Pace is the amount of time it takes you to cover one unit of distance. It is expressed as time per distance — for example, 6 minutes per mile (6:00/mi) or 5 minutes per kilometer (5:00/km). Pace is the preferred measurement for runners, hikers, cyclists, and swimmers because it directly maps to lap splits and finish-time planning.
Unlike speed, which tells you how far you travel in a unit of time (e.g., 10 km/h), pace tells you how long each unit of distance takes. A lower pace value means you are moving faster; a lower speed value means you are moving slower.
Concept | Definition | Formula | Unit Example |
Pace | Time per unit distance | Pace = Time ÷ Distance | min/km or min/mile |
Speed | Distance per unit time | Speed = Distance ÷ Time | km/h or mph |
Time | Total duration of activity | Time = Pace × Distance | hours, minutes, seconds |
Distance | Total distance covered | Distance = Speed × Time | km, miles, meters |
▌ Core Formulas & Symbols
Symbol Reference Table
Symbol | Variable | Unit | Description |
P | Pace | min/km or min/mile | Time required to cover one unit of distance |
T | Time | h : mm : ss | Total elapsed time of the run or activity |
D | Distance | km, miles, m | Total distance covered during the activity |
S | Speed | km/h or mph | Average speed (distance per unit time) |
MHR | Max Heart Rate | bpm (beats/min) | Maximum heart rate, used for training zones |
HR | Heart Rate | bpm | Current or average heart rate during exercise |
VO₂max | Aerobic Capacity | mL/kg/min | Maximum oxygen uptake — key fitness marker |
LAT | Lactate Threshold | % of VO₂max | The threshold where lactate starts to accumulate |
RPE | Rate of Perceived Exertion | Scale 1–10 | Subjective intensity measure during exercise |
The Three Core Pace Equations
Formula 1 — Calculate Pace |
P = T ÷ D |
Where: P = Pace (min/km or min/mi) |
T = Total Time (in minutes) |
D = Distance (km or miles) |
Formula 2 — Calculate Total Time |
T = P × D |
Where: T = Total Time (in minutes) |
P = Pace (min/km or min/mi) |
D = Distance (km or miles) |
Formula 3 — Calculate Distance |
D = T ÷ P |
Where: D = Distance (km or miles) |
T = Total Time (in minutes) |
P = Pace (min/km or min/mi) |
Formula 4 — Pace ↔ Speed Conversion |
Speed (km/h) = 60 ÷ Pace (min/km) |
Pace (min/km) = 60 ÷ Speed (km/h) |
Speed (mph) = 60 ÷ Pace (min/mile) |
Pace (min/mi) = 60 ÷ Speed (mph) |
▌ Worked Examples
Example 1 — Find Your Average Pace
✎ Ahmed runs 10 km in 52 minutes. What is his pace? |
Step 1: Identify values: T = 52 min, D = 10 km |
Step 2: Apply formula: P = T ÷ D |
Step 3: Calculate: P = 52 ÷ 10 = 5.2 min/km |
Step 4: Convert decimal: 0.2 × 60 = 12 seconds |
✔ Result: Ahmed’s pace is 5 minutes 12 seconds per kilometer (5:12/km) |
Example 2 — Find Finish Time for a Marathon
✎ Sara wants to run a marathon (42.195 km) at a pace of 5:30/km. How long will it take? |
Step 1: Convert pace: 5:30 = 5.5 min/km |
Step 2: Apply formula: T = P × D |
Step 3: Calculate: T = 5.5 × 42.195 = 232.07 minutes |
Step 4: Convert: 232.07 ÷ 60 = 3 hours 52 minutes 4 seconds |
✔ Result: Sara will finish the marathon in approximately 3 hours 52 minutes (3:52:04) |
Example 3 — Find Distance Covered
✎ Bilal runs at a pace of 6:00/km for 45 minutes. How far does he go? |
Step 1: Identify values: P = 6 min/km, T = 45 min |
Step 2: Apply formula: D = T ÷ P |
Step 3: Calculate: D = 45 ÷ 6 = 7.5 km |
✔ Result: Bilal covers 7.5 kilometers in 45 minutes at a 6:00/km pace |
Example 4 — Pace to Speed Conversion
✎ A runner maintains a pace of 4:30 per km. What is their speed in km/h? |
Step 1: Convert pace to decimal: 4:30 = 4.5 min/km |
Step 2: Apply formula: Speed = 60 ÷ Pace |
Step 3: Calculate: Speed = 60 ÷ 4.5 = 13.33 km/h |
✔ Result: A 4:30/km pace is equivalent to 13.33 km/h |
▌ Race Pace Reference Table
Use the table below to quickly determine your finish time across common race distances at different paces. All times are shown in hours:minutes:seconds format.
