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5 Mile Running Standards

What Is a Good 5 Mile Time?

Compare 5 Mile times by experience level, including world record, elite, advanced, intermediate and beginner benchmarks.

Typical 5 Mile running standards

These are broad comparison benchmarks rather than official race classifications. Courses, weather, training, pacing and field strength all matter.

Experience LevelMenWomenNotes
World Best22:0524:27Approximate all-time road best reference.
Elite22-28 min25-32 minHighly competitive road running.
Advanced30-40 min34-45 minExperienced runners with strong endurance.
Intermediate40-55 min45-62 minRegular runners with consistent training.
Beginner55-75 min62-85 minNewer runners building endurance.

What these 5 Mile standards mean

5 mile races sit between 5K speed and 10K endurance, so they are a useful test of sustained tempo running.

A good 5 mile time usually reflects the ability to stay controlled after the opening miles rather than simply starting fast.

Because 5 mile races are less common than 5K or 10K, treat the bands as practical guidance rather than precise rankings.

Example 5 Mile result comparisons

These examples show how to read a finish time in context. Use the table above for the full range.

Example TimeComparisonWhat It Usually Suggests
65:00Beginner rangeA reasonable result for a newer runner extending beyond 5K distance.
50:00Intermediate rangeShows steady aerobic fitness and the ability to hold a purposeful pace for several miles.
38:00Advanced rangeA strong recreational performance that usually requires threshold-focused training.

How to compare your 5 Mile result

  • Compare 5 mile results with 10K fitness, because the effort profile is closer to 10K than to a short track race.
  • Check whether the course is certified and whether conditions were similar before comparing personal bests.
  • Use mile splits to see whether the first two miles were too aggressive.

Methodology

How these 5 Mile benchmarks are estimated

  • World-record and elite rows are anchored to published all-time lists where an official event list exists, then rounded into practical comparison bands for recreational runners.
  • Beginner, intermediate and advanced rows are broad recreational bands, estimated from common race-result distributions, coaching conventions and the pace relationships between adjacent distances.
  • Age-group rows are not official age-grading tables. They are practical comparison bands that increase gradually by age group while preserving the same beginner, intermediate and advanced meaning.
  • Distances without official World Athletics world records, such as 5 mile and 10 mile road races, use world-best/reference language and road-racing statistics rather than official-record language.
  • Benchmarks are reviewed when the race-content data changes, and record-level rows should be checked against the linked source lists before publication updates.

Sources reviewed

Last updated June 2, 2026 by the PaceConverter editorial team. Read the editorial policy.

What makes a good 5 Mile time?

A good 5-mile time depends on the runner you are comparing against. Age, sex, experience level, weekly training, race conditions and pacing all change the context.

Use the standards above as broad guidance, then use the related calculator to convert your target time into pace and splits.

Related 5 Mile Tools

Frequently asked questions

What is considered a good 5 Mile time?

A good 5 Mile time depends on age, sex, training background and experience level. Intermediate runners are usually faster than beginners, while advanced and elite runners are significantly faster.

What is a beginner 5 Mile time?

Beginner 5 Mile times vary widely, but newer runners usually focus on completing the distance with even pacing before chasing advanced benchmarks.

How should I compare my 5 Mile time?

Compare your time against runners with similar age, sex, training history and race conditions rather than using one universal standard.