FREE RACE PREDICTOR CALCULATOR: 5K TO MARATHON FINISH TIMES
Enter your most recent PR or race result. Instantly predict your exact finish time and mile pace for every standard distance — from a local 5K to a Boston Qualifier (BQ) marathon — using Pete Riegel’s validated endurance formula.
| Distance | Predicted Time | Pace / Mile | Pace / km | Avg Speed |
|---|
HOW THIS RACE PREDICTOR WORKS: THE RIEGEL FORMULA & VO2 MAX
This calculator uses three layers of sports science: Pete Riegel’s 1977 endurance equation to predict your times, Jack Daniels’ VDOT methodology to build your training zones, and the Daniels-Gilbert VO₂max approximation to estimate your aerobic fitness. Here is exactly what happens from the moment you click Calculate.
You enter three pieces of data: your race distance, your finish time (hours, minutes, seconds), and your experience level. The calculator converts your finish time into a single total-seconds value internally — for example, 45:30 becomes 2,730 seconds.
The experience level selection sets the fatigue exponent k used in Riegel’s formula. This is the single most important calibration for prediction accuracy:
For custom distances, the calculator converts miles to kilometres (1 mi = 1.60934 km) before any formula is applied, so all internal calculations run in metric.
American research engineer Pete Riegel published his endurance equation in Runner’s World in 1977, later refined in the peer-reviewed journal American Scientist in 1981. It remains the most widely validated race-time predictor in sports science today.
| Var | Name | What It Represents |
|---|---|---|
| T₂ | Predicted Time | What the calculator outputs for each target distance — in seconds, then formatted to h/m/s |
| T₁ | Known Time | Your input finish time, converted to total seconds |
| D₂ | Target Distance | The race distance being predicted, in kilometres |
| D₁ | Known Distance | The race distance you actually ran, in kilometres |
| k | Fatigue Exponent | The rate at which speed decreases as distance increases. Higher k = more fatigue penalty |
The exponent k is what makes the formula non-linear. Without it (k = 1.0), the prediction would assume your pace stays identical at all distances — clearly impossible. The exponent mathematically captures the physiological reality that humans slow down at longer distances due to glycogen depletion, muscle fatigue, heat production, and neural fatigue.
D₁ = 10 km
5:03/km pace
The calculator runs this formula independently for all 12 standard distances, then converts each raw-seconds result into pace per kilometre (seconds ÷ km), pace per mile (×1.60934), and average speed in km/h (km ÷ hours).
Alongside predictions, the calculator estimates your VO₂max — the maximum rate at which your body can consume oxygen during maximal exercise, measured in mL/kg/min. This uses the Daniels-Gilbert approximation, the same formula underpinning the VDOT system.
It works in two stages: first computing the oxygen demand at your race pace (VO₂ at velocity), then dividing by the fractional utilisation of VO₂max sustainable for your race duration:
The %VO₂ formula accounts for the fact that shorter races are run at higher fractions of VO₂max (a mile runner uses ~97%) while marathoners sustain roughly 75–85% of their VO₂max. This exponential decay curve was derived by Daniels and Gilbert from thousands of performance data points.
| VO₂max Score | Fitness Category | Typical Profile | Marathon Equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| < 35 | Beginner | New to structured running | > 4:30:00 |
| 35 – 44 | Recreational | Regular runner, casual races | 3:45 – 4:30 |
| 45 – 54 | Trained | Consistent training 30–45 mi/wk | 3:00 – 3:45 |
| 55 – 64 | Sub-Elite | High mileage, structured blocks | 2:30 – 3:00 |
| ≥ 65 | Elite | National/international competitor | < 2:30:00 |
Training paces are built on the Jack Daniels VDOT methodology from his book Daniels’ Running Formula (1st ed. 1998, 4th ed. 2022). Rather than guessing workout paces, this system derives every zone from a single performance benchmark — your equivalent marathon pace — ensuring your training load is precisely calibrated to your current fitness.
The calculator first derives your equivalent marathon time from your input race using the Riegel formula (Step 2), then applies these percentage multipliers to marathon pace per km:
Every raw-seconds value is formatted into the most readable representation. Times under 1 hour display as MM:SS. Times 1 hour or over display as Xh MMm SSs. Paces display as MM:SS / km and MM:SS / mi. Speed in km/h to 2 decimal places. Your reference race row is highlighted in crimson with a “YOUR RACE” badge for instant orientation.
The VO₂max banner at the top of results shows your estimated aerobic fitness score with a colour-coded category badge, your reference-race paces per km and per mile, and average speed — giving you a full performance snapshot before reviewing the full table.
