Amyr Klink was the first person to row across the
South Atlantic, leaving from
Lüderitz, Namibia on 9 June 1984 and arriving 101 days later in
Salvador, Brazil on 18 September 1984. One man holds the world record for both the fastest solo boat to cross the Atlantic and the fastest duo - Dutch Mark Slats crossed the Atlantic Ocean solo in only 30 days, seven hours and 49 minutes in 2017 in a Rannoch R15 ocean rowing boat called Peanuts. Mark rowed the Atlantic again in 2020 with a fellow Dutchman Kai Weedmer. The duo were first to arrive in Antigua beating all 3, 4 and 5 man crews participating in the Atlantic Challenge and broke the record for the fastest pair to row across the Atlantic Ocean taking just 32 days, 22 hours, 13 minutes. Their boat 'Maria' a D12 from The Ocean Rowing Company was built by Mark Slats himself. The world record for the fastest four-man crossing of the Atlantic Ocean in a rowing boat is held by team The Four Oarsmen. During the Talisker Whisky Atlantic challenge they rowed 4,722 km (2,554 nautical miles) from La Gomera in the Canary Islands to Antigua aboard a Rannoch R45 boat named
Aegir, arriving on 12 January 2018. They rowed the Atlantic Ocean Trade Winds I route (open-class category) in 29 days and 15 hours. The four man team consisted of close friends (Stuart Watts, Peter Robinson, Richard Taylor and George Biggar – all from the United Kingdom).
Aegir is the fastest rowing boat to cross any ocean, at an average speed of 3.589 knots, beating the previous record held by
Sara G since 2011. The fastest rowing record to cross the Atlantic Ocean by a female crew was created by Chinese women Cloris Chen Yuli, Amber Li Xiaobing, Tina Liang Mintian and Sarah Meng Yajie at the Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge 2017, rowing a Rannoch R45
Jasmine 2. Arriving on 18 January 2018, they rowed from La Gomera to Antigua in 34 days, 13 hours, 13 minutes, shattering the previous record of 40 days, 8 hours, 26 minutes set two years ago by a British team. Their team Kung Fu Cha Cha was the first team from Asia to row across the Atlantic Ocean. With an average age of 23.5, the four students from Shantou University became the youngest team ever to row across the Atlantic. Before attending university, they had no experience in ocean rowing. The fastest Atlantic crossing by a female crew of three was 42 days, 7 hours, 17 minutes between 12 December 2021 and 23 January 2022 over the Canaries to Antigua course, achieved by English crew Kat Cordiner, Charlotte Irving and Abby Johnston rowing Rannoch R45
Dolly Parton. An eleven-man French crew aboard
La Mondiale set the record for the fastest row from
Santa Cruz de La Palma to
Martinique, in 1992 at 35 days, 8 hours, and 30 minutes. On 3 December 1999,
Tori Murden of the United States became the first woman to row any ocean solo when she arrived in
Guadeloupe, having set off from
Tenerife in the Canary Islands 81 days earlier. In March 2006,
Julie Wafaei of Canada became the first woman to row across the Atlantic from mainland to mainland. On 10 July 2005, the
Vivaldi Atlantic four-man team (Nigel Morris, George Rock, Steve Dawson, Rob Munslow) set the record for fastest unsupported row from
St John's,
Newfoundland to the longitude of
Bishop Rock lighthouse, United Kingdom. They left on 31 May 2005, arriving back on 10 July 2005 in a time of 39 days 22 hours and 10 minutes setting a Guinness World Record. The
Vivaldi Atlantic four also became the first four-man team ever to row the North Atlantic west to east. The fastest unsupported row from the United States to England was set in 2005 by The Ocean Fours (NL) (Gijs Groeneveld, Robert Hoeve, Jaap Koomen, Maarten Staarink) with the
Vopak Victory. They left New York on 27 May and crossed the Bishops Rock longitude 60 days, 16 hours, and 19 minutes later. This record was beaten by
Leven Brown and his crew in 2010. Their boat
Artemis Investments left New York on 17 June 2010 and arrived in St Mary's on 31 July 2010 in a time of 43 days 21 hours 26 mins and 48 seconds. This has remained the record to date for the longer and original North Atlantic route. During their voyage they were capsized twice in storms. Frenchman
Charles Hedrich set the record for the fastest solo Atlantic crossing in 2007, from Dakar to Brazil in 36 days and 6 hours.
