The Complete Running Pace Training Guide 2026

Updated April 2026 · 18 min read

Master the 5 training zones, build a weekly pace ladder, and use the right calculator for every workout. This is the pillar resource for runners targeting 5K through marathon distances.

The 30-second answer:

Run 80% of your weekly miles in Zone 1-2 (easy), 20% in Zones 3-5 (hard). Easy pace is 60-90 sec/mile slower than goal marathon pace. Hard pace depends on the workout — use a calculator that converts your recent race time into specific paces for tempo, threshold, intervals, and long runs.

Why Most Runners Train Wrong

The single biggest mistake in recreational running is the "moderate trap": running too hard on easy days and too easy on hard days. The result is a runner who's always tired, never gets faster, and eventually gets injured.

Decades of exercise science (and recent meta-analyses from Stephen Seiler and the Norwegian Olympic team) all point to the same answer: polarized training. 80% of weekly miles at truly easy pace, 20% at genuinely hard pace, and almost nothing in the middle.

This guide explains exactly how to find your zones, build a weekly schedule that follows the 80/20 rule, and use RunBikeCalc's free calculators to dial in every workout.

The 5 Running Training Zones (and What Each Builds)

Zone % Max HR Effort What It Builds Sample Workout
Zone 150-60%Very easy, conversationalRecovery, capillary density30 min easy after a hard day
Zone 260-70%Easy, can speak full sentencesAerobic base, fat oxidation, mitochondrial density60-90 min long run
Zone 370-80%Comfortably hard, short sentencesMarathon pace enduranceTempo: 4×6 min @ marathon pace, 2 min easy between
Zone 480-90%Hard, 1-2 word answers onlyLactate threshold, race-specific enduranceThreshold: 4×1 mile @ 10K pace, 1 min easy
Zone 590-100%Maximum, no speechVO2 max, neuromuscular powerVO2: 6×3 min @ 3K pace, 3 min easy

How to Find Your Personal Pace Zones

Method 1: Recent race time + a pace calculator (most accurate)

The fastest way to find your pace zones is to plug a recent race result into a calculator. Use your most recent 5K, 10K, or half marathon time:

The calculator returns paces for easy runs, marathon, threshold, interval (5K), and repetition (mile). Update these every 4-6 weeks.

Method 2: Heart rate zones (best for easy / Zone 2 days)

If you wear a heart rate monitor, find your max HR (220 minus age is a starting estimate; better to do an all-out 5K and see your peak). Then:

Heart rate is more honest than pace on easy days because it accounts for fatigue, weather, sleep, and altitude. Use it for Zone 1-2 work; switch to pace for Zone 3-5 intervals where HR lags too much.

Method 3: Talk test (no equipment)

The Polarized Weekly Schedule (80/20)

For a 5-day-a-week runner targeting 30-40 miles per week:

Day Workout Zone Why
MondayRest or 30-min easyZ1Recovery from weekend long run
TuesdayThreshold workout (e.g., 4×1 mile @ 10K pace)Z4Build lactate clearance
Wednesday45-60 min easyZ1-Z2Aerobic recovery
ThursdayTempo workout (e.g., 4×6 min @ marathon pace)Z3Race-specific endurance
FridayRest or 30-min easyZ1Recovery before long run
SaturdayVO2 intervals OR easy runZ5 OR Z2Alternate weeks for top-end speed
SundayLong run (60-90 min easy)Z2Build aerobic base

Total weekly time at hard pace: 35-50 minutes. Total weekly time at easy pace: 3-4 hours. Ratio: 80% easy, 20% hard. This is the polarized approach.

The 12 Workout Templates Every Runner Should Know

1. Easy Run (Zones 1-2)

Pace: 60-90 sec/mile slower than marathon pace. Duration: 30-90 minutes. Frequency: 3-4× per week. Purpose: Aerobic base, recovery, mitochondrial development.

2. Long Run (Zone 2)

Pace: Marathon pace + 60 sec/mile. Duration: 90-180 minutes (gradually building). Frequency: Once per week. Purpose: Glycogen storage, capillary density, race endurance.

3. Tempo Run (Zone 3)

Pace: Marathon to half-marathon pace. Workout: 4×6 min hard / 2 min easy, or continuous 20-minute tempo. Frequency: Once per week. Purpose: Comfortable-hard pacing skill.

4. Threshold (Zone 4)

Pace: 10K to 1-hour race pace. Workout: 4×1 mile / 1 min recovery. Frequency: Once per week (alternate with tempo). Purpose: Lactate threshold elevation.