Accuracy & Known Limitations for U.S. Road Races
While the Riegel Formula and VO₂ max estimations are the gold standard in sports science, they are mathematical models. Here is the expected accuracy when applied to typical U.S. road race conditions.
REAL U.S. RUNNER EXAMPLES: 5K PR TO BQ MARATHON
Five US runners — from a first-time 5K finisher in New York to a 54-year-old masters athlete in Denver — show exactly what the Race Predictor produces across different fitness levels, distances, and experience factors.
“Marcus runs 45 miles/week with the Chicago Running Collective. Targeting his first sub-3 marathon at the Chicago Marathon.”
| Target Race | Predicted Time | Pace / km | Pace / mi |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Mile | 05:35 | 03:28/km | 05:35/mi |
| 5K | 18:35 | 03:43/km | 05:59/mi |
| Half Marathon | 1h 25m 30s | 04:03/km | 06:31/mi |
| Marathon | 2h 58m 15s | 04:13/km | 06:48/mi |
“Jennifer runs 3 days/week and completed the 3M Half Marathon in Austin. Planning her first full marathon at Houston.”
| Target Race | Predicted Time | Pace / km | Pace / mi |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5K | 27:10 | 05:26/km | 08:45/mi |
| 10K | 56:39 | 05:40/km | 09:07/mi |
| 15K | 1h 27m 04s | 05:48/km | 09:21/mi |
| Marathon | 4h 20m 37s | 06:11/km | 09:56/mi |
“Derek is a 40–44 AG competitor who placed 3rd at the Falmouth Road Race. Wants to qualify for Boston in 3 years.”
| Target Race | Predicted Time | Pace / km | Pace / mi |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10K | 46:23 | 04:38/km | 07:28/mi |
| Half Marathon | 1h 42m 21s | 04:51/km | 07:48/mi |
| 25K | 2h 02m 32s | 04:54/km | 07:53/mi |
| Marathon | 3h 33m 24s | 05:03/km | 08:08/mi |
“Aisha ran her first NYC 5K after a Couch to 5K programme. She wants to complete the TCS NYC Half Marathon next spring.”
| Target Race | Predicted Time | Pace / km | Pace / mi |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10K | 1h 12m 56s | 07:18/km | 11:44/mi |
| 15K | 1h 53m 00s | 07:32/km | 12:07/mi |
| Half Marathon | 2h 43m 21s | 07:45/km | 12:28/mi |
| Marathon | 5h 45m 19s | 08:11/km | 13:10/mi |
“Bill has run 22 marathons including 6 Boston qualifiers. A 55–59 AG threat, he trains at altitude and averages 55 miles/week.”
| Target Race | Predicted Time | Pace / km | Pace / mi |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5K | 20:53 | 04:11/km | 06:43/mi |
| 10K | 42:57 | 04:18/km | 06:55/mi |
| Half Marathon | 1h 33m 22s | 04:26/km | 07:07/mi |
| 50K | 3h 49m 04s | 04:35/km | 07:22/mi |
5 PRO TIPS: HOW TO ACTUALLY HIT YOUR PREDICTED RACE PACE
Each tip is drawn directly from the five US runner profiles above — specific, actionable coaching advice tied to what their Race Predictor results actually reveal. These are not generic running clichés. They are precision-targeted interventions based on the numbers.
Marcus’s Race Predictor shows a predicted half marathon of 1h 25m 30s — a 4:03/km pace. Most runners in his position do tempo runs “by feel,” which research shows consistently underestimates true threshold intensity by 8–15 seconds per kilometre. That’s a critical gap when you’re 8 minutes off a sub-3 marathon.
His predicted half pace is his lactate threshold pace. Running one weekly tempo session precisely at 4:03/km ± 5 sec — not slower, not faster — directly raises the speed he can sustain aerobically. A single weekly tempo session improves lactate threshold by 8–15% in trained runners within 8–12 weeks, according to research published in the International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance.
5:00/kmMain Set: 3 × 12 min at
4:03/km with 3 min easy recovery jog betweenProgression (Weeks 5–8): 4 × 12 min at
4:00/kmCool-down: 2 km easy
Total quality volume: 36–48 min at threshold — the evidence-backed sweet spot for LT adaptation without overreaching
Jennifer’s predicted marathon pace is 6:11/km. The single most common first-marathon mistake is starting long training runs at goal marathon pace — leading to chronic fatigue, injury, and under-recovery. Her long runs should start at 6:45–7:15/km (easy pace) and only introduce marathon-pace segments in the final miles as race day approaches.
