Happy hour is dead. Long live the run club. Searches for run clubs surged 82% over the past year as Americans ditched cocktails for coordinated cardio. Chess clubs jumped 47%, book clubs rose 26%, and social clubs overall climbed 39%. The shift from bars to structured activities reveals something profound about loneliness, connection, and what people actually need from social experiences in 2025.
The Death of the Bar Scene
Bars and nightclubs are seeing declining interest as primary social venues. The traditional Friday night drinks with coworkers or weekend bar-hopping with friends feels increasingly hollow to many adults. The venues are loud, expensive, and designed around alcohol consumption rather than actual conversation or connection. You leave with a lighter wallet, a hangover, and maybe some blurry memories – but did you actually connect with anyone?
Run clubs offer something fundamentally different. You show up at a designated time and place, usually early morning or evening. The group runs together at various paces, with faster runners sometimes circling back to encourage slower ones. Afterward, many clubs gather for coffee or breakfast, creating organic social time where conversation flows naturally from shared experience.
The running itself serves as both icebreaker and equalizer. Everyone’s focused on the same activity, removing pressure to be witty or interesting in traditional social ways. You talk while moving, which many people find easier than sitting across from someone making intense eye contact. The physical challenge creates instant camaraderie – you’re literally all in this together.

Why Structured Beats Spontaneous
The explosion of clubs – running, chess, book, social – reveals that adults crave structure more than they crave freedom. Spontaneous socializing sounds appealing in theory but often results in decision paralysis and flaking. “We should hang out sometime” rarely manifests into actual plans. But “I’ll see you at run club Tuesday at 6:30am” creates accountability and consistency.
Structured activities also solve the friendship problem plaguing modern adults. After college or major life transitions, making new friends becomes incredibly difficult. Friendship requires repeated, unplanned interaction over time – exactly what adult life doesn’t naturally provide. You can’t befriend your coworkers the way you befriended college roommates because you’re not living together and your interactions remain bounded by professional norms.
Clubs create the repeated exposure needed for friendship to develop organically. You see the same people every week doing the same activity. Conversations build on previous ones. Inside jokes emerge. You learn about each other’s lives incrementally rather than through awkward “getting to know you” sessions. The activity provides built-in conversation material while the consistency creates actual relationships.
The Health Factor Doesn’t Hurt
Let’s be honest: choosing run club over happy hour also represents a choice toward health over hangovers. The wellness movement has thoroughly penetrated mainstream culture to the point where many people feel genuinely better about themselves spending mornings running than spending evenings drinking.
This isn’t about moral superiority or judgment of drinking culture. It’s practical recognition that alcohol-centered socializing comes with costs – financial, physical, and mental. Morning run clubs mean you show up to work feeling energized rather than hungover. You save money on expensive drinks and late-night food. You build fitness while building friendships rather than having to carve out separate time for both.
The shift also reflects changing attitudes about what constitutes “fun” or “social success.” Previous generations might have measured social vitality by how many nights they went out drinking. Current generations increasingly measure it by participation in communities, consistency with healthy habits, and quality of connections rather than quantity of social events.

Beyond Running
The run club phenomenon extends far beyond actual running. Chess clubs create intellectual competition and community. Book clubs combine reading with discussion and social time. Social clubs form around every conceivable interest – hiking, cycling, crafting, gaming, cooking, volunteering.
The common thread is structured, recurring, activity-based gathering that creates natural opportunities for connection. People don’t show up to “make friends” – they show up to do something they enjoy. Friendship becomes a byproduct rather than the stated goal, which paradoxically makes it more likely to actually happen.
These clubs also span demographics in ways bars often don’t. At run club, you might find yourself jogging next to someone twenty years older or younger, from completely different professional and social circles. The activity provides common ground that transcends the usual sorting mechanisms that keep adults in narrow social bubbles.
What This Means
The explosive growth in structured social activities signals a broader cultural reckoning with loneliness and the failure of digital connection to satisfy human social needs. People are desperate for IRL experiences, real conversations, and communities they belong to rather than just follow online.
Bars aren’t going anywhere, but they’re no longer the default social venue they once were. The future of socializing looks more like intentional community building around shared activities and values. It’s early mornings in running shoes, Tuesday night chess matches, monthly book club gatherings, and weekend group hikes.
It’s showing up consistently, participating genuinely, and building relationships through repeated exposure and shared experience. It’s recognizing that connection requires more than just proximity and alcohol – it requires intention, structure, and activities that bring out better versions of ourselves rather than just lubricated versions.