5. VO2 Max Intervals (Zone 5)

Pace: 3K-5K pace. Workout: 6×3 min hard / 3 min easy. Frequency: Once every 1-2 weeks. Purpose: Maximum oxygen uptake, top-end speed.

6. Mile Repeats (Zone 4-5)

Pace: 5K pace. Workout: 4-6×1 mile / 90-second jog. Frequency: Once per week during base build. Purpose: Race-specific 5K-10K fitness.

7. 800m Repeats (Zone 5)

Pace: Mile race pace. Workout: 8-12×800m / 400m jog. Frequency: Once per week during peak. Purpose: Top-end speed and lactate tolerance.

8. Strides (Zone 5, neuromuscular)

Pace: Near-sprint, controlled. Workout: 6-8×100m strides at the end of an easy run. Frequency: 2-3× per week. Purpose: Form, leg turnover, neuromuscular activation.

9. Hill Repeats (Zone 4-5)

Effort: Hard, controlled. Workout: 6-10×60-90 sec hill, jog down recovery. Frequency: Once per week during base. Purpose: Strength, power, injury prevention.

10. Fartlek (Zones 2-5, varied)

Pace: Mixed. Workout: 60 min run with 8×2 min hard / 2 min easy in the middle. Frequency: Once per week. Purpose: Pace flexibility, race-day adaptability.

11. Progression Run (Zones 2-3)

Pace: Easy → marathon pace. Workout: 60 min run, last 20 min at marathon pace. Frequency: Every 2 weeks. Purpose: Finishing strong, race-day pacing.

12. Recovery Run (Zone 1)

Pace: Marathon pace + 90+ sec/mile. Duration: 30-45 min. Frequency: Day after hard workout. Purpose: Active recovery, blood flow.

The 6 Free Calculators You Need

RunBikeCalc has six calculators that work together for pace training:

  1. Pace Calculator — convert race time to training paces
  2. VDOT Calculator — Jack Daniels' system; the gold standard
  3. Race Time Predictor — project marathon time from 5K
  4. Heart Rate Zones Calculator — find your 5 zones
  5. VO2 Max Calculator — get your fitness age + percentile
  6. Marathon Training Calculator — full plan generator

How Long Until You See Results

Realistic timeline for pace improvement on the polarized 80/20 program:

The 7 Most Common Mistakes

  1. Easy days too fast. Drifting from Zone 2 into Zone 3. Slows recovery, compromises hard days.
  2. Hard days too soft. Tempo runs that should be Zone 3 ending up in Zone 2. Fitness stalls.
  3. Adding mileage too fast. 10% per week is the safe ceiling. More leads to injury.
  4. Skipping the long run. Aerobic base is non-negotiable for distance runners.
  5. Ignoring strength work. 2× per week of basic strength reduces injury rate by 50%.
  6. Racing every weekend. Use races sparingly during base. Save the deep efforts for goal races.
  7. Chasing too many goals. Pick one race distance and one fitness target per training block (8-12 weeks).

Pace Training for Specific Race Distances

5K (training pace ratios)

10K

Half Marathon

Marathon

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the 5 running training zones?

Zone 1 (recovery, 50-60% max HR), Zone 2 (aerobic base, 60-70%), Zone 3 (tempo, 70-80%), Zone 4 (threshold/lactate, 80-90%), Zone 5 (VO2 max, 90-100%). Most runners spend too much time in Zone 3 and not enough in Zones 1-2 and 4-5.

What's the right pace for an easy run?

Easy run pace should be 60-90 seconds per mile slower than your goal marathon pace, or roughly Zone 1-2 heart rate (50-70% max HR). Use the conversational test: you should be able to speak 5-6 word sentences without gasping.

How do I calculate my training paces?

Run a recent race (5K is most common) and plug the time into the Pace Calculator. The calculator returns paces for easy runs, tempo, threshold, intervals, and long runs. Update every 4-6 weeks.

How many days per week should I run?

4-6 running days per week is optimal for most runners. Beginners: 3-4 days. Marathon runners: 5-6 days. Beyond 6 days/week, injury rates increase substantially.

Should I follow polarized or pyramidal training?

Polarized (80% easy / 20% hard) is best supported by recent research for most runners under 40 miles per week. Pyramidal training suits high-mileage marathon runners over 50 miles per week.

How long does it take to see pace improvement?

Most runners see meaningful improvements (10-30 seconds per mile) at 8-12 weeks. Beginners often see 60+ second improvements in their first 6 months.

Should I run by pace or heart rate?

Both have value. Train by heart rate for easy and Zone 2 days; train by pace for tempo, threshold, and intervals. Heart rate accounts for fatigue, weather, and sleep but lags 30-90 seconds.

Related Resources

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