Nationals are the dream. For high school track and field athletes, New Balance Nationals Indoor—held March 12–15, 2026 at The TRACK at New Balance in Boston—is one of the biggest stages of the year. But travel, fees, and pressure fall unevenly on families and programs. The meet is both a showcase and a stress test for inequality in youth sports, and New Balance’s sponsorship is more than goodwill: it is brand presence at the moment when the gap between who can afford to show up and who cannot becomes visible.
The Meet That Makes and Breaks High School Athletes
The 2026 New Balance Nationals Indoor took place at 91 Guest Street in Boston, with a 200-metre hydraulically banked indoor track, a 24,000-plus square foot warm-up area, and space for up to 5,000 spectators. Sporting News and other outlets provided live updates and results as athletes competed for national All-America honours across running events, relays, and field events. The same week, CITIUS Mag and others reminded readers that there is no single high school national championship: when New Balance and Nike parted ways after the pandemic, they created competing national meets. East Coast athletes tend to go to New Balance in Boston; West Coast athletes often go to Nike Indoor Nationals. Athletes can call themselves national champions without ever facing each other. The meets are marketing activations as much as championships—brand loyalty and shoe sales sit underneath the podium.
Who pays to get there? Family spending on youth sports has risen sharply. According to the Project Play survey, the average U.S. family spent $1,016 on a child’s primary sport in 2024, a 46 percent increase since 2019—twice the rate of overall inflation. With secondary sports included, families spend nearly $1,500 per child per year. Travel sports add registration fees (hundreds to thousands of dollars), equipment, travel, lodging, and meals. The Sports Economist and others report that parents have taken out loans, picked up second jobs, and gone into debt to fund youth athletics. At the elite level, Reuters reported that at the 2023 U.S. Track and Field Championships in Eugene, unsponsored athletes faced airfares of $1,200 or more and total costs of over $3,200 per person; many argued that anyone who had the standard should be able to come without going into debt. High school nationals are not the same as senior championships, but the pattern is the same: travel and fees sort who can compete and who cannot.
New Balance’s role is double-edged. The company sponsors the meet and the venue; it also invests in grassroots access. In 2025 it extended its partnership with New York Road Runners, including free shoes for over 400 students and a commitment to refurbish local tracks starting in 2026. In March 2026 Wilson High School in Long Beach announced a three-year New Balance partnership worth approximately $300,000, including uniforms and an annual allotment of 250 pairs of shoes and 250 pairs of spikes. So New Balance puts money into programs and into the marquee meet. The meet itself, though, still rewards the families and schools that can afford Boston—flights, hotels, entry fees, and time off. The sponsorship is more than goodwill because it ties the brand to the pinnacle of the high school season while the economics of that pinnacle leave many athletes and programs behind.
What This Actually Means
The evidence adds up to a familiar story: nationals are a showcase and a stress test. They reward talent and also wealth and geography. New Balance’s sponsorship builds goodwill and visibility, but it does not by itself fix the inequality built into travel, fees, and the split between competing national meets. The real story is not whether the meet is legitimate—it is—but who gets to be in the room. Until travel and cost barriers come down, the meet will keep making and breaking athletes in ways that have as much to do with family budgets as with the stopwatch.
What Is New Balance Nationals Indoor?
New Balance Nationals Indoor (NBNI) is one of two major American high school national championship indoor track and field meets. It is held annually in Boston—historically at the Reggie Lewis Center and more recently at The TRACK at New Balance. The 2026 edition ran March 12–15. Athletes compete for national All-America honours in running, relay, and field events. The meet was formerly known as the National Scholastic Indoor Championships; New Balance took over naming and sponsorship. There is no single unified high school national championship; Nike and New Balance run separate indoor and outdoor nationals, so “national champion” depends on which meet an athlete attends.
Why Do Travel and Fees Create Inequality at Nationals?
Getting to Boston (or to Nike’s venue) requires entry fees, flights or long drives, hotels, and meals. Many state and local bodies do not reimburse travel for individual or cross-country-style sports. The Project Play survey found that 56 percent of parents worry they cannot afford to put their children in sports next year, and 75 percent have considered pulling their children out, with cost a leading factor. Wealthier families spend far more per child than lower-income families, so the pool of athletes who can afford nationals is skewed. The meet is open to those who qualify and can pay; the “can pay” part is the stress test for inequality.
Sources
RunnerSpace, Sporting News, New Balance Nationals, Project Play, CITIUS Mag, The562, Reuters