The structured approach is called the “progression long run”: most of the run at easy pace, with the final 3–5 miles accelerating to predicted marathon pace. This builds the specific neuromuscular and metabolic patterns of race-day closing miles without the injury risk of running 18+ miles at race effort from mile one.
6:55–7:10/km — genuinely conversational, full sentences possibleMiles 15–17:
6:30/km — moderate, not labouredMiles 18–20:
6:11/km marathon goal pace — controlled but race-effort focusPurpose: Your legs experience the metabolic cost of marathon pace on fatigued glycogen stores — exactly what mile 20–26 of a real marathon demands
Derek’s 22:15 5K predicts a 3:33:24 marathon. The Boston Qualifier for men 40–44 is 3:05:00 — a 28-minute gap. The critical insight here is that this gap exists despite his strong 5K speed, which means his aerobic base at marathon distance is undertrained, not his top-end speed. The predictor is revealing a fatigue-resistance deficit, not a VO₂max deficit.
At 43, research confirms masters athletes take 48–72 hours longer to recover from hard sessions than runners in their 20s and 30s. Running a hard/easy/hard weekly pattern — instead of the traditional hard/easy — is the single most evidence-backed masters training adjustment. His priority must be accumulating marathon-specific mileage with full recovery between quality sessions.
Easy/Hard
Tuesday: Quality 1 — Tempo intervals at predicted half pace
4:51/km (4 × 8 min)Wednesday: Easy recovery run
6:00–6:30/km — 45 min maxThursday: Easy recovery run
6:00/km — 50 minFriday: Quality 2 — Marathon-pace run at
5:03/km (10–14 miles with 6 at M-pace)Saturday: Easy 40 min + strength (glutes, single-leg work)
Sunday: Long run
5:45–6:15/km — 16–20 miles easy
Aisha’s current prediction of 2:43:21 for the half marathon is based on her current fitness — not her ceiling. The Beginner k=1.08 factor applied to her 5K already adds a conservative fatigue penalty. The most powerful insight from her results: every 60 seconds she drops from her 5K time projects approximately 4–5 minutes off her half marathon.
New runners have the steepest VO₂max improvement curve of any group. Research shows untrained beginners can improve VO₂max by 15–25% within the first 6 months of structured training — improvements that elite runners might chase for a decade. The Race Predictor is most powerful as a monthly benchmark tool for new runners, not a one-time lookup.
7:30/kmWeeks 5–8: Add strides (6 × 20 sec fast, full recovery) on Thursday. Long run builds to 10 km
Weeks 9–12: Tuesday becomes 25 min easy + 10 min at predicted 10K pace
7:18/km. Long run 13–16 kmWeeks 13–15: Long run peaks at 18–19 km at
8:00/km. Re-run predictor with current 5K timeWeek 16: Taper — 10 km long run, race week routine
Bill’s advanced k=1.04 factor reflects his altitude-trained aerobic efficiency and low fatigue exponent. His 50K prediction of 3:49:04 at 4:35/km is not just a prediction — it is a pacing blueprint. At ultra distances, GPS splits are unreliable on trails, aid stations disrupt rhythm, and the temptation to go out hard is the primary cause of blow-ups after mile 20.
Bill’s predicted 50K pace of 4:35/km breaks down to approximately 7:22/mile. His strategy should be to run the first 20 miles at exactly 7:35–7:45/mile (5–8 seconds conservative), then allow the final 11 miles to naturally settle at target pace. Research on elite ultra-marathon pacing consistently shows that runners who run the first half 2–5% slower than target finish significantly faster overall due to avoided glycogen depletion.
4:45/km — hold back, feel easy, let others gokm 10–25:
4:38/km — settling into race rhythm, still aerobickm 25–40:
4:33/km — marathon-effort feel, controlled pushkm 40–50:
4:25–4:30/km — empty the tank, predicted pace now feels achievable on fresh glycogenProjected finish: 3:47–3:51 depending on trail conditions — bracketing the 3:49:04 Riegel prediction
RACE PREDICTION FAQS: TRAINING ZONES & MARATHON EQUIVALENTS
Every question runners across the US ask about race prediction, the Riegel formula, VO₂max, training paces, and using predictions to qualify for Boston — answered with precision.
