Running Pace Chart

Select a pace per mile or per kilometre and this chart instantly shows your projected finish times for 5K, 10K, half marathon, and marathon — all in one reference table. Scroll to your target row, or let the highlighted row jump to your entered pace. To go further, take your pace into training zones from your VDOT or build a mile-by-mile negative split plan. For a more detailed per-distance calculation, use the running pace calculator.

Pace
Race finish times by pace
Pace/miPace/km5 K10 KHalfMarathon
5:003:0615:3231:041:05:332:11:06
5:153:1616:1932:371:08:492:17:39
5:303:2517:0534:111:12:062:24:12
5:453:3417:5235:441:15:232:30:45
6:003:4418:3837:171:18:392:37:19
6:153:5319:2538:501:21:562:43:52
6:304:0220:1240:231:25:132:50:25
6:454:1220:5841:571:28:292:56:59
7:004:2121:4543:301:31:463:03:32
7:154:3022:3145:031:35:033:10:05
7:304:4023:1846:361:38:193:16:38
7:454:4924:0548:091:41:363:23:12
8:004:5824:5149:431:44:533:29:45
8:155:0825:3851:161:48:093:36:18
8:305:1726:2452:491:51:263:42:52
8:455:2627:1154:221:54:423:49:25
9:005:3627:5855:551:57:593:55:58
9:155:4528:4457:292:01:164:02:31
9:305:5429:3159:022:04:324:09:05
9:456:0430:181:00:352:07:494:15:38
10:006:1331:041:02:082:11:064:22:11
10:156:2231:511:03:412:14:224:28:45
10:306:3132:371:05:152:17:394:35:18
10:456:4133:241:06:482:20:564:41:51
11:006:5034:111:08:212:24:124:48:24
11:156:5934:571:09:542:27:294:54:58
11:307:0935:441:11:272:30:455:01:31
11:457:1836:301:13:012:34:025:08:04
12:007:2737:171:14:342:37:195:14:38
Marathon3:29:45
5 K24:51
10 K49:43
Half marathon1:44:53
Pace per kilometre4:58 /km

8 /mi · 0

How it works

finish time = pace × distance

Average pace is time divided by distance — the inverse of speed. Given a pace in seconds per mile (or per kilometre), the finish time for any distance follows directly: multiply the pace by the number of miles (or kilometres) in the race. We hold all internal arithmetic in metres and seconds (SI, ADR-9) and convert only at the display boundary, so the mi and km columns can never drift apart through rounding. The table covers 5:00–12:00 per mile (roughly 3:06–7:27 per km) in 15-second steps, spanning recreational to competitive effort levels.

Sources

FAQ

What is a running pace chart?

A running pace chart is a reference table that maps a range of paces — expressed as minutes and seconds per mile or per kilometre — to projected finish times across standard race distances (5K, 10K, half marathon, marathon). Rather than calculating one result at a time, the chart lets you scan a column and pick the row whose marathon or half-marathon time matches your goal.

How do I use this chart to set a race goal?

Find the finish time you want in the Marathon or Half column and read across to the Pace/mi or Pace/km column in the same row. That is the average pace you need to hold. Enter it above to see the highlighted row and the cross-unit pace. Then build a negative split plan or check your training pace zones before committing.

Why do the mi and km finish times match exactly?

The chart computes everything in metres and seconds internally and only converts at the display step. One mile is exactly 1609.344 m, so both columns describe the identical speed — just expressed in different units. There is no rounding drift between them.

What range of paces does the chart cover?

The table runs from 5:00/mi to 12:00/mi in 15-second steps, which spans roughly 3:06/km to 7:27/km. This covers elite club runners through recreational runners completing a marathon in around 5:15. If your pace is outside that range, enter it above and the calculator will still give you the four finish times.

Are the finish times realistic predictions?

They are even-pace projections — the time you would finish in if you held exactly this pace from start to finish with no variation. Real races involve warm-up, fatigue, hills, and pacing errors, so treat the figures as a mathematical ceiling. For a realistic target that accounts for the longer you race the slower you go, try a race-time predictor.

How do I convert between min/mile and min/km?

One mile is 1.609344 km, so pace per mile is always a larger number than pace per km (it takes longer to cover one mile than one kilometre). To convert, multiply a min/mile value by 0.6214 to get min/km, or divide a min/km value by 0.6214 to get min/mile. The chart shows both columns so you never have to do the arithmetic.

What is a good marathon pace for a beginner?

There is no single right answer, but many first-time marathon runners target a finish of 4:00–5:00, which corresponds to roughly 9:09–11:27 per mile (5:41–7:06 per km). Look for that range in the Marathon column and follow the row to find your per-mile and per-km pace targets. Build your long runs at a comfortable pace 60–90 seconds per mile slower than that goal.

Finish times are even-pace projections based on the pace you enter. They do not account for fatigue, elevation, weather, or race-day conditions. General training reference only — not medical or professional coaching advice.

Embed this calculator

Add the running pace chart to your website or club page — free, no sign-up. Paste this snippet where you want the calculator to appear:

<script src="https://dialpace.com/embed/running-pace-chart.js" async></script>