International Poetry Competition 2025

Remembering

Enter for the chance to win $100!

Welcome to our first international poetry competition of 2025! We’re looking for all kinds of poetry on the theme of Remembering. As always, we encourage you to bend the rules with both content and form.

Deadline for entry: June 30th 2025

  1. There will be one prize winner. The winning poet will receive a prize of $100 (USD), plus publication of their poem as a standalone piece on Free the Verse. Payment will be made via PayPal.

  2. The entry fee is $3.49, and you may submit 1 poem per entry. Multiple entries are permitted. All fees are used to cover our operating costs.

  3. All entries must be original work that is owned by the entrant. We accept poems which have previously been published, and simultaneous submissions are permitted. We do not accept poems previously published in our magazine, Free the Verse.

  4. The winning poet will be notified by email within 2 months of the competition closing.

  5. You will retain the copyright to your work. By entering the competition, you grant Free the Verse the right to publish your poem and name on our website and in any associated marketing materials.

  6. This is an international competition – however, at this time, we only accept poems written in English. You are welcome to include words and phrases from other languages.

  7. You must be over 18 years old to submit.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Poetry Competition Winners

After Rain – Madison Bertenshaw

I taste currents. Creosote, mud, agave, caliche, spines, javelina shit. You stab me like a cactus collecting the desert. Your body makes my home shiver.

I fell in love with your white heart, a dove stamped on your chest. I’ve never loved a man.

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Anton in Summer – Natalie Susak

In class I learn the word for summer: ljeto.
This summer: ljetos.
This summer figs fall from trees
at the beach where we swim with your cousins.

Anton is wrestling the Hungarian vizsla
unleashed in clear waters.

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Aunty Nor – Farrah Lucia Jamaluddin

“If you are not a little bad from time to time
how can you learn to be a little good?”
my aunt would tell me as I soaked her
robe with my tears. I can’t remember what
I had done, but the guilt was heartbreaking.

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A Wake – Keri Withington

I took the lake road home from the neurologist’s office.
It’s pretty
and I can’t
deal with traffic
right now.

Read More