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Running Pace Calculator

Calculate pace, time, or distance for any run or race distance

Quick Distances:
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About Running Pace Calculator

Tracking health metrics shouldn't require doctor visits for every quick estimate. Running Pace Calculator lets you calculate pace, time, or distance for any run or race distance instantly with science-backed formulas. All calculations run in your browser, and no personal health data is stored or transmitted anywhere.

How to Use

1
Enter your measurements Fill in the required fields such as age, height, weight, or other health metrics.
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Choose your unit system Select metric (kg, cm) or imperial (lbs, ft/in) depending on your preference.
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View your results See your calculated results with color-coded categories, ranges, and clear explanations.
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Understand the context Read the category descriptions and healthy ranges to understand what your results mean.
🔒 Privacy note: All processing happens locally in your browser. Your data is never sent to any server.

Why Use Running Pace Calculator?

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Evidence-Based Formulas Running Pace Calculator uses clinically recognized formulas and guidelines from organizations like the WHO, CDC, and peer-reviewed medical research.
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Health Data Privacy Your body measurements, health metrics, and personal data are processed entirely in your browser. Nothing is stored, shared, or transmitted.
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Visual Results Clear charts, color-coded ranges, and contextual explanations help you understand your results at a glance — not just a raw number.
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Educational Tool This calculator provides estimates for educational purposes. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical decisions and diagnoses.

Frequently Asked Questions

Running pace is the time it takes to cover one unit of distance, typically expressed as minutes per kilometer (min/km) or minutes per mile (min/mi). It's the inverse of speed. A pace of 5:00/km means you run 1 kilometer in exactly 5 minutes, which equals 12 km/h or about 7.5 mph.

Improve pace through: interval training (short fast bursts with recovery), tempo runs (sustained comfortably hard effort for 20–40 min), consistent weekly mileage build-up, and strength training for running economy. Most coaches recommend 80% of training at easy pace and 20% at higher intensity. Improvement takes 4–8 weeks of consistent training to show.

Common race paces for recreational runners: 5K — 5:00–7:00/km; 10K — 5:20–7:30/km; Half Marathon — 5:40–8:00/km; Marathon — 6:00–8:30/km. Elite runners run 5K in under 2:40/km and marathons in under 3:00/km. Focus on your own improvement rather than comparing to others.