Note that the nineteenth century records are not strictly compatible as they measure a "Day's run" which was measured noon to noon regardless of longitude. The two entries above were both eastbound and therefore less than 24 hours.
Notable performances During her
Jules Verne Trophy record in 2011-2012, the
Banque Populaire V skippered by
Loïck Peyron covered 811.70 nautical miles in 24 hours on 3 December 2011 at 11:45 UT, posting 28 days over 600 miles, including 9 days over 700 miles and 1 day over 800 miles. During her Jules-Verne trophy record in 2009-2010, the trimaran
Groupama 3 skippered by
Franck Cammas covered 798 nautical miles in 24 hours on 13 February 2010 at 5 p.m. UT, showing 17 days over 600 miles, including 10 days over 700 miles. During her Jules-Verne trophy record in 2016-2017, the trimaran
Idec sport in the hands of
Francis Joyon and his crew of Clément Surtel,
Alex Pella, Bernard Stamm, Gwénolé Gahinet and Sébastien Audigane, covered 894 nautical miles in 24 hours, and 10 consecutive days at 809 miles / 24 h. Francis Joyon rounds Cape Horn, 16 days after riding off of South America, and after a course of nearly 12,000 miles above an average of 30 knots (730.16 miles / 24 h over 16 days). He then signs a performance increase of between 30 and 40% compared to the record to be broken by Loïck Peyron 5 years earlier. Leaving the southern seas with a lead of 4 j 06 h 35 min over Loïck Peyron's previous record, Francis Joyon, Clément Surtel,
Alex Pella, Bernard Stamm, Gwénolé Gahinet and Sébastien Audigane regained the equivalent of 2,800 miles on the record during this episode. During the aborted attempt of 2019,
Yann Guichard sets a new record crossing the equator in 4 days 19 h 57 min and, thanks to favorable weather conditions, lines up 4,812.1 miles from the 11th to 16th day, or 802 miles / day for 6 consecutive days.
24 hour distance record for
Armel Le Cléac'h on
Banque Populaire VII: 682,85 miles in 24 hours singlehanded on 26 January 2014 (28,45 knots). During his record around the world Singlehanded in 2017,
24 hour distance record for
François Gabart on
Macif: 850,68 miles in 24h. During his attempt for the
Jules Verne Trophy on 5 December 2020,
Thomas Coville on
:fr:Sodebo Ultim 3 covered 889.9 miles in 24 hours (37.1 knots average, top speed 48.9 knots). During his attempt for the
Jules Verne Trophy on 21 December 2024,
François Gabart on
SVR-Lazartigue covered 892.2 miles in 24 hours (37.2 knots average, top speed over 50 knots). During the return trip after his victory in the 2021
Transat Jacques-Vabre,
Charles Caudrelier broke two unofficial records on the
:fr:Maxi Edmond de Rothschild: in false solo training, he reached 50.7 knots, and covered 880 miles in 24 hours at an average speed of 36.6 knots. This last record cannot be approved for a lack of adequate equipment on board. ==124 hour Boston Teapot record==