Pace
calculator
Enter a distance and a target time; get your pace, speed, and even splits in min/mi or min/km. With the reason one pace can't be carried across race distances.
How the math works
Pace is one identity: time divided by distance. Enter two of pace, time, and distance and the third follows.
time = pace × distance
distance = time ÷ pace
speed = 60 ÷ pace (mph if pace is per mile, km/h if per km)
min/mi ↔ min/km uses the exact factor 1 mile = 1.609344 km
The distance presets use World Athletics standard course lengths: a 5K is 3.106856 mi, a half marathon is 21.0975 km (13.109375 mi), and a marathon is 42.195 km (26.218750 mi). Unit conversions are exact, per NIST SP 811 — no rounded factors.
Worked example
A runner with a 5K personal best of 22:00 wants to target a sub-20:00. What pace does each require, and how much faster is that?
- Target pace (20:00 for 5K): 20:00 ÷ 3.107 mi = 6:26/mi (4:00/km)
- Current pace (22:00 for 5K): 22:00 ÷ 3.107 mi = 7:05/mi (4:24/km)
- Improvement required: 39 sec/mi (24 sec/km)
- Even splits at goal pace (per km): 4:00, 8:00, 12:00, 16:00, 20:00
When this calculator is wrong
The pace this prints is a race target, and the most common way to misuse it is to run most of your training at it. Polarised-training research (Seiler 2010 and subsequent) points to roughly 80% of endurance running in easy Zone 1–2 — well below goal pace — and about 20% hard, with very little in the moderate "grey zone" that goal-pace running tends to sit in. The grey zone feels productive but drives aerobic adaptation less than easy work and VO2 max less than hard intervals. The exception is time-crunched athletes with fewer than four sessions a week, for whom some grey-zone running is unavoidable and probably fine.
- Even splits are an assumption, not a plan. The table above divides the effort evenly. Real races reward even-to-slightly-negative splitting; going out faster than goal pace and banking time almost always costs more in the back half than it saves up front.
- It is not a cross-distance predictor. Pace slows as distance grows. The men's 5K world-record pace is 4:03/mi (2:31/km); the men's marathon record pace is 4:36/mi (2:51/km) — about 33 sec/mi (20 sec/km) slower, even at the elite ceiling. Carrying your 5K pace to a marathon overshoots badly. Predicting a time at a new distance is a different formula (Riegel).
- GPS pace lags reality. Watch pace drifts on turns, in tunnels, and among tall buildings. For pacing a race, trust marked mile or kilometre splits over the instant-pace readout.
What to do with the result
Set the goal pace from a recent race or a time trial, not from what you hope to run. Then use the split column as a ceiling for the first half: aim to reach halfway a few seconds per mile slower than goal, and spend what's left in the back half. Run the majority of your weekly volume easy — the goal pace belongs to a small share of your training, not most of it. Re-run the numbers after a tune-up race; if you can't hold even splits in that race, the goal pace is the thing to adjust, not the plan.
Common questions
- How do I calculate my running pace?
- Divide your finish time by the distance. A 20:00 5K over 3.107 miles is 6:26 per mile; the same run over 5 kilometres is 4:00 per kilometre. Pace is just time ÷ distance — the calculator handles the unit conversion so you don't round the factor.
- How do I convert min/mile to min/km?
- Divide the per-mile pace by 1.609344 (the exact miles-to-km factor). An 8:00/mi pace is 4:58/km. Going the other way, multiply the per-km pace by the same number. This calculator shows both at once.
- Can I use my 5K pace to set my marathon pace?
- No. Pace decays with distance — even the world records slow about 33 sec/mi from the 5K to the marathon. A pace calculator does arithmetic on one distance; predicting a time at a different distance needs a prediction formula (Riegel), which accounts for that decay.
- Should I run even splits or negative splits?
- Even to slightly negative is the durable approach for most races. The split table here is even by construction; treat it as the ceiling for the first half rather than a target to beat early. Banking time by going out fast tends to cost more later than it saves.
- How much of my training should be at goal race pace?
- Not much. Polarised-training work (Seiler 2010) supports roughly 80% of running easy and about 20% hard, with little time at the moderate pace that goal-pace running usually falls into. Goal pace is for a handful of key sessions and race day, not for most of the week.