Pace | 5K (5.0 km) | 10K (10 km) | Half Marathon (21.1 km) | Marathon (42.2 km) |
4:00 /km | 0:20:00 | 0:40:00 | 1:24:24 | 2:48:48 |
4:30 /km | 0:22:30 | 0:45:00 | 1:34:57 | 3:09:54 |
5:00 /km | 0:25:00 | 0:50:00 | 1:45:30 | 3:31:00 |
5:30 /km | 0:27:30 | 0:55:00 | 1:56:03 | 3:52:06 |
6:00 /km | 0:30:00 | 1:00:00 | 2:06:36 | 4:13:12 |
6:30 /km | 0:32:30 | 1:05:00 | 2:17:09 | 4:34:18 |
7:00 /km | 0:35:00 | 1:10:00 | 2:27:42 | 4:55:24 |
8:00 /km | 0:40:00 | 1:20:00 | 2:48:48 | 5:37:36 |
10:00 /km | 0:50:00 | 1:40:00 | 3:31:00 | 7:02:00 |
💡 Tip: For miles: multiply km pace by 1.609 to get min/mile. For example, 5:00/km ≈ 8:03/mile. |
▌ Pace vs. Speed — Conversion Reference
Pace and speed express the same concept in opposite ways. Use this conversion table as a quick reference during training planning.
Pace (min/km) | Speed (km/h) | Pace (min/mile) | Speed (mph) | Effort Level |
3:00 | 20.0 | 4:50 | 12.4 | Elite Sprint |
3:30 | 17.1 | 5:38 | 10.6 | Elite Distance |
4:00 | 15.0 | 6:26 | 9.3 | Advanced Runner |
4:30 | 13.3 | 7:14 | 8.3 | Intermediate |
5:00 | 12.0 | 8:03 | 7.5 | Recreational |
5:30 | 10.9 | 8:51 | 6.8 | Comfortable |
6:00 | 10.0 | 9:39 | 6.2 | Easy/Jogging |
7:00 | 8.6 | 11:16 | 5.4 | Brisk Walk–Jog |
8:00 | 7.5 | 12:52 | 4.7 | Fast Walk |
10:00 | 6.0 | 16:05 | 3.7 | Moderate Walk |
▌ Heart Rate, Maximum Heart Rate & Training Zones
Maximum Heart Rate (MHR) Formulas
Maximum Heart Rate (MHR) is the highest number of beats per minute (bpm) your heart can reach during maximum exertion. It is used to define training zones. There are several formulas for estimating MHR:
MHR Formula 1 — Fox & Haskell (Most Common) |
MHR = 220 − Age |
Example: For a 30-year-old athlete: |
MHR = 220 − 30 = 190 bpm |
MHR Formula 2 — Tanaka Formula (More Accurate for Fit Adults) |
MHR = 208 − (0.7 × Age) |
Example: For a 30-year-old athlete: |
MHR = 208 − (0.7 × 30) = 208 − 21 = 187 bpm |
MHR Formula 3 — Gulati Formula (Recommended for Women) |
MHR = 206 − (0.88 × Age) |
Example: For a 35-year-old woman: |
MHR = 206 − (0.88 × 35) = 206 − 30.8 = 175.2 bpm |
⚠️ Note: No formula perfectly predicts MHR for every individual. MHR is most accurately measured via a cardiac stress test conducted under medical supervision. Individual variation can be ±10–20 bpm from formula-based estimates. |
The 5 Training Heart Rate Zones
Once you know your MHR, you can define five training zones. Each zone targets different energy systems and fitness goals:
Zone | Name | % of MHR | bpm (MHR=190) | Pace Feel | Primary Benefit |
Zone 1 | Recovery / Easy | 50–60% | 95–114 bpm | Very easy, conversational | Active recovery, fat burning |
Zone 2 | Aerobic Base | 60–70% | 114–133 bpm | Easy, can speak full sentences | Aerobic endurance, fat metabolism |
Zone 3 | Tempo | 70–80% | 133–152 bpm | Moderate, short sentences only | Aerobic capacity, lactate clearance |
Zone 4 | Threshold | 80–90% | 152–171 bpm | Hard, only a few words | Lactate threshold, race pace |
Zone 5 | VO₂max / Sprint | 90–100% | 171–190 bpm | Maximum, cannot speak | Speed, power, VO₂max |
Heart Rate Zone Calculation |
Zone Target HR = MHR × Zone Percentage |
Example (Zone 2 for MHR = 190 bpm): |
Lower: 190 × 0.60 = 114 bpm |
Upper: 190 × 0.70 = 133 bpm |
Train between 114 and 133 bpm for Zone 2 aerobic base work |
💡 Pro Tip: For marathon training, 70–80% of total training volume should be in Zone 1 and Zone 2 (easy/aerobic). Only 20% should be in Zones 3–5. This is the 80/20 principle followed by elite endurance athletes. |
▌ Aerobic Threshold vs. Anaerobic Threshold
Understanding your aerobic and anaerobic thresholds is essential for effective long-distance training, particularly for marathon runners.
