The 5K is the most democratic distance in running. It's short enough for beginners to complete, fast enough for elites to make headlines, and thanks to parkrun, it now has the richest dataset of any road race distance in the world.
With data from millions of timed 5K runs globally, we can answer the question precisely: what's a good 5K time, and where does yours rank?
The Real Average 5K Time
Forget the polished race results you see at elite events. The typical recreational 5K runner — the person who shows up at a local parkrun or community race on a Saturday morning — runs very differently to what many training guides suggest.
Data from parkrun events globally and Strava aggregates shows:
- Men's average 5K time: ~27–28 minutes
- Women's average 5K time: ~31–32 minutes
These figures reflect mass participation events. Purely competitive road races attract a faster self-selected field and run closer to 23–24 min (men) and 27–29 min (women).
Parkrun deliberately includes walkers and run/walkers. Roughly 15–20% of parkrun participants walk all or part of the course. If you're a continuous runner, your time is already faster than a large slice of participants.
Finish Time Percentiles
Where does your time rank among 5K runners? This table is based on aggregate data from mass participation 5K events and published race statistics.
Men
| Finish Time | Approximate Ranking |
|---|---|
| Sub 17:00 | Top 1% |
| Sub 20:00 | Top 7% |
| Sub 22:00 | Top 15% |
| Sub 25:00 | Top 30% |
| Sub 28:00 | Top 48% (near median) |
| Sub 32:00 | Top 65% |
| Sub 38:00 | Top 80% |
| Sub 45:00 | Top 92% |
Women
| Finish Time | Approximate Ranking |
|---|---|
| Sub 20:00 | Top 1% |
| Sub 23:00 | Top 7% |
| Sub 26:00 | Top 18% |
| Sub 29:00 | Top 33% |
| Sub 32:00 | Top 50% (near median) |
| Sub 37:00 | Top 68% |
| Sub 43:00 | Top 83% |
| Sub 50:00 | Top 93% |
How Times Improve With Experience
One of the clearest findings from parkrun data is how dramatically new runners improve. Academic research on parkrun participants shows that consistent 5K runners see their biggest gains in the first 10–20 runs as the body adapts to the demands of running.
The general pattern across thousands of runners:
- Runs 1–10: Largest single-session improvements. Fitness adapts rapidly.
- Runs 10–30: Continued improvement but at a slower rate. Form and pacing become more efficient.
- Runs 30–50: Plateau begins unless training changes (adding intervals, tempo runs, increased volume).
- Runs 50+: Improvement requires deliberate training structure. Running more 5Ks alone won't make you faster.
Key Takeaway
If you've been running 5Ks for less than 6 months, your time is almost certainly still improving on its own. If you've plateaued, the data points clearly to one fix: add structured workouts (intervals and threshold runs) rather than just doing more easy runs.
Age Group Benchmarks
5K times peak in the mid-20s and decline gradually with age, but the decline is slower than most people expect — particularly for those who train consistently.
| Age Group | Men Competitive Average | Women Competitive Average |
|---|---|---|
| 18–24 | 22:30 | 27:00 |
| 25–34 | 23:00 | 27:30 |
| 35–44 | 24:30 | 29:00 |
| 45–54 | 26:30 | 31:00 |
| 55–64 | 29:00 | 34:30 |
| 65–74 | 32:30 | 39:00 |
"Competitive average" means runners who race regularly at local events — not all-participant averages.
The Gender Gap
Across 5K distances, women run approximately 15–20% slower than men on average. This gap is consistent across age groups and fitness levels, and reflects physiological differences in oxygen-carrying capacity and muscle mass.
The gap actually narrows slightly at ultra-endurance distances, but for 5K and 10K it remains stable at roughly one in six minutes of finish time difference.
Data sources: Parkrun global statistics; Strava Global Running Report; RunRepeat State of Running (107.9M results); academic research on parkrun participation patterns (PMC9959326).