Ride London

The iconic Ford RideLondon-Essex 100 will return next year on Sunday 26 May 2024. The 100-mile challenge is one of the UK’s most famous cycle events and gives riders a unique opportunity to pedal on traffic-free roads through some of the most famous streets of London and the picturesque villages and countryside of neighbouring Essex.


Want to join thousands of others on an epic journey that takes in both the buzz of central London and the beauty of rural Essex? You’ll also be raising money for people whose lives are put on pause because of pain and isolation caused by migraine. Every mile you cycle and every penny you raise will support anyone living with debilitating migraine.

The Route

The Ford-RideLondon-Essex 100 route will set off from Victoria Embankment in central London, head past the Olympic Park and through the London boroughs of Westminster, City of London, Tower Hamlets, Newham, Hackney, Waltham Forest and Redbridge before coursing into Essex via Epping Forest.

Riders will then glide through some of the county’s most picturesque towns, villages and countryside – including Epping, Ongar, Great Dunmow, Felsted and Writtle – with a section of the route replicating the 2014 Tour de France stage that went through Essex and finished in London.

To take part you just need to pay a £25 registration fee and pledge to raise £350 for people living with debilitating migraine. To guarantee your place, we ask that you raise £250 two months before the event. 

Already got your place for Ride London? Then we'd love to have you on #TeamMigraine. Simply chose the own place option to let us know. 

Own Place Registration


The Migraine Trust is dedicated to helping people affected by migraine. We are the only UK migraine charity providing information and support, campaigning for awareness and change, and funding and promoting research.

One in seven people in the UK live with migraine, and this complex and debilitating neurological disorder significantly affects their lives. We have been leading and bringing the migraine community together to change this since 1965.

Every year over two million people visit our website and thousands contact our helplines for information and support on all aspects of migraine and for help in managing it at work, in education, and in accessing healthcare.

We campaign for increased awareness and understanding of migraine, and national policy change to improve the lives of people who get it.