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Walking Pace Calculator

Solve any pace × time × distance question — walking, jogging, or running. Plus calorie burn estimate via Ainsworth 2011 METs, intensity classification via Tudor-Locke steps-per-minute, and Cooper test conversion.

Pace, speed, distance — the relationships

Three numbers form a triangle: pace (time per unit distance), distance covered, and total time. Know any two, solve for the third. Pace is the runner\'s metric (minutes per km or mile); speed is the walker\'s/cyclist\'s metric (km/h or mph). They\'re reciprocals: pace of 10 min/km = speed of 6 km/h. Most people are bad at converting between them mentally, which is why a single calculator that handles all three is useful.

What pace means for intensity

The Ainsworth Compendium MET values for walking and running map cleanly onto pace:

Tudor-Locke step-rate intensity classification

Catrine Tudor-Locke\'s 2018 cadence-and-intensity research established practical thresholds:

These thresholds work for most adults regardless of stride length, which is why "100 steps per minute" is a more reliable definition of brisk walking than "3.5 mph" for the general population.

The 10,000 steps target — the real evidence

The 10,000 steps/day target originated as a 1965 marketing campaign by Japanese pedometer brand "Manpo-kei" (literally "ten-thousand step meter"). For decades it had no scientific basis. Recent research has now validated it — partly. The 2019 Lee et al. study in JAMA Internal Medicine tracked 16,741 older women and found significantly reduced mortality at 4,400 steps/day, with risk continuing to drop until plateauing around 7,500 steps. The 2022 Paluch et al. meta-analysis (Lancet Public Health, 47,000 adults) showed a non-linear benefit curve: each 1,000 step increase from 0 to ~8,000 reduced mortality risk, then flattened. For most adults, 7,500–10,000 steps/day is the sweet spot — higher counts provide diminishing returns.

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Frequently asked questions

What's a good walking pace for general fitness?
The 2018 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans recommend 150–300 minutes of moderate-intensity activity per week, where "moderate" is defined as walking at a pace where you can talk in short sentences but not sing. For most adults that translates to about 3.5–4 mph (5.6–6.4 km/h), or 15–17 minutes per mile. The 2020 Tudor-Locke step-rate research established 100 steps per minute as a useful threshold — above that pace, walking reliably hits moderate-intensity heart rate zones for most adults.
How fast do I need to walk to call it "brisk"?
The Centers for Disease Control defines brisk walking as 2.5–4 mph (4–6.4 km/h) — but this corresponds to a wide MET range (2.8 to 5 MET). A more reliable definition uses cadence: 100+ steps per minute corresponds to moderate-intensity for most adults regardless of stride length. For people with shorter strides (under 5'4"), 110–120 steps/min may be needed to hit the same intensity. If you can talk but can't comfortably sing, you're in the moderate brisk zone.
How accurate is the calorie estimate?
For steady-state walking and running on flat ground, MET-based estimates are within ±15% of indirect calorimetry for population averages. Individual error can be ±25% due to gait efficiency, body composition, and footwear. For tracking trends — comparing this week to last week — MET-based estimates are reliable. For absolute calorie counts to plan a deficit, treat the number as approximate and check against actual weight changes over 2–3 weeks. Hills, wind resistance, and uneven terrain all increase calorie burn beyond the MET prediction.
Does pace matter more than distance for weight loss?
Distance matters slightly more for total calories. Calories burned ≈ MET × weight × time, but a faster pace bumps the MET multiplier so you cover more distance at a higher rate. The result: walking 3 miles at 4 mph (45 min, ~250 kcal for a 70 kg person) burns more than walking 3 miles at 3 mph (60 min, ~210 kcal) — but covers same distance. For practical purposes, more steps and more total distance per week outperform single hard sessions for sustainable fat loss in non-athletes. The 10,000 steps/day target was originally a marketing number (from a Japanese pedometer brand in 1965) but has been validated by the 2019 Lee et al. study showing reduced mortality at 7,500+ steps/day, plateauing around 10,000.
When does walking become running?
Biomechanically, walking and running differ in the presence of a "flight phase" — in walking, at least one foot is always on the ground; in running, both feet leave the ground briefly during each stride. The pace where this transition happens varies: most adults transition from walking to jogging around 4.5–5 mph (7.2–8 km/h). Competitive racewalkers can sustain 9+ mph by lengthening stride dramatically, but for everyday walkers the metabolic cost of fast walking exceeds the cost of running at the same speed above ~5 mph — at which point switching to a slow jog is more efficient.
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