What Is a Good 1 Mile Time? Average Mile Benchmarks, Pace Chart, and Practical Examples
Understand what a good 1-mile time looks like with benchmark tables, conversion formulas, projection examples, and practical pacing context.
What is a good 1 mile run time?
A good 1 mile time is 7:04. This is the average 1 Mile time across all ages and genders. The fastest time in the benchmark dataset used for this page is 4:08.
Source context: benchmark snapshot from Run Regimen benchmark data and editorial policy, checked March 12, 2026.
Separate official-record context: World Athletics records listings. Official records update periodically, so treat the benchmark and official-record contexts as separate references.
Compliance note
This article and linked tools are for informational and journaling purposes only. I am NOT a doctor.
Overall Benchmark
7:04
Average 1 Mile time across all ages and genders in the benchmark dataset.
Male Benchmark
6:38
Average 1 Mile time across men of all ages in the benchmark dataset.
Female Benchmark
7:44
Average 1 Mile time across women of all ages in the benchmark dataset.
Fastest Benchmark
4:08
Fastest 1 Mile time in the benchmark dataset snapshot.
How to interpret a good 1 Mile time
A useful benchmark is contextual, not absolute. Age, event depth, terrain profile, and training consistency all affect outcome. Use benchmark tables as orientation, then combine them with your recent races and split quality.
Evidence reviews such as Joyner and Coyle and pacing synthesis from Abbiss and Laursen support this multi-factor view of distance performance.
Average 1 Mile run time by age and ability
The benchmark section below provides age-row and ability-band context with finish-time, pace, and speed views. Values in pace/speed tabs are generated deterministically from the same finish-time table so the math is internally consistent.
Benchmark Table Views
Switch between finish time, pace, and speed views. Every tab is computed from the same benchmark finish-time matrix so values stay internally consistent.
Accuracy note: `min/km` and `min/mile` are pace (time per distance). `km/h`, `mph`, `m/s`, `km/min`, and `mi/min` are speed (distance per time). The same conversion logic is used for both male and female sections.
Male 1 Mile Running Times
A good 1 Mile time for a man is 06:38. This is the average 1 Mile time across men of all ages. The fastest 1 Mile time in this benchmark dataset is 04:08.
| Age | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | WR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 11:06 | 09:17 | 07:56 | 06:57 | 06:13 | 04:31 |
| 15 | 09:37 | 08:02 | 06:53 | 06:03 | 05:24 | 03:56 |
| 20 | 09:17 | 07:45 | 06:38 | 05:49 | 05:12 | 03:47 |
| 25 | 09:17 | 07:45 | 06:38 | 05:49 | 05:12 | 03:47 |
| 30 | 09:17 | 07:45 | 06:38 | 05:49 | 05:12 | 03:47 |
| 35 | 09:26 | 07:53 | 06:45 | 05:54 | 05:17 | 03:51 |
| 40 | 09:46 | 08:09 | 06:58 | 06:06 | 05:27 | 03:59 |
| 45 | 10:08 | 08:28 | 07:15 | 06:21 | 05:41 | 04:09 |
| 50 | 10:35 | 08:50 | 07:34 | 06:37 | 05:56 | 04:20 |
| 55 | 11:05 | 09:15 | 07:55 | 06:56 | 06:13 | 04:34 |
| 60 | 11:39 | 09:44 | 08:20 | 07:17 | 06:32 | 04:48 |
| 65 | 12:16 | 10:15 | 08:47 | 07:41 | 06:54 | 05:04 |
| 70 | 13:00 | 10:51 | 09:18 | 08:08 | 07:18 | 05:22 |
| 75 | 14:01 | 11:42 | 10:02 | 08:47 | 07:52 | 05:47 |
| 80 | 15:34 | 13:00 | 11:09 | 09:45 | 08:45 | 06:26 |
| 85 | 17:58 | 14:59 | 12:52 | 11:15 | 10:05 | 07:23 |
| 90 | 21:51 | 18:15 | 15:40 | 13:42 | 12:17 | 08:59 |
Female 1 Mile Running Times
A good 1 Mile time for a woman is 07:44. This is the average 1 Mile time across women of all ages. The fastest 1 Mile time in this benchmark dataset is 04:45.