Threshold | Also Called | % of MHR | % of VO₂max | Energy Source | Sustainable Duration |
Aerobic Threshold (AeT) | Fat Burning Threshold | 60–75% | 55–65% | Primarily fat (lipids) | Several hours |
Anaerobic Threshold (AT) | Lactate Threshold | 80–90% | 75–90% | Glycogen (carbohydrates) | 30–60 minutes |
VO₂max Pace | Interval Pace | 95–100% | 97–100% | Phosphocreatine + Glycogen | 3–8 minutes |
Training at or slightly below your Anaerobic Threshold (AT) — often called tempo running — significantly raises your sustainable race pace. For marathon runners, the goal is to raise the aerobic threshold so that race pace can be maintained using fat as a fuel source, sparing glycogen for the final miles.
▌ Average Paces by Activity & Skill Level
Running Pace Benchmarks
Category | Average Pace (min/km) | Average Speed (km/h) | Approximate MHR % |
Elite Men (Marathon) | 2:50 – 3:05 | 19.4 – 21.2 | 88–92% |
Elite Women (Marathon) | 3:10 – 3:25 | 17.5 – 18.9 | 88–92% |
Advanced Amateur | 4:00 – 4:45 | 12.6 – 15.0 | 75–85% |
Intermediate Runner | 5:00 – 6:00 | 10.0 – 12.0 | 65–75% |
Recreational Jogger | 6:00 – 7:30 | 8.0 – 10.0 | 55–65% |
Beginner Runner | 7:30 – 10:00 | 6.0 – 8.0 | 50–60% |
Walking Pace Benchmarks
Walking Type | Pace (min/km) | Speed (km/h) | Notes |
Strolling | 17:00 – 20:00 | 3.0 – 3.5 | Relaxed, casual walking |
Normal Walk | 12:00 – 15:00 | 4.0 – 5.0 | Everyday walking pace |
Brisk Walk (CDC) | 11:00 – 13:00 | 4.8 – 5.5 | Recommended aerobic walking |
Power Walk | 9:00 – 11:00 | 5.5 – 6.7 | Arms pumping, high effort |
Race Walk | 6:30 – 8:00 | 7.5 – 9.2 | Competitive, specialized gait |
Cycling Pace Benchmarks
Category | Speed (km/h) | Pace (min/km) | Notes |
Leisurely Cycling | 10 – 15 | 4:00 – 6:00 | Casual city or trail riding |
Moderate Recreational | 16 – 20 | 3:00 – 3:45 | Fitness cycling |
Enthusiast | 21 – 26 | 2:18 – 2:51 | Regular training rides |
Advanced Amateur | 27 – 32 | 1:52 – 2:13 | Competitive club rides |
Elite Cyclist | 33+ | < 1:49 | Racing, Tour de France level |
▌ Multi-Segment & Split Pace Calculation
When you run a route with multiple segments (e.g., Point A → B → C), you can calculate pace for each segment independently. This is invaluable for interval training and race pacing strategy.
