Sub-4 Hour Marathon Pace Chart: Splits, Pace per Mile, and Pace per Km
Sub-4 Hour Marathon Pace Chart
Required pace per km
5:41/km over the full official marathon distance.
Required pace per mile
9:09/mi with mile checkpoints calculated from the exact underlying pace.
Halfway split
2:00:00 if the pace is held evenly through halfway.
All calculations use the full official marathon distance of 42.195 kilometers, as defined by World Athletics.
Interactive Marathon pace calculator
Enter a goal time or target pace to see the equivalent Marathon finish time, pace per kilometer, pace per mile, and practical cumulative splits. This calculator assumes even pacing.
Use `mm:ss` or `hh:mm:ss`. Bare numbers are rejected to avoid ambiguity.
Marathon goal presets
Quick coaching note
Use the opening 5K or 10K to stay calm, fuel early, and avoid drifting faster than plan. Even or slightly negative split logic is usually safer than trying to gain time before halfway.
Estimated finish time
4:00:00
Pace per kilometer
5:41/km
Pace per mile
9:09/mi
Kilometer checkpoints
Mile checkpoints
Halfway
2:00:00
Final 10K
56:53
Pacing interpretation
This is a common marathon goal range. The simplest way to protect it is to run the opening 5K and 10K slightly calmer than race-day adrenaline suggests.
Use the opening 5K or 10K to stay calm, fuel early, and avoid drifting faster than plan. Even or slightly negative split logic is usually safer than trying to gain time before halfway.
Mile-based cumulative splits are calculated from the exact pace before display rounding, so the final mile checkpoint can differ by a second from multiplying the rounded pace label.
Sub-4 Hour Marathon split reference
These are cumulative checkpoints, not per-segment splits. Use the buttons to switch between mile and kilometer views while keeping the same official-distance marathon math.
On-page reference
| Mile | Cumulative split |
|---|---|
| 1 | 9:09 |
| 2 | 18:18 |
| 3 | 27:28 |
| 4 | 36:37 |
| 5 | 45:46 |
| 6 | 54:55 |
| 7 | 1:04:05 |
| 8 | 1:13:14 |
| 9 | 1:22:23 |
| 10 | 1:31:32 |
| 11 | 1:40:41 |
| 12 | 1:49:51 |
| 13 | 1:59:00 |
| 13.1 | 2:00:00 |
| 14 | 2:08:09 |
| 15 | 2:17:18 |
| 16 | 2:26:28 |
| 17 | 2:35:37 |
| 18 | 2:44:46 |
| 19 | 2:53:55 |
| 20 | 3:03:05 |
| 21 | 3:12:14 |
| 22 | 3:21:23 |
| 23 | 3:30:32 |
| 24 | 3:39:41 |
| 25 | 3:48:51 |
| 26 | 3:58:00 |
| 26.2 | 4:00:00 |
How to use this chart
Treat these numbers as cumulative checkpoints for a clean, even-paced race. In the real world, staying slightly under the listed pace early can be safer than trying to sit exactly on the edge of the target from the gun.
The mile view is useful if your watch and race feedback are mostly imperial.
If you want broader comparisons across more finish-time goals, use the full marathon pace chart.
What this pace target really means
A sub-4 marathon is one of the most common time goals in road running because it is ambitious, practical, and easy to track. It still punishes early pacing mistakes and poor fuel timing.
For most runners, sub-4 is best paced with a calm opening 5K or 10K, stable middle miles, and enough restraint that fueling and rhythm still hold together after 20 miles.
How to use this pace chart on race day
Use checkpoints, not noisy instant pace
Watch pace can jump around. Official markers and elapsed time are usually more reliable for marathon execution.
Do not bank time early
The most common sub-4 mistake is going out faster than goal pace because race-day effort feels easy early. That usually shows up as late-race fade rather than a meaningful time gain.
Assume ideal arithmetic, not guaranteed outcome
The chart tells you what pace the clock requires. It does not prove readiness, guarantee execution, or remove the impact of weather, fueling, and terrain.
Methodology
Time from kilometer pace
Marathon finish time = pace per km × 42.195
At 5:41/km, the projected finish is 4:00:00.
Time from mile pace
Marathon finish time = pace per mile × 26.2188
At 9:09/mi, the projected finish is 4:00:00.
Pace from finish time
Pace per km = finish time ÷ 42.195
A 4:00:00 marathon equals about 5:41/km after rounding.
Mile pace from finish time
Pace per mile = finish time ÷ 26.2188
A 4:00:00 marathon equals about 9:09/mi after rounding.
This page assumes even pacing and ideal execution. Mile-based cumulative checkpoints are calculated from the exact pace before display rounding, so a late split can differ by a second from multiplying the rounded pace label.
Why careful pacing matters in the marathon
General pacing research such as Abbiss and Laursen supports the value of disciplined effort regulation, and marathon-specific observational work such as Nikolaidis and Knechtle shows that pacing deterioration is common when runners misjudge the early part of the race.
That is why these pages are strict about the arithmetic but conservative about the interpretation: the pace requirement is exact, while the ability to sustain it still depends on training, fueling, conditions, and race-day decisions.
Frequently asked questions
What pace is a sub-4 hour marathon?
A sub-4 hour marathon requires about 5:41 per kilometer or 9:09 per mile when calculations use the full official marathon distance of 42.195 kilometers.
What is the halfway split for a sub-4 marathon?
The halfway split for exactly 4:00:00 is 2:00:00. That does not mean you should force the early miles if conditions, terrain, or race-day nerves are pushing effort too high.
What are key sub-4 marathon splits?
Useful checkpoints include about 28:26 for 5K, 56:53 for 10K, 2:00:00 at halfway, and roughly 3:19:05 at 35K if you are holding the pace evenly.
Does this use the full official marathon distance?
Yes. The page uses the official marathon distance of 42.195 kilometers rather than simplifying the race to 26.2 miles in the underlying math.
Why can a late mile split differ by one second from the rounded pace label?
Displayed pace labels are rounded for readability, but cumulative mile checkpoints are calculated from the exact pace before rounding. That can produce a one-second difference late in the race.
Related tools and guides
Compare this exact goal with the broader range of marathon finish-time rows and pacing options.
Add broader benchmark or companion-distance context when you want to pressure-test the goal pace.
Convert custom pace and finish-time targets when you want more than the fixed chart view.
Build more detailed checkpoint plans and custom segment breakdowns beyond the standard chart.
Turn a goal pace into a fuller marathon execution plan with practical strategy context.
Check whether recent shorter-distance performances line up with the marathon goal you want to chase.
More marathon planning context: Marathon Running Times, Half Marathon Pace Chart, and VDOT Calculator.
Editorial references
- Pacing strategies in athletic competition
Abbiss and Laursen (2008), PMID: 18278984
- Pacing of women and men in half-marathon and marathon races
Nikolaidis and Knechtle (2019), PMID: 30646638
- Sex differences in pacing during half-marathon and marathon race
Nikolaidis et al. (2019), PMID: 30897961
- Marathon
World Athletics