Pace Calculator
Calculate your running or cycling pace.
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Pace Calculator
Everything you need to know
Comprehensive Guide to Running Pace
Pace is the primary metric used by runners to measure workout intensity and progress. It's expressed as time per unit of distance (typically minutes and seconds per mile or kilometer). Understanding pace allows runners to:
- Train at proper intensities for different adaptations
- Predict race times
- Track fitness improvements over time
- Compare performance across different distances
- Plan structured training programs
Unlike speed (measured in miles per hour), pace is more intuitive for runners because it directly answers the question: "How fast am I going?" in terms of when they'll cover a set distance.
How to Use the Pace Calculator
Our pace calculator helps runners convert between pace and speed, calculate split times, and find target paces:
Select Your Unit System
- Imperial (miles, minutes/mile)
- Metric (kilometers, minutes/kilometer)
Enter Your Pace or Speed
- Pace format: Minutes:Seconds (e.g., 7:45 = 7 minutes 45 seconds per mile)
- Speed format: mph or km/h
Calculate Conversions
- Automatic conversion between pace and speed
- Total time for any distance
Determine Training Paces
- Based on your current fitness level
- Different paces for different training zones
- Race prediction at various distances
Pace vs Speed Relationship
Converting Between Pace and Speed
Formula:
Speed (mph) = 60 ÷ Pace (minutes per mile)
Pace (min/mile) = 60 ÷ Speed (mph)
Metric equivalent:
Speed (km/h) = 60 ÷ Pace (minutes per km)
Pace (min/km) = 60 ÷ Speed (km/h)
Example Conversions
8:00 per mile pace:
- Speed = 60 ÷ 8 = 7.5 mph
6:30 per mile pace:
- Speed = 60 ÷ 6.5 = 9.2 mph
5:00 per km pace:
- Speed = 60 ÷ 5 = 12 km/h
Common Running Paces and Their Speed Equivalents
| Pace (per mile) | Speed (mph) | Effort Level |
|---|---|---|
| 12:00 | 5.0 | Jogging, very easy |
| 10:00 | 6.0 | Easy recovery |
| 9:00 | 6.7 | Comfortable aerobic |
| 8:00 | 7.5 | Moderate aerobic |
| 7:30 | 8.0 | Tempo/threshold |
| 7:00 | 8.6 | Fast/race effort |
| 6:30 | 9.2 | 5K race pace |
| 6:00 | 10.0 | Half-marathon to 10K effort |
| 5:30 | 10.9 | 5K race effort |
| 5:00 | 12.0 | Mile race effort |
Training Paces Based on Current Fitness
Runners should train at different paces to develop different energy systems. Using a recent race or time trial, calculate your training zones:
Easy/Recovery Pace
Formula: Race pace + 60-90 seconds per mile
Purpose: Build aerobic base, active recovery
Example:
- 5K race pace: 6:30/mile
- Easy pace: 7:30-8:00/mile
Tempo/Threshold Pace
Formula: Race pace + 20-30 seconds per mile
Purpose: Improve lactate threshold, sustainable speed
Example:
- 5K race pace: 6:30/mile
- Tempo pace: 6:50-7:00/mile
VO2 Max / Interval Pace
Formula: Race pace or slightly faster
Purpose: Increase aerobic power
Example:
- 5K race pace: 6:30/mile
- Interval pace: 6:00-6:30/mile
Long Run Pace
Formula: Easy pace or moderate (10-60 seconds slower than goal race pace)
Purpose: Build aerobic capacity and mental toughness
Example:
- Marathon goal: 7:30/mile pace
- Long run pace: 8:30-8:45/mile
Calculating Split Times
Marathon (26.2 miles) Split Times at Various Paces
| Pace | 5K | 10K | Half Marathon | Full Marathon |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8:00/mile | 24:50 | 49:40 | 1:45:37 | 3:31:14 |
| 7:30/mile | 23:20 | 46:40 | 1:38:50 | 3:17:30 |
| 7:00/mile | 21:50 | 43:40 | 1:32:02 | 3:03:46 |
| 6:30/mile | 20:20 | 40:40 | 1:25:15 | 2:50:01 |
| 6:00/mile | 18:50 | 37:40 | 1:18:27 | 2:36:17 |
Half Marathon (13.1 miles) Split Times at Various Paces
| Pace | 5K | 10K | Half Marathon |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8:00/mile | 24:50 | 49:40 | 1:44:52 |
| 7:00/mile | 21:50 | 43:40 | 1:32:02 |
| 6:30/mile | 20:20 | 40:40 | 1:25:15 |
| 6:00/mile | 18:50 | 37:40 | 1:18:27 |
5K (3.1 miles) Split Times at Various Paces
| Pace | 1 Mile | 2 Miles | 3 Miles | 5K |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8:00/mile | 8:00 | 16:00 | 24:00 | 24:50 |
| 7:30/mile | 7:30 | 15:00 | 22:30 | 23:20 |
| 7:00/mile | 7:00 | 14:00 | 21:00 | 21:50 |
| 6:30/mile | 6:30 | 13:00 | 19:30 | 20:20 |
| 6:00/mile | 6:00 | 12:00 | 18:00 | 18:50 |
Race Pace Predictor
Use one race result to predict performance at other distances using the VDOT concept:
Example: Estimating Marathon Pace from a 5K Time
If 5K time is 21:00 (6:45/mile pace):
- Conservative estimate: 8:15-8:30/mile marathon pace
- Optimistic estimate: 7:45-8:00/mile marathon pace
- Realistic estimate: 8:00-8:15/mile marathon pace
If 5K time is 18:00 (5:49/mile pace):
- Conservative estimate: 6:45-7:00/mile marathon pace
- Optimistic estimate: 6:15-6:30/mile marathon pace
- Realistic estimate: 6:30-6:45/mile marathon pace
Rule of thumb: Add approximately 1.5-2 minutes per mile from your 5K pace to estimate realistic marathon pace (assuming adequate training).
