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Pace Calculator

Running Pace Calculator

Calculate pace, finish time, or distance for any run. Get split times for 5K, 10K, half marathon, and marathon. Pace equivalency charts included.

Pace, Time & Distance

Solve for any variable

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Your Pace
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Enter your data to calculate
Pace
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Speed
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Total Time
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Distance
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Pace Equivalency
Race Finish Times at This Pace
RaceDistanceFinish Time
Running Science

Pacing Strategy Guide

The difference between a great race and blowing up often comes down to pacing.

Even vs. Negative Splits

The most reliable race strategy is even pacing -- running each mile at roughly the same speed. Slightly negative splits (running the second half faster) often produce personal bests because you avoid early fatigue.

The "too fast" trap: Going out 10-15 seconds per mile faster than your target pace can cost you 30+ seconds per mile in the final third of a race. Disciplined early pacing pays dividends late.

Common Target Paces

  • Elite marathon: ~4:35-5:00 min/mile (2:01-2:10)
  • Sub-3 marathon: 6:52 min/mile or faster
  • Sub-4 marathon: 9:09 min/mile or faster
  • Sub-2 half marathon: 9:09 min/mile
  • Sub-25 5K: 8:03 min/mile
  • Beginner 5K: 10-13 min/mile

Pace vs. Speed

Pace is the time it takes to cover a unit of distance (e.g., 8:30 per mile). Speed is the distance covered per unit of time (e.g., 7.1 mph). Runners typically think in pace; cyclists in speed.

To convert: Speed (mph) = 60 / pace (min/mile). For example, a 10:00 min/mile pace = 6.0 mph.

How to Use This Pace Calculator

This calculator solves the fundamental pace equation three ways: given any two of pace, distance, and time, it calculates the third. Use it for training runs, race planning, or comparing your performance across different distances.

Planning Your Race

Enter your goal race distance and target pace to see your projected finish time. Then check the split table to see what that pace looks like across standard race distances. This helps you set realistic goals -- if your 5K pace predicts a 4:30 marathon, that tells you something about the effort required.

Training Runs

Use the "Solve for Pace" mode after a training run to calculate your average pace. Enter the distance you ran and total time elapsed. Compare this to your target race pace to gauge fitness. Easy runs should typically be 1-2 minutes per mile slower than your race pace.