| Level | k Value | Weekly Miles | Running Experience |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner | 1.08 | < 20 miles | < 1 year consistent training |
| Intermediate | 1.06 | 20–40 miles | 1–5 years, regular races |
| Advanced | 1.04 | 40+ miles | 5+ years, structured training blocks |
| VO₂max Range | Category | Typical Marathon Time | Profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| < 35 | Beginner | > 4h 30m | New runners, infrequent training |
| 35–44 | Recreational | 3:45–4:30 | Regular but casual, 2–3 days/week |
| 45–54 | Trained | 3:00–3:45 | Structured training, 30–45 miles/week |
| 55–64 | Sub-Elite | 2:30–3:00 | High mileage, periodised training |
| 65+ | Elite | < 2:30 | National-level competitors |
| Zone | Multiplier on Marathon Pace | % VO₂max |
|---|---|---|
| Easy (E) | × 1.28–1.38 (slower) | 59–74% |
| Long Run (L) | × 1.18–1.28 | 65–75% |
| Marathon Pace (M) | × 0.98–1.02 (race pace) | 75–84% |
| Threshold (T) | × 0.89–0.94 (faster) | 83–88% |
| Interval (I) | × 0.80–0.86 | 95–100% |
| Repetition (R) | × 0.72–0.78 | 105–120% |
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MEDICAL DISCLAIMER & SPORTS SCIENCE METHODOLOGY
Genghis Fitness is committed to complete transparency about how this Race Predictor works, what it is, and — equally important — what it is not. Please read the following before using any result as a health, medical, or training decision.
All content, predictions, VO₂max estimates, and training pace recommendations generated by the Genghis Fitness Race Predictor are provided for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing on this page or produced by this calculator constitutes medical advice, sports medicine advice, physical therapy advice, or any form of professional health guidance.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that adults consult a healthcare professional before significantly increasing physical activity intensity or volume, particularly individuals over 40, those with cardiovascular risk factors, or those returning from injury. The American Heart Association (AHA) similarly advises physician clearance before undertaking vigorous aerobic training programmes for individuals with known or suspected heart conditions.
Genghis Fitness expressly disclaims all liability for any injury, health event, overtraining syndrome, or adverse outcome resulting from the use of Race Predictor outputs as a substitute for personalised medical or coaching guidance.
The Riegel formula (T₂ = T₁ × (D₂/D₁)^k) is a validated statistical model derived from population-level race data. It produces probabilistic estimates, not certain outcomes. Individual results will vary based on training history, terrain, weather, nutrition, sleep, altitude, race-day conditions, and numerous other physiological variables the formula cannot model.
Known mathematical limitations of this calculator include:
To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, Genghis Fitness, its owners, contributors, and affiliated parties expressly disclaim all warranties — express or implied — including but not limited to warranties of accuracy, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement, with respect to the Race Predictor calculator and all associated content on this page.
Genghis Fitness shall not be liable for any direct, indirect, incidental, special, consequential, or punitive damages arising from: reliance on calculator outputs as a training plan; use of predicted paces in a race without adequate preparation; physical injury sustained during training or racing; or any adverse health event connected to the use of information on this page. Users assume all risk associated with their running training and race participation.
This page contains outbound links to government health agencies, academic research databases, and sports governing bodies for reference and authority purposes. These are provided as informational citations only. Genghis Fitness is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by any linked organisation. Linked organisations have not reviewed or endorsed the content of this calculator.
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The following government agencies, health organisations, and peer-reviewed research bodies inform the scientific basis of this calculator. These outbound links are provided for verification and further reading:
Genghis Fitness builds calculators and content for athletes who want data, not guesswork. Every tool on this site is built around documented methodology from published sports science — not proprietary algorithms, undisclosed models, or marketing-driven outputs. Our Race Predictor uses a formula that is openly documented, publicly reproducible, and academically cited — the Riegel equation from American Scientist, 1981.
We believe fitness tools should be transparent by default: the formula is shown, the variables are explained, the accuracy ranges are stated honestly, and the limitations are disclosed prominently — not buried in footnotes. If a tool cannot explain how it works, you cannot trust what it produces.
Every piece of content on the Race Predictor page follows a documented editorial process before publication:
The Genghis Fitness Race Predictor is provided free of charge with no registration required. We do not sell your race data, input times, or usage information to third parties. This page may contain links to other Genghis Fitness calculator tools — these are editorial recommendations based on relevance to the Race Predictor, not paid placements.
No calculator manufacturer, race organisation, sports brand, or supplement company has paid for inclusion, endorsement, or preferential treatment in any section of this page. All tool recommendations (Related Calculators), runner profiles (Real US Examples), and training advice (Pro Tips) reflect the editorial judgement of the Genghis Fitness content team based on scientific merit and user relevance alone. Genghis Fitness maintains full editorial independence.
The Race Predictor is grounded in the following primary sources. These are the actual published works behind the mathematics — not retrofitted citations:
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