Oktoberfest Zinzinnati

Oktoberfest Zinzinnati is an annual German-heritage festival in the city of Cincinnati, Ohio. Based on the original Munich Oktoberfest, it is billed as the largest Oktoberfest celebration in the United States and second largest in the world. First held in 1976, as of 2023 it hosted over 700,000 attendees each year. It is held along six blocks of Downtown Cincinnati.

Location and length
The festival for years was held on 5th Street. In 2016 the festival moved to 3rd Street to clear room for Cincinnati Streetcar construction. In 2021 it expanded to four days and in 2023 returned to 5th Street.

Events
Oktoberfest Zinzinnati claimed the world record for the largest Chicken Dance in 1994, with over 48,000 participants.

The festival includes the World Brat Eating Championship and also the Running of the Wieners, in which dachshunds and dachshund mixes ("wiener dogs") race in 75-foot heats, wearing hot dog costumes.

COVID-19
In 2020, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, concerts were virtual instead of live. In both 2020 and 2021, Oktoberfest Zinzinnati was recognized as the world's largest Oktoberfest because Munich's Oktoberfest was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic two years in a row.

Other Greater Cincinnati Oktoberfests
Cincinnati has a large percentage of the population with some German ancestry, and there are multiple Oktoberfests held in and around the downtown area as well as outlying suburbs.

Cincinnati's Germania Society has held an Oktoberfest since 1971. The Donauschwaben Society also holds an Oktoberfest.

Covington, Kentucky, directly across the Ohio River from downtown Cincinnati and considered part of Greater Cincinnati, has since 1979 held an Oktoberfest in its Mainstrasse Village. Newport, Kentucky, also directly across the river from Cincinnati, holds an annual Oktoberfest.