There's a wife-carrying championship that takes place in Finland every year where the winner receives his wife's weight in beer.
Finland's Wife-Carrying Race: Win Her Weight in Beer
Every July in the small Finnish town of Sonkajärvi, couples gather for what might be the world's most unusual sporting event: a race where men carry women through obstacle courses for a prize measured in liters, not trophies. The Wife-Carrying World Championship, known locally as Eukonkanto, has been crowning champions since 1992, and yes, the winner really does receive his partner's weight in beer.
The competition is exactly what it sounds like, but more demanding than you'd expect. Contestants must navigate a 253.5-meter course featuring two dry obstacles and a water pit about one meter deep, all while carrying another human being. The water obstacle alone has ended countless championship dreams, turning confident carriers into flailing, drenched competitors.
Three Legal Ways to Haul a Human
Competitors can choose from three approved carrying techniques. The classic piggyback is straightforward but exhausting. The fireman's carry distributes weight over the shoulder. But the method favored by champions? The Estonian-style carry, where the "wife" hangs upside-down on the carrier's back, legs over his shoulders. It looks absurd, but physics doesn't care about dignity.
The rules are refreshingly simple with just a few requirements:
- The carried partner must weigh at least 49kg (108 lbs) or wear a weighted backpack to reach the minimum
- She must be over 17 years old
- She doesn't actually have to be your wife—neighbors, friends, and "found further afield" partners are all acceptable
- If you drop your partner, you face a 15-second penalty
Why Beer? Why Finland?
The prize calculation is wonderfully literal. After winning, the carried partner sits on one end of a giant teeter-totter while beer is stacked on the other end until perfect balance is achieved. A 60kg woman translates to roughly 60 liters of beer—about 200 bottles. Winners also receive merchandise, a trophy, and international bragging rights that money can't buy.
The event's origins trace back to tales of Herkko Rosvo-Ronkainen, a 19th-century Finnish forest robber who allegedly trained his gang by making them carry heavy sacks—or possibly stolen women—through the woods. Whether this backstory is historical fact or elaborate justification for a drinking game elevated to sport status remains charmingly unclear.
A Global Phenomenon
What started as a quirky Finnish tradition has spawned competitions worldwide. North America hosts multiple championships, including events in Maine and Wisconsin. Australia, Hong Kong, India, Germany, and the UK have all embraced the sport, complete with official rules recognized by Guinness World Records.
Lithuania's Vytautas Kirkliauskas dominated recent years with three championship wins (2018, 2019, 2024). But in 2025, Wisconsin's Caleb and Justine Roesler made history as the first American couple to win the World Championship, setting a course record in the process. Justine went home with her weight in Finnish beer, proving that sometimes the most ridiculous competitions produce the most memorable victories.
In a world of increasingly serious athletic competitions, Finland's wife-carrying championship remains gloriously committed to its absurd premise: run fast, don't drop your partner, win beer. It's the kind of tradition that makes you wonder what other brilliant ideas have emerged from long Finnish winters.

