2010, for the Dubai World Cup race. The race track complex contains two tracks with seating for 60,000, a hotel, restaurants, theater and a museum. There is no parimutuel betting in the UAE as gambling is illegal.
South America Argentina , the main racecourse in
Buenos Aires In Argentina the sport is known as turf. Some of the most famous racers are
Irineo Leguisamo, Vilmar Sanguinetti, Marina Lezcano, Jorge Valdivieso, Pablo Falero and Jorge Ricardo. The most notable Argentine horse of recent decades is
Invasor, who won Uruguay's Triple Crown in 2005; won four U.S. Grade I races in 2006, including the
Breeders' Cup Classic, on his way to being named that country's
Horse of the Year; and ended his racing career in 2007 with two more Grade I/Group One wins, including the Dubai World Cup. Carlos Gardel's tango
Por una cabeza is about horse racing, a sport of which he was a known fan. Gardel was a good friend of
Irineo Leguisamo, who is the most recognized Uruguayan jockey, who raced numerous years in Argentine. ==Betting==