Remote functionalization through progressive olefin isomerization enables site-selective modification at a distal position, diversifying the synthetic approaches. However, the developed protocols have long relied on transition metal catalysis. Transition metal catalysts are deemed irreplaceable, albeit facing challenges in metal residue and catalyst poisoning. In this work, we present a pioneering approach that employs a borenium ion as a catalyst for site-selective, remote borylation, eliminating the need for metal catalysts. As the reaction progresses, borylation isomers at different positions emerge, gradually and ultimately converging into the predominant α-borylation product. This process is akin to a "walking" of a boron moiety along a carbon skeleton toward an aryl terminus. Detailed mechanistic studies and DFT calculations substantiate the borenium-catalyzed, stepwise migration via a reversible B–H insertion/elimination sequence. This remote borylation exhibits good functional group compatibility, complementing those methods reliant on transition metals. Furthermore, this metal-free protocol permits the convenient synthesis of silyl-remote-boryl compounds, demonstrating an opposite regioselectivity to that observed in transition-metal-catalyzed tandem silylation-borylation reactions. This discovery therefore contributes to site-selective, remote difunctionalization via sequential C–B and C–Si derivatizations, exemplified by the synthesis of amino-remote-alcohol bioactive molecules.