Practical Running Scenarios
Scenario 1: Beginner Building Base
Current fitness: Can run 2 miles at 10:30/mile pace
Training plan:
- Easy runs: 11:00-11:30/mile
- Long runs: 10:45-11:00/mile
- Short intervals: 10:00-10:15/mile
Goal: Build to 5 miles comfortably in 12 weeks
Scenario 2: Intermediate Runner Training for 5K
Recent 5K race: 6:45/mile pace (21:00 finish)
Training paces:
- Easy runs: 7:45-8:15/mile
- Tempo runs: 7:00-7:15/mile
- Interval repeats: 6:30-6:45/mile
- Long runs: 7:30-8:00/mile
Goal: Break 20:00 (6:27/mile) in 8 weeks
Scenario 3: Advanced Runner Training for Marathon
Recent half marathon: 1:28:30 (6:47/mile pace)
Training paces:
- Easy runs: 7:45-8:15/mile
- Tempo runs: 7:15-7:30/mile
- Marathon goal pace: 6:45-7:00/mile
- Long runs: 7:30-8:00/mile
Goal: Sub-3 hour marathon (6:52/mile) in 16 weeks
How Pace Changes With Fitness Level
| Fitness Level | 5K Pace | 10K Pace | Half Marathon | Marathon |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner | 10:30 | 10:45 | 10:00 | 10:15 |
| Intermediate | 8:00 | 8:15 | 7:30 | 8:00 |
| Advanced | 6:30 | 6:40 | 6:15 | 6:45 |
| Elite Amateur | 5:30 | 5:40 | 5:15 | 5:45 |
Note: Pace differences increase at longer distances due to endurance demands.
Factors Affecting Running Pace
Course Factors
- Flat vs hilly: Hills slow pace 30-60 seconds per mile
- Surface: Track fastest, then road, then trail (slowest)
- Temperature: Heat slows pace ~10 seconds per mile per 10°F
Individual Factors
- Fitness level: Primary determinant of pace capability
- Experience: Experienced runners pace more efficiently
- Body weight: Lighter runners typically maintain faster paces
- Age: Peak running performance typically 25-35 years old
Training Factors
- Mileage volume: Higher volume supports faster paces
- Speed work: Interval training improves pace significantly
- Recovery: Adequate sleep and nutrition support faster paces
- Cross-training: Strength training prevents injuries and supports pacing
Tips for Maintaining Target Pace
- Use a watch or GPS device: Provides real-time pace feedback
- Learn your perceived exertion: Understand what different paces feel like
- Run even effort, not even pace: Adjust for hills and conditions
- Start conservatively: Negative split (second half faster) than positive split
- Practice pacing: Pacing is a learnable skill that improves with practice
- Know your limits: Don't race every workout at goal pace
- Build mileage gradually: Increase weekly volume by 10% maximum
Frequently Asked Questions
What's a "good" running pace?
This depends on age, gender, and experience. A good pace is one where you're consistently improving your own times. Don't compare yourself to others.
How do I slow down my easy runs?
Easy runs should feel truly easy. If you find yourself speeding up, it often means you haven't recovered from harder training. Slow down more—easy runs build aerobic base just like faster runs.
Why can't I maintain race pace in training?
Training is about building fitness, not racing. Specific race paces are maintained when you're fresh and tapered. In regular training, you should do various intensities, not always race pace.
How do I convert my pace for different surfaces?
Road pace is baseline. Add 5-10 seconds per mile for treadmill, 15-30 seconds per mile for trail depending on terrain.
Should I train at one pace?
No. Effective training includes easy (60% of volume), moderate (20%), and hard (20%) paces. Mixing intensities produces better results than always running at one pace.