Average Pace Across Multiple Segments |
P_avg = (T₁ + T₂ + T₃ + … + Tₙ) ÷ (D₁ + D₂ + D₃ + … + Dₙ) |
Where T₁, T₂… are segment times and D₁, D₂… are segment distances. |
Note: Do NOT average individual paces — always sum total time |
and total distance, then divide. |
✎ Multi-segment run: Segment 1 = 3 km in 15 min, Segment 2 = 5 km in 28 min |
Step 1: Total time: T = 15 + 28 = 43 minutes |
Step 2: Total distance: D = 3 + 5 = 8 km |
Step 3: Average pace: P = 43 ÷ 8 = 5.375 min/km |
Step 4: Convert decimal: 0.375 × 60 = 22.5 seconds |
✔ Result: Overall average pace = 5 minutes 22.5 seconds per km (5:22.5/km) |
▌ Race Finish Time Estimator
If you have run part of a race and want to estimate your final finish time, use the following formula based on your current pace and remaining distance:
Projected Finish Time Estimator |
T_finish = T_elapsed + (P_current × D_remaining) |
Where: |
T_elapsed = Time already run |
P_current = Your current average pace |
D_remaining = Distance still left in the race |
✎ At the 30 km mark of a marathon, you have run for 2:45:00 at avg pace of 5:30/km. Estimate finish time. |
Step 1: Remaining distance: 42.195 − 30 = 12.195 km |
Step 2: Remaining time: P × D = 5.5 × 12.195 = 67.07 minutes ≈ 1:07:04 |
Step 3: Projected finish: 2:45:00 + 1:07:04 = 3:52:04 |
✔ Result: Projected marathon finish time ≈ 3 hours 52 minutes 4 seconds |
▌ How to Improve Your Running Pace
Improving pace requires a structured, multi-layered training approach. Below are the most proven methods used by recreational and competitive athletes:
1. Build Your Aerobic Base (Zone 2 Training)
The foundation of pace improvement is a strong aerobic engine. Running 70–80% of your weekly mileage at easy Zone 2 effort (60–70% MHR) trains your mitochondria and cardiovascular system to sustain effort longer without fatigue.
2. Tempo Runs (Lactate Threshold Training)
Running at your lactate threshold pace (approximately 80–90% MHR) for 20–40 minutes teaches your body to clear lactate more efficiently. This directly raises the pace you can sustain in a race. A typical tempo run: 10-min warm-up, 20-min at threshold, 10-min cool-down.
3. Interval Training (VO₂max Sessions)
Short, high-intensity intervals (90–100% MHR) improve your maximum oxygen uptake (VO₂max). Common formats: 4 × 1,000 m at 5K race pace with 90-second recovery jogs. Do these once per week maximum.
4. Long Runs
Weekly long runs (performed at easy pace) increase mitochondrial density, fat oxidation capacity, and mental endurance. For marathon preparation, long runs should gradually extend to 30–35 km.
5. Strides & Speed Drills
Short accelerations (60–100 m at 85–90% effort) at the end of easy runs improve neuromuscular coordination, running economy, and form. Do 4–6 strides twice a week.
6. Consistency & Progressive Overload
Pace improves only with consistent training over time. Apply the 10% rule: increase weekly mileage by no more than 10% per week to prevent injury. Track your pace with a GPS watch or pace calculator to monitor progress across weeks and months.
Training Type | Frequency | Intensity (MHR) | Primary Adaptation |
Easy / Recovery Run | 3–4× / week | 60–70% | Aerobic base, fat metabolism |
Long Run | 1× / week | 60–70% | Endurance, glycogen efficiency |
Tempo Run | 1× / week | 80–88% | Lactate threshold improvement |
Interval / VO₂max | 1× / week | 90–100% | Speed, VO₂max, aerobic power |
Strides | 2× / week | 85–90% | Running economy, neuromuscular |
Rest / Cross-Train | 1–2× / week | N/A | Recovery, injury prevention |
▌ Using Pace for Different Activities
Swimming Pace
Swimming pace is typically expressed in minutes per 100 meters (min/100m) or minutes per 100 yards. The same formulas apply. A competitive swimmer averages 1:20–1:40 per 100m; a recreational swimmer averages 2:00–3:00 per 100m.
