Exploring Puyallup on Foot: Hidden Gems, Local Businesses, and the People Who Make This City Run

By All Things Fun Sports  |  May 12, 2026  |  5 min read

There’s a version of Puyallup most people only see through a windshield — the strip malls on Meridian, the Fair traffic in September, the drive-through coffee stands on every corner. And then there’s the Puyallup you discover the moment you lace up and start moving. 

On foot, this city opens up. The Riverwalk Trail winds quietly along the water while downtown still sleeps. The neighborhoods tucked behind the main drag reveal murals, gardens, and front porches where people wave. The local breweries, ice cream shops, and wine bars that anchor community life appear around corners you never knew to turn.

If you’ve been running in Puyallup or thinking about trying it, this is your guide — not to the fastest routes or the most competitive courses, but to the people, places, and pit stops that make running here feel like something worth doing again tomorrow.

Start Here: The Routes That Show You Puyallup

The Puyallup Riverwalk Trail

The Riverwalk is where most Puyallup runners start — and for good reason. This five-mile paved trail hugs the Puyallup River from downtown out toward East Main, flat and beginner-friendly with river views the whole way. Morning runs here are peaceful in a way that’s hard to find in a city this size. You’ll share the path with dog walkers, stroller-pushing parents, and the occasional great blue heron standing completely unbothered in the shallows.

It’s also the backbone of several ATFS events, including the Puyallup Valley Half Marathon every September — one of the flattest, fastest half-marathon courses in the South Sound.

Bradley Lake Park

For speed work, social runs, or your first Couch-to-5K loop, Bradley Lake Park’s one-mile circuit is a Puyallup institution. Well-lit, centrally located, and always welcoming — it’s the kind of place where you’ll recognize faces after a few visits. ATFS uses it as a race venue too, most notably for the Christmas Eve Ugly Sweater 5K every December — now in its eighth year.

Clark’s Creek Park

When you’re ready to leave the pavement behind, Clark’s Creek Park delivers everything the Pacific Northwest promised you. Wooded trails, rolling hills, soft dirt paths, and technical sections that will make your legs stronger and your mind quieter. Trail shoes are a must, especially from October through April. This is where Puyallup runners come when they need to remember why they started.

For a full breakdown of every route in and around Puyallup — distances, terrain, and difficulty — check out our Best Running Trails in Puyallup guide.

The Best Part of Any Run: Where You End Up After

Ask any Puyallup runner what keeps them coming back and you’ll hear the same answer: the people and the places. The post-run culture here is as strong as the training culture, and the local businesses that show up for this community deserve their moment.

Firemind Brewing — 211 W Stewart Ave

Firemind is the unofficial finish line for the ATFS monthly Pub Run, and for good reason. This downtown craft brewery is the kind of place that feels like it was built for communities like ours — loud in the best way, welcoming to every pace and every kind of runner. Their motto is “every mind burns for something,” and on Pub Run nights, what’s burning is a healthy love of cold beer and company. Join us on the last Wednesday of every month at 6pm — no registration, no pressure.

Lick Homemade Ice Cream — 105 2nd St SW

You’ve earned it. Lick is a downtown Puyallup staple — handcrafted flavors made with care, the kind of shop that locals point to when someone asks what makes this city special. Post-run ice cream is not a guilty pleasure. It’s a carbohydrate recovery strategy. Science. We stand by this.

The Lazy Ballerina Wine Bar — 319 S Meridian

A speakeasy-style wine bar with 1920s Jazz Age energy, self-serve wine machines, and a charcuterie board that pairs surprisingly well with race-day legs. If you’ve run the Mimosa Run 5K in August, you already know the Lazy Ballerina — it’s where we end up every year. But you don’t need a race bib to visit. Just a Sunday afternoon and a healthy attitude toward recovery.

FLACO Mexican Food Truck

FLACO shows up at ATFS events the way the best guests show up to a party — exactly when you need them and never empty-handed. If there’s a taco waiting for you at the finish line of a Pub Run, that is motivation. Full stop.

Put It All Together: The Explore Puyallup Scavenger 12K

On May 31, 2026, we’re turning everything above into an event.

The Explore Puyallup Scavenger 12K sends runners — solo or in teams of up to four — through the city on a course built around riddles, clues, and hidden gems. You’ll see parts of Puyallup you’ve never noticed, run past landmarks that have stories you’ve never heard, and finish with the particular satisfaction of having actually explored rather than just covered ground.

EVENT DETAILS

•         Date: Saturday, May 31, 2026

•         Distance: 12K scavenger course through Puyallup

•         Format: Solo or teams of up to 4 runners

•         Capacity: 150 participants — limited spots!

•         Start time: 9:00am

There are only 150 spots. If you’ve been wanting to see Puyallup differently — this is how you do it.

REGISTER FOR THE EXPLORE PUYALLUP SCAVENGER 12K

May 31, 2026  |  Only 150 Spots  |  allthingsfunsports.com/events

Why Puyallup Is a Hidden Gem for Runners

There’s a certain kind of running city that gets all the attention — Seattle, Portland, Bellingham. And then there’s Puyallup, which quietly has everything those cities have and fewer people crowding the trails.

Here’s what makes it work:

  • Access: You’re 25 minutes from Point Defiance in Tacoma, an hour from Mount Rainier, and surrounded by trail systems in every direction. You never have to go far for a great run.
  • Community: The Puyallup running community punches above its weight. Monthly pub runs, annual themed races, and a culture where walkers are as welcome as marathoners.
  • Scale: Routes aren’t overcrowded. Trails feel personal. Local businesses know your name. That’s rare, and it’s worth protecting.
  • Variety: Flat river path one day, wooded trail climbs the next. Road racing and trail racing are both accessible from the same zip code.

The City Looks Different at 6-Minute Miles

Or 12-minute miles. Or a comfortable walk. The pace doesn’t matter. What matters is that you’re moving through a city with more to offer than most people realize — and that the community built around that movement is something genuinely worth being part of.

If you’re local, come to a Pub Run. Try a race. Explore a route you’ve been meaning to check out. If you’re visiting, you might be surprised what you find.

And if you want to see all of it in one day — riddles, trails, and finish-line smiles included — register for the Explore Puyallup Scavenger 12K on May 31. Only 150 spots. The city is waiting.

All Things Fun Sports  —  Putting the Fun in Run!

Puyallup, WA  |  allthingsfunsports.com  |  Facebook & Instagram: @allthingsfunsports

Runners and walkers always welcome. All paces. All abilities. All of Puyallup.