| Age | Beginner | Novice | Intermediate | Advanced | Elite | WR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 12:14 | 10:23 | 09:00 | 07:57 | 07:08 | 05:04 |
| 15 | 11:00 | 09:19 | 08:05 | 07:08 | 06:24 | 04:32 |
| 20 | 10:36 | 08:59 | 07:44 | 06:50 | 06:08 | 04:21 |
| 25 | 10:36 | 08:59 | 07:44 | 06:50 | 06:08 | 04:21 |
| 30 | 10:36 | 08:59 | 07:44 | 06:50 | 06:08 | 04:21 |
| 35 | 10:40 | 09:02 | 07:47 | 06:52 | 06:10 | 04:23 |
| 40 | 10:53 | 09:14 | 07:57 | 07:00 | 06:17 | 04:28 |
| 45 | 11:17 | 09:34 | 08:14 | 07:15 | 06:31 | 04:38 |
| 50 | 11:52 | 10:04 | 08:39 | 07:37 | 06:50 | 04:52 |
| 55 | 12:34 | 10:40 | 09:11 | 08:05 | 07:15 | 05:09 |
| 60 | 13:21 | 11:19 | 09:45 | 08:35 | 07:42 | 05:28 |
| 65 | 14:13 | 12:03 | 10:23 | 09:09 | 08:12 | 05:50 |
| 70 | 15:12 | 12:53 | 11:06 | 09:47 | 08:45 | 06:15 |
| 75 | 16:21 | 13:51 | 11:57 | 10:31 | 09:25 | 06:43 |
| 80 | 17:43 | 15:00 | 12:56 | 11:24 | 10:12 | 07:17 |
| 85 | 20:02 | 16:58 | 14:38 | 12:53 | 11:32 | 08:14 |
| 90 | 23:42 | 20:04 | 17:22 | 15:17 | 13:42 | 09:48 |
Important table note
The final WR column follows the source benchmark-table label for the best time at each age row. It should not be read as the current absolute open world record for the distance.
What do the running abilities mean?
Beginner
Faster than 5% of runners
A beginner runner has started running and has run for at least a month.
Novice
Faster than 20% of runners
A novice runner has run regularly for at least six months.
Intermediate
Faster than 50% of runners
An intermediate runner has run regularly for at least two years.
Advanced
Faster than 80% of runners
An advanced runner has run for over five years.
Elite
Faster than 95% of runners
An elite runner has dedicated over five years to become competitive at running.
How to use the table
Find your age row, compare across ability columns, then switch to pace/speed tabs for execution context. Male and female sections use different benchmark source times, but the conversion formulas are identical across both sections.
Formulas used for pace and projection
Pace from finish time
Pace (sec/km) = Finish Time (sec) / 1.6093
Use this to convert 1 Mile finish time into actionable pacing.
Speed conversion
Speed (km/h) = 3600 / Pace (sec/km)
Useful for treadmill translation and cross-unit planning.
Riegel projection
T2 = T1 * (D2 / D1)^1.06
Empirical projection model from Riegel (1981) for equivalent-distance planning.
Imperial pace conversion
Pace (sec/mile) = Finish Time (sec) / 1
Converts the same finish time to min/mile pace context.
Worked examples
Example 1: converting the overall benchmark
7:04 = 424 seconds
Pace (sec/km) = 424 / 1.6093 = 263.5 sec/km = 4:23/km
Pace (sec/mile) = 424 / 1 = 424 sec/mile = 7:04/mi
Speed = 13.66 km/h
Example 2: distance projection from benchmark anchor
Male age 30 intermediate benchmark = 06:38.
T2 = 398 * (5 / 1.6093)^1.06 = 1,324 sec = 22:04 for 5K
Projection models are planning anchors, not guaranteed outcomes.
Practical pacing framework
Opening 400m
Run controlled rather than sprinting out of the start to protect final-lap quality.
Middle 800m
Lock rhythm and cadence; this section is usually the largest performance separator.
Final 400m
Progress effort decisively and finish with form discipline under high fatigue.
Common mistakes that distort comparisons
- Comparing courses with different terrain and conditions without adjustment context.
- Treating a benchmark table as an absolute rule instead of a descriptive distribution snapshot.
- Using stale race anchors from a different training phase to set current targets.
- Ignoring split quality and focusing only on finish-time headline numbers.
Frequently asked questions
Is a 7:00 mile a good time?
A 7:00 mile is a strong recreational benchmark for many runners. It is best used as a progression target in a broader training cycle.
Why do mile benchmark tables and official records differ?
Benchmark tables summarize broad population data. Official records represent the fastest certified performances and are maintained separately.
Should mile pacing start fast?
Starting too aggressively often causes late slowdown. Most runners execute better with controlled opening pace and progressive finishing effort.
Can mile performance estimate 5K potential?
Yes, as an anchor. Projection methods are useful for planning, but distance-specific conditioning remains the deciding factor.
References
Run Regimen benchmark data and editorial policy
Internal benchmark snapshot context used for the age-and-ability tables
World Athletics records listings
Official records reference context
Athletic records and human endurance
Riegel (1981), PMID: 7235349
Endurance exercise performance: the physiology of champions
Joyner and Coyle (2008), PMID: 17901124
Pacing strategies in athletic competition
Abbiss and Laursen (2008), PMID: 18278984
Use your result in the right calculator
Move from benchmark reading to actionable pacing and training targets with these tools.
Editorial references
- Run Regimen benchmark data and editorial policy
Internal benchmark snapshot context used for the age-and-ability tables
- World Athletics records listings
Official records reference context
- Athletic records and human endurance
Riegel (1981), PMID: 7235349
- Endurance exercise performance: the physiology of champions
Joyner and Coyle (2008), PMID: 17901124
- Pacing strategies in athletic competition
Abbiss and Laursen (2008), PMID: 18278984