Swimming Pace Formula |
P_swim = T (minutes) ÷ D (in 100m units) |
Example: Swim 1,500m in 30 minutes: |
D = 1500 ÷ 100 = 15 units |
P = 30 ÷ 15 = 2:00 per 100m |
Cycling Pace
Cyclists typically use speed (km/h or mph) rather than pace, but the same relationship applies. Pace for cyclists is expressed as min/km. The same formulas (P = T ÷ D, T = P × D, D = T ÷ P) are fully applicable.
Hiking Pace
Hiking pace calculations must account for elevation gain. The Naismith Rule is the standard hiking time estimator:
Naismith’s Rule (Hiking with Elevation) |
T (hours) = (D ÷ 5) + (Elevation Gain ÷ 600) |
Where: D = horizontal distance in km |
Elevation Gain is in meters |
5 km/h = average flat hiking speed |
600 m of climb adds 1 hour |
Example: 12 km hike with 800m elevation gain: |
T = (12 ÷ 5) + (800 ÷ 600) = 2.4 + 1.33 = 3.73 hours ≈ 3h 44min |
▌ Common Race Distances — Official Measurements
Race | Distance (km) | Distance (miles) | World Record (Men) | World Record (Women) |
1 Mile | 1.609 km | 1.0 miles | 3:43.13 (El Guerrouj, 1999) | 4:07.64 (Hassan, 2019) |
5K | 5.0 km | 3.107 miles | 12:35.36 (Kiplimo, 2020) | 14:05.20 (Obiri, 2023) |
10K | 10.0 km | 6.214 miles | 26:17.53 (Kiplimo, 2021) | 29:01.03 (Tsegay, 2021) |
Half Marathon | 21.097 km | 13.109 miles | 57:31 (Kibel, 2024) | 1:02:52 (Hassan, 2023) |
Marathon | 42.195 km | 26.219 miles | 2:00:35 (Kipchoge, 2023) | 2:09:56 (Assefa, 2023) |
50K Ultra | 50.0 km | 31.07 miles | 2:43:38 (Kamargo, 2020) | 3:07:20 (Jornet, 2013) |
▌ Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q1: What is a good pace for a beginner runner?
A good beginning running pace is anything between 7:00–10:00 min/km (11:16–16:05 min/mile). The most important rule for beginners: run at a pace where you can hold a full conversation. Speed will come naturally as fitness improves over weeks and months.
Q2: What is a good 5K pace?
For recreational runners, a 5K finish time of 25–35 minutes (5:00–7:00 per km) is a solid benchmark. Sub-25 minutes (under 5:00/km) is considered above average. Elite amateur runners aim for sub-20 minutes (under 4:00/km).
Q3: How do I convert pace from min/km to min/mile?
Pace Conversion: km ↔ miles |
Pace (min/mile) = Pace (min/km) × 1.60934 |
Pace (min/km) = Pace (min/mile) ÷ 1.60934 |
Example: 5:00 min/km × 1.60934 = 8:03 min/mile |
Q4: Is it better to train by pace or heart rate?
For long runs, aerobic base building, and recovery runs — train by heart rate (Zone 2). This prevents overtraining and builds aerobic efficiency. For tempo runs, intervals, and race simulations — train by pace to develop speed-specific adaptations. Ideally, use both: check that your pace aligns with the expected heart rate zone for that workout.
Q5: Why can’t I average my split paces?
Averaging individual paces gives a mathematically incorrect result unless all segments are equal distance. Always sum total time and divide by total distance to find true average pace. For example: 4:00/km for 1 km and 6:00/km for 1 km averages to 5:00/km — but 4:00/km for 3 km and 6:00/km for 1 km does NOT average to 5:00/km. The correct average is (12 + 6) ÷ 4 = 4:30/km.
Q6: What pace should I target for my first marathon?
For a first marathon, most coaches recommend targeting a finish time between 4:00 and 5:30 hours. This corresponds to a pace of 5:41–7:49 per km (9:09–12:35 per mile). The golden rule: start conservatively (2–5% slower than your target pace for the first half) to avoid hitting the wall at mile 20.
🏅 Final Tip: Consistent tracking is the fastest way to improve. Use CalculatorFactory Pace Calculator to log every run, compare your pace week over week, and fine-tune your race strategy. Even a 10-second improvement in pace per kilometer translates to over 7 minutes saved in a full marathon! |