Harry Styles Goes Shirtless for Runner’s World and Gets Brutally Honest About Feeling Like He’s “Not Adding to the World”

Harry Styles for Runners World
Photo by Laura Jane Coulson/Runner's World

NEED TO KNOW

  • Harry Styles appears shirtless on the Spring 2026 cover of Runner’s World, revealing his marathon-trained physique and a surprising new passion for long-distance running.
  • In a candid interview with author Haruki Murakami, Styles opened up about his insecurities around fame, feeling existentially uncertain about his contributions to the world.
  • The feature coincides with Styles’ comeback era, with his fourth studio album Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. dropping March 6.

Leave it to Harry Styles to make a cover comeback in cheetah-print shorts and absolutely nothing else on top. The 32-year-old singer appears shirtless on the Spring 2026 cover of Runner’s World, showing off his toned abs and tattoos while stretching on a sunny street, wearing cheetah-print shorts and Oakley sunglasses. It’s the kind of effortless, why-is-he-like-this energy that has defined his public persona since roughly 2017. The difference now? He actually earned those abs by running marathons.

For the accompanying interview, Styles sat down with acclaimed author Haruki Murakami, whose book What I Talk About When I Talk About Running inspired him to start training for marathons. It’s a deeply specific, deeply Harry choice of conversation partner — and somehow, it works perfectly.

Harry Styles for Runners World
Photo by Laura Jane Coulson/Runner’s World

But beyond the abs and the artful photo shoot, the interview delivered something fans hadn’t gotten in a while: a genuinely vulnerable Harry Styles.

Styles shared some real struggles he’s had with his career over the years, including questioning whether his impact in the music industry is actually meaningful. “Something I’ve often struggled with, in the middle of a tour, is feeling like I’m not sure what I’m giving, not sure what I’m adding to the world,” he told Runner’s World. “Especially when the reward system and the kind of adulation that you can receive feels so loud.”

He didn’t stop there. “I’m getting all this energy. People are giving me so much, which I deeply appreciate. But what am I contributing? At times, I felt quite existential about that.”

Harry Styles for Runners World
Photo by Laura Jane Coulson/Runner’s World

For a man who sold out arenas across six continents on his Love On Tour, those insecurities land with a surprising thud. Yet there’s something almost refreshing about a pop star of his magnitude admitting that the applause doesn’t automatically silence the doubt.

After performing 173 shows in 2023, Styles chose to take time off to travel, spend time with friends, and experience life as part of an audience rather than as the performer. The three-year silence that followed wasn’t creative stagnation — it was, apparently, a very active recalibration. He traveled, attended Glastonbury, spent time in Berlin’s club scene, and visited Rome to see a new Pope announced. As one does.

Harry Styles for Runners World
Photo by Laura Jane Coulson/Runner’s World

It was also during this period that running became something more than exercise. “Because in some of those new experiences, there’s just so much stimulation, right? So many people, and it’s just so loud. So then running also became my processing place for all of that. Really being by myself. When you’re training for a marathon, which is the loneliest part, you just kind of set out for a run, and three hours later you come back,” he said.

Styles told Murakami, “It freed me from the idea that music had to be an unhealthy profession and I had to be this tortured soul. Your point is that being healthy makes you able to be an artist for a long time, that you can be a structured, healthy person and make great work.” Murakami is 77, for context. The torch has been passed.

Harry Styles for Runners World
Photo by Laura Jane Coulson/Runner’s World

His time in Berlin — where he ran a three-hour marathon in September — also fed directly into his new music. “Good electronic music is so good, you know — especially the melodic aspect. When you’re out at night, it’s such a community, but you’re also watching people have such individual experiences,” he said. That energy, he explained, became the heartbeat of his forthcoming fourth album.

Styles said he wanted the album to capture the feeling of being immersed in music: “I wanted to recreate [what] I had on the dance floor, being lost in instrumentation and the musicality… I wanted it to feel like, ‘Oh, we’re in this music together. Like I’m in it with you.'”

He’s also notably redirecting the spotlight when it comes to credit. “It isn’t down to me. I can’t sell out a venue, only they can do that,” he said. “And there’s a producer that I work with who makes me great, and everyone who works on my team. Everything that I’ve been rewarded for takes a lot of people.”

Harry Styles for Runners World
Photo by Laura Jane Coulson/Runner’s World

He also opened up about how fame had quietly made him close himself off over the years. “Over the years, I had to say no to everything I was invited to, whether it was a friend’s birthday, a trip somewhere amazing, an opening,” he recalled. “I started to wonder if I was saying no because I really was so busy or because it was more comfortable than saying yes.”

Running, it turns out, gave him a way back to himself — and to the world. “Well, the main thing is that you’re always moving,” he said of running’s appeal. Whether that’s a metaphor for his career revival or just a solid training philosophy, we’ll let you decide.

Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. drops March 6, and Styles will take the album on the road with his Together, Together tour this spring and summer. The shirtless era has officially begun. The existential crisis is still very much present, but apparently, you can run through that, too.

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