Running Pace Calculator: Calculate Your Running Pace
Convert between distance, time, and pace for any run
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Projected race times assume you can hold pace across the full distance. In reality, pace falls off at longer distances — typical slowdown is about 5–10% from 5K to marathon for recreational runners.
A pace calculator converts a run's total time and distance into a pace — the average time per mile or per kilometer — plus a predicted finish time at standard race distances. Dividing total seconds by distance is simple; projecting across distances is approximate because runners slow down as races get longer.
This running pace calculator helps you determine your average pace in minutes per mile or per kilometer by inputting your total distance and elapsed time. It also provides projected finish times for common race distances such as 5K, 10K, half marathon, and full marathon, serving as a valuable tool for runners of all levels. Use it to benchmark training workouts, understand your fitness progression, and set realistic race goals, offering a quick and reliable way to analyze performance and plan future efforts.
What is a running pace?
Use this comprehensive pace calculator to effortlessly convert between running pace (minutes per mile or per kilometer), total distance covered, and elapsed time. Enter any two of these variables – for instance, your 5K finish time and the race distance – and our tool will compute your average pace, provide mile or kilometer splits, and project equivalent finish times for other common race distances like the 10K, half marathon, and full marathon. This calculator is an invaluable resource for runners of all levels, from beginners planning their first 5K to seasoned marathoners fine-tuning their race-day pacing strategy. It's also excellent for benchmarking training workouts, understanding your fitness progression, and setting realistic race goals. While the core math relies on straightforward unit-rate arithmetic, similar to what coaches and GPS watches use, it offers a quick and reliable way to analyze your running performance and plan future efforts.
The formula
- pace — seconds per mile or kilometer
- total seconds — hours×3600 + minutes×60 + seconds
- distance — total miles or kilometers run
Source: Basic Unit Rate Calculation and Linear Projection.
Worked examples
1A 5 mile run in 45 minutes
Five miles in 45 minutes works out to 9:00/mile, about 6.67 mph. At that effort, a 5K would take roughly 27:58, a 10K about 55:56, and a marathon 3:55:57 — though the marathon figure is optimistic for anyone who hasn't trained specifically for the distance.
2A 10K in 50 minutes
Ten kilometers in 50:00 is 5:00/km pace — a common benchmark for intermediate runners. Equivalent linear projections: 5K in 25:00, half marathon in 1:45:30, marathon in 3:30:58.
3A half marathon in 1 hour 50 minutes
Completing a half marathon (13.1 miles) in 1 hour and 50 minutes results in an average pace of approximately 8:23 per mile, or 5:13 per kilometer. This pace linearly projects to a 5K time of about 26:02, a 10K time of 52:04, and a full marathon time of 3:40:00. These projections serve as a useful guide for training and race planning.
How to use this calculator
- Distance
- Distance unit (default: 1)
- Hours
- Minutes
- Seconds
- Read the result. Use the worked examples below to sanity-check against a known scenario.
Common mistakes and edge cases
Reading linear projections as guarantees. A 7:00/mile 5K does not automatically translate to a 3:04 marathon. Recreational runners typically slow 5–15% from 5K to marathon; elite runners slow closer to 5%.
Mixing units mid-plan. A 5:00/km pace is not the same as 5:00/mile. Pick one and stick with it — your watch and your training plan should agree.
Tracking pace without tracking effort. Two runs at identical pace can feel completely different depending on hills, heat, and rest. Heart rate or perceived effort belong alongside pace in any training log.
Frequently asked questions
Why are my race projections different from my watch's?
What's a good pace?
How do I pace myself in a race?
How does altitude affect running pace?
What's the difference between pace and speed?
How can I improve my running pace?
Should I train by pace or heart rate?
What is a negative split?
Running Pace glossary
How we built this calculator
Methodology
Pace is a simple rate: total time divided by total distance. The output is usually expressed in minutes per mile or per kilometer because that's how training plans prescribe effort. Speed (miles per hour) is the reciprocal.
This calculator was written by Numora health team and reviewed by Numora medical review board, Certified Running Coach before publication. Both names link to full bios with verifiable credentials.
Sources & references
Every numeric assumption traces to a primary source.