
Guinness World Records isn’t just a glossy book of human extremes; it is also a safety and ethics rulebook.
Over the years, the organisation has learned that some record ideas, no matter how attention-grabbing, carry too much risk, encourage unhealthy copycats, or are simply too hard to judge fairly.
Those categories are refused or “retired.” Understanding where the lines are and what you can attempt instead will save you time and keep everyone safe.
The three big tests: safety, copycats, fairness
Guinness turns down proposals for three main reasons. First, an attempt might endanger participants, spectators, animals, or the environment.
Second, the category could promote behaviour that is harmful or irresponsible if copied, especially by young people. Third, the feat may be too vague or subjective to verify with the same standard in every country.
When a proposal fails on any of those counts, it is rejected or redesigned into a safer “skills” format.
Food and drink stunts: from excess to skill
Food and drink challenges are a prime example. Records that reward bingeing, how much you can swallow or how quickly you can consume alcohol, are not accepted because they normalise risky behaviour.
That does not mean all food records are gone. Where safety can be controlled, Guinness may recognise tightly defined speed-eating challenges using small quantities, set time limits, medical oversight, and clear rules.
The point is to measure precision and technique, not excess.
Medical or body-modification ideas: keep it non-invasive
Medical counts and body-modification records are treated with similar caution. Tallies for invasive procedures or any attempt that requires devices inside the body beyond reasonable comfort are off the table.
Instead of counting stitches or surgeries, organisers are encouraged to rethink the concept as a public-health effort, for example, a supervised screening event where qualified professionals perform standard tests under strict protocols.
This keeps the spirit of “most completed” without crossing a safety line.
Extreme endurance: celebrate dedication, not danger
Some of the most dramatic endurance stunts—being buried alive, prolonged fasting, or anything that deprives the body of sleep and oxygen—have been ruled out after well-documented health incidents.
In place of these, Guinness looks for adjacent ideas that honour service and skill rather than flirt with danger.
A caretaker’s decades of work, a researcher’s lifetime contribution to nutrition, or a documented career total in a safe, measurable task all recognise dedication without putting lives at risk.
Romance and dance: rest breaks make it safe
Even seemingly harmless romance or dance challenges have needed rethinking. The once-popular “longest continuous kiss” was deactivated because attempts pushed people into sleep deprivation and other health issues.
Non-stop dance marathons raise similar concerns. Where there is genuine cultural interest, the categories can return in safer forms, with mandatory rest periods, hydration rules, minimum ages, and trained medics on site.
The focus shifts from punishing endurance to choreography, coordination, or fundraising impact.
Animal welfare: a hard red line
Animal welfare is non-negotiable. Records that cause stress or encourage mistreatment, such as those that once incentivised overfeeding or forced performance, are refused.
What does pass scrutiny are demonstrations of positive training and natural ability: a dog navigating an agility course to a published standard, or a trained animal performing a trick assessed for accuracy rather than duration.
Every such attempt must meet welfare checks and be overseen by qualified handlers.
Music feats: skill over oxygen risk
Music has its own grey areas. For instance, attempts to sustain a single saxophone note using circular breathing have been discouraged because of safety and verification concerns.
Guinness prefers musical feats that emphasise measurable skill, such as verified speed or accuracy at a set tempo, rather than tests that risk oxygen deprivation or blurred judging.
Other limits: minors, harmful products, the environment
There are further limits that reflect social responsibility. Many categories involving minors are restricted or require extra safeguards, because children may try to copy risky behaviour they see online.
Records that effectively promote tobacco or cannabis are generally refused, as are spectacles that harm the environment, such as mass balloon releases.
As public understanding changes, Guinness updates its policies, “resting” older titles and introducing new ones that are safer to attempt and easier to verify.
How to design a record that gets approved
If you are serious about setting a record, begin by designing your idea around safety. Ask whether a stranger might copy your attempt without trained support and get hurt. If the honest answer is yes, change the idea.
Next, look for the skill at the heart of your concept. Replace “how much” and “how long without rest” with “how precisely,” “how accurately,” or “how fast under strict rules.”
The best record categories are narrow, measurable, and repeatable anywhere in the world.
How to run a clean, recognisable attempt
Preparation matters as much as the idea. Read the current guidelines for your target category and follow them closely.
Plan your evidence trail before the attempt: independent witnesses, calibrated measuring tools, continuous video, official timekeeping, and any required medical or welfare oversight.
Choose a venue that allows safe crowd management and emergency access, and brief your team so everyone knows the protocol if something goes wrong. A clean, well-documented attempt is easier to recognise and safer to run.

