Whether you are a brand new runner or a weekend racer chasing a personal best, one question comes up again and again: am I fast for my age? It is natural to want to know how your pace stacks up, but the honest answer is that “average” depends heavily on your age and sex. A pace that is excellent for a 65-year-old looks very different from one for a 25-year-old. So what is the average running pace by age and sex, and where do you fall on the chart?
The good news is that real data exists, drawn from millions of road race finishes, and it paints a much more reassuring picture than the fast times you see on social media. The averages are slower than most people assume, and they shift in predictable ways as runners age.
The big chart below breaks down average pace by age group and sex, for the mile and for every common race distance. Find your row, then we’ll explain what the numbers mean.
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What Is the Average Running Pace?
Across all adult age groups, the average running pace is about 9 minutes per mile for men and 10 minutes 21 seconds per mile for women, based on median finishers in recreational road races. These numbers surprise a lot of people, because the paces you see shared online tend to come from the fastest, most experienced runners. The reality for the typical runner is considerably more relaxed. The most important thing to understand before reading the chart is that “average” is not a single number; it shifts meaningfully depending on your age, your sex, and the distance you are running.
How Pace Changes With Age
Running performance generally peaks between the ages of 25 and 34, then declines gradually, at a rate of roughly 1 percent per year after age 35. As the chart shows, the average mile pace for men rises from about 7:52 in the 20 to 24 group to 13:20 for runners 70 and older, with women following the same curve from 9:17 to 15:12. The key word, though, is gradual. The year-over-year change is small, which is why a dedicated runner in their 50s or 60s can easily outrun a sedentary person half their age. Age sets a slow ceiling, but training determines where you actually land beneath it.
The Difference Between Men and Women
On average, men run about 10 to 15 percent faster than women at equivalent training levels. This gap is rooted in physiological differences, including average muscle mass, hemoglobin concentration, and lung capacity. It is why the chart lists separate columns, and why race qualifying standards like those for the Boston Marathon set different times for men and women. That said, the gap narrows significantly at lower fitness levels, where training quality and consistency matter far more than physiology. For most recreational runners, the person-to-person differences in training dwarf the average differences between the sexes.
How Distance Affects Pace
One of the most useful things the chart reveals is that your pace naturally slows as the race gets longer, and this is completely normal. A runner who averages around 9 minutes per mile in a 5K will run closer to 10:24 per mile over a full marathon. This is not a sign of poor fitness; it is basic physiology, since the body cannot sustain a fast pace over a very long distance. That is why comparing a marathon pace to a mile pace is misleading. When you check yourself against the chart, always compare to the same distance you actually ran.
What Counts as a Good Pace?
A “good” pace is entirely relative to your age, sex, and experience. Using the tiers in the chart, a recreational runner aged 35 to 44 running a mile between roughly 7 and 8:30 (men) or 8 and 9:45 (women) is performing above average. Anything faster moves into excellent or elite territory, the top 10 percent and top 1 percent respectively, while beginners typically start above 10 to 11 minutes per mile and improve quickly. The most encouraging fact in all of this data is that the single biggest factor separating a slow pace from a fast one is not talent or age, but consistent training over time. If you enjoy these kinds of breakdowns, see our guide to soccer ball sizes by age.
The Bottom Line
The average running pace is about 9:03 per mile for men and 10:21 per mile for women, but the real value is in the age-by-age breakdown, since a good pace for a 25-year-old is very different from one for a 65-year-old. Performance peaks in the late 20s and early 30s and declines slowly after 35, men run modestly faster than women on average, and pace eases as distance grows. Above all, the data shows that training consistency matters more than any of it. Find your row on the chart, see where you stand, and remember that almost everyone can get faster with steady, patient effort.