A call to bring keelboats back to Anniversary Day
Anyone who has been out on the Waitematā during Anniversary Day will know the harbour still feels alive. The tugboats hammer off the line, the classic launches roll through at full shine, and crowds gather along the waterfront to watch the show.
Yet there’s been a clear drop in keelboat numbers. What was once a busy, competitive start line has dwindled to only a few boats in recent years. You notice it from the deck, and you notice it from the shore.
The regatta team wants that picture to change for 2026.
A format shaped around how people sail now
This year brings several tweaks aimed at making the Harbour Race more workable for modern crews. Nothing complicated, just practical changes designed to make the day more inviting.
The two-division layout is the most obvious. Boats up to 9.5 metres race together, and the larger yachts have their own start. It keeps the fleets tighter and gives crews more meaningful contests.

A 1300hrs start offers a breathing space for teams who might otherwise be rushing off moorings and out of marinas. Shifting the start to Resolution Buoy is another sensible move. Boats coming from Bucklands Beach, Panmure, Pine Harbour and the eastern suburbs will have a shorter run to the line.
The race distance sits at roughly 10 to 15 nautical miles. Long enough to enjoy a decent beat and run, short enough that crews can still make family plans later in the day. Everyone finishes at Westhaven, which is handy for almost anyone. Step off the boat, grab a drink, or point the bow home with daylight to spare.
A reason to stay and celebrate
To make a full day of it, the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron will host the official Anniversary Regatta after-party. The North Lawn outdoor bar and the Dinghy Locker indoors are reserved for skippers, crews, supporters and anyone linked to the event.
The Royal New Zealand Navy Band will perform throughout the afternoon, adding colour no matter what the weather throws at us. For many, it will be a good chance to catch up with other crews, share the day’s stories, and wind down after racing.
The Sail Past: open to every boat on the harbour
The organisers also want boats that prefer not to race to feel part of the day. The Sail Past remains a centrepiece of the regatta and is open to anything that floats.

The fleet will leave Westhaven at midday and sweep across to North Head. Classic launches, modern keelboats, multihulls, runabouts, anything that fits safely into the parade is welcome. Registration is free, and the display is always a favourite for spectators on both sides of the harbour.
It is also a reminder of how broad Auckland’s boating community really is.
Rebuilding a harbour tradition
The aim for 2026 is simple. More keelboats on the water, a stronger presence across the harbour, and a return to the scale that once defined Anniversary Day. The crowds still come. The tugboats still put on a show. The classic fleet still shines. The organisers would like the keelboats back in that picture.

With cleaner divisions, a practical race length, a user-friendly start, and a social finish at Westhaven, the regatta offers plenty for owners and crews. If enough boats return to the line, the harbour will look the way it should on Auckland’s birthday.
Reviving traditions often starts with one good reason. This year’s changes might be the one that gets crews back out there.



















