Half Marathon6 minMay 5, 2026

Half Marathon Finish Times: A Data Breakdown of the World's Most Popular Race Distance

The half marathon is the fastest-growing race distance globally. We break down finish time distributions, age group benchmarks, and what the data says about setting realistic goals.

🔬
RunDataLab Research Team
Analysis backed by millions of race results

The half marathon has become the world's most popular race distance for good reason: it's long enough to feel like a real achievement, short enough to train for in 10–12 weeks, and just forgiving enough to allow a second attempt without months of recovery.

According to RunRepeat's analysis of over 100 million race results, half marathon participation grew by 93% between 2008 and 2018 — faster than any other distance. That growth has brought a much wider range of athletes to the start line, which means the finish time data looks very different from a decade ago.

The Global Average

RunRepeat's State of Running report puts the global half marathon averages at:

  • Men: ~2:02
  • Women: ~2:16

As with marathon times, these averages have been slowly increasing over time — not because runners are getting slower, but because the sport is drawing in more participants at all ends of the ability spectrum.

💡
Info

These global averages include all finisher levels across all race types, from elite road races to charity events with significant walk/run contingents. Competitive club runners will typically cluster well below these averages.

Finish Time Percentiles

Here is how half marathon times distribute across the full participant population:

Men

Finish TimeApproximate Percentile
Sub 1:10Top 1%
Sub 1:20Top 4%
Sub 1:30Top 12%
Sub 1:40Top 25%
Sub 1:50Top 40%
Sub 2:00Top 55%
Sub 2:15Top 72%
Sub 2:30Top 84%
Sub 3:00Top 95%

Women

Finish TimeApproximate Percentile
Sub 1:20Top 1%
Sub 1:30Top 5%
Sub 1:40Top 13%
Sub 1:52Top 27%
Sub 2:02Top 43%
Sub 2:15Top 58%
Sub 2:30Top 74%
Sub 2:45Top 85%
Sub 3:00Top 93%
🎯

Key Takeaway

Sub-1:30 for men and sub-1:45 for women puts you in the top 12–15% of all half marathon finishers globally. These are genuinely strong times that require dedicated training, despite what some running communities might imply.

Age Group Performance

Half marathon times follow a similar arc to marathon times: a performance peak in the late 20s to early 30s, followed by a gradual decline of roughly 30–60 seconds per year per decade after 40.

Age GroupMen AverageWomen Average
18–241:572:14
25–291:542:11
30–341:522:09
35–391:552:12
40–442:012:18
45–492:082:26
50–542:172:36
55–592:292:51
60–642:443:08

The Relationship Between Half Marathon and Marathon Time

The half marathon is the most reliable predictor of marathon performance. The most widely used conversion — multiplying your half marathon time by 2.1 — assumes a moderate level of fatigue and pacing discipline over the full distance.

In practice, the data shows that most recreational runners slow more than this in the marathon:

Half Marathon TimeConservative Marathon EstimateOptimistic (with targeted training)
1:303:10–3:203:05
1:453:42–3:553:36
2:004:15–4:304:08
2:154:45–5:054:38
2:305:20–5:405:10

The "conservative" column reflects what most runners actually achieve on race day. The "optimistic" column requires specific marathon preparation including long runs, adequate weekly volume, and good race pacing.

The Half Marathon as a Goal in Itself

One useful insight from the data: runners who treat the half marathon as their primary goal — rather than a stepping stone to the marathon — tend to set faster half marathon times. Training specifically for 21km with the right mix of threshold work, tempo runs, and long runs consistently outperforms "base marathon training" for half marathon performance.

If sub-1:45 is your half marathon goal, it's worth building a program specifically around that target rather than running it as a long training run within marathon prep.


Data sources: RunRepeat State of Running 2019 (107.9M results, 1986–2018); World Athletics road race statistics; major race organisers (Berlin, NYC Half, Copenhagen).