Charles Hedrich is also the first man to complete a double Atlantic crossing nonstop, rowing solo and unassisted. Leaving from
Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon, his path took him eastward across the
North Atlantic to the
Canary Islands, and then westward back to
Martinique. The expedition lasted 145 days and 22 hours, ending on 1 December 2012. On 14 June 2007,
Bhavik Gandhi became the first
Asian to row the Atlantic solo, nonstop and unsupported from
Spain to
Antigua. The trip, lasting 106 days, also set the record for the longest solo row across the
Atlantic Ocean. A fourteen-man British and Irish crew skippered by
Leven Brown aboard
La Mondiale set a new world record crossing the mid-Atlantic from east-to-west, Gran Canaria to Barbados, of 33 days, 7 hours, and 30 minutes from 15 December 2007, to 17 January 2008. In 2010,
Katie Spotz of the United States rowed solo mainland-to-mainland
Dakar,
Senegal–
Georgetown,
Guyana, in 70 days. At 22 years and 260 days old, she held the record as the youngest person to row solo across an ocean until 2018 when American Oliver Crane crossed the Atlantic solo at 19 years and 148 days old. The record for the fastest crossing from Africa to the West Indies was set in 2011 by a six-man crew aboard
Sara G (Matt Craughwell,
Fiann Paul, Tomas Cremona,
Adam Burke, Rob Byrne and Graham Carlin), with a crossing time of 33 days 21 hours and 46 minutes from Morocco to the West Indies. Sara G travelled at an average speed of 3.386 knots and the highest total number of days rowed above 100 miles per day (16 days). The Atlantic speed record was the first of four speed records earning Fiann Paul the Guinness World Record of "The first person to hold current speed records on four oceans" in 2017. From 10 October 2011 to 11 March 2012,
Erden Eruç set the record for the longest distance rowed across the Atlantic, solo and nonstop, crossing from
Lüderitz,
Namibia to
Güiria,
Venezuela along a route of in days. Gerard Marie of France set the record as the oldest solo ocean rower in 2015 at 66 years 323 days old, while Diana Hoff of the United Kingdom set the record as the oldest female solo ocean rower in 2000 at 55 years 135 days old. Dianne Carrington and Peter Smith, both of the United Kingdom, hold the records for the oldest female and male ocean rowers among rowing teams at 61 years 349 days (2018) and 74 years 217 days (2016), respectively. the first American to complete a North Atlantic crossing, aboard the custom built boat
Lucille. The journey of set a record crossing time of 38 days, 6 hours and 49 minutes from 27 June to 4 August 2018, at an average speed of . In 2020, Anna and Cameron Mclean became the world's first brother and sister team to row any ocean. They achieved this by rowing across the Atlantic Ocean in 43 days, 15 hours and 22 minutes. In February 2021, 21-year-old
Jasmine Harrison of
Thirsk, North Yorkshire became the youngest woman ever to row across the Atlantic Ocean. Harrison rowed from La Gomera in the Canary Islands to Antigua in the West Indies in 70 days, three hours and 48 minutes. Her 3,000-mile, 52-day journey began on December 11, 2024, when she set off from La Gomera in the
Canary Islands. She arrived in
Antigua in the Caribbean on February 1, 2025, having rowed an estimated 60–70 Kilometres each day across the Atlantic. Her row was completed in 52 days, 5 hours and 44 minutes. Despite having no prior nautical experience, Ananya demonstrated extraordinary determination. She dedicated three and a half years to rigorous training, building her physical endurance, technical rowing skills, and mental resilience. This preparation proved crucial when, during the race, her rudder broke. Undeterred, she braved 15-foot waves and her fear of deep water to dive under her boat and make the necessary repairs. Ananya's remarkable feat culminated in completing the World's Toughest Row, where she finished second in the solo category. Driven by a desire to make a difference, Ananya undertook this challenge to raise funds for two important causes: the Mental Health Foundation UK and the Deenabandhu Trust, which provides a home and education for orphaned and impoverished children in South India. - Fours event won by
Queensgate (GB) – Jason Hart, Iain "Yorkie" Lomas, Phil Langman and Shaun Barker; Pairs event won by Christopher Morgan and Michael Perrins in
Carpe Diem (GB). • Woodvale
Atlantic Rowing Race 2005 - Won by
Clint Evans and Chris Andrews in
C² (GB). • Shephard Ocean Fours Rowing Race 2006 - Inaugural North Atlantic Rowing Race won by team OAR Northwest (Jordan Hanssen, Brad Vickers, Greg Spooner, and Dylan LeValley) rowing
James Robert Hanssen. OAR Northwest set a Guinness World Record for the first unassisted row from mainland United States to mainland United Kingdom. • The Talisker Whisky Atlantic Challenge - Current and now annual event in ocean rowing on the Atlantic Ocean, from San Sebastian in
La Gomera,
Canary Islands (28° N 18° W) to Nelson's Dockyard,
English Harbour,
Antigua & Barbuda (17° N 61° W). The race begins in early December, with up to 30 teams participating from around the world. == Pacific Ocean rowing ==