Boston Marathon Pace Calculator

Set your goal time and this Boston Marathon pace calculator builds an **even-effort** split table for the actual Hopkinton-to-Boylston course — banking effort on the early downhill, holding back on the Newton Hills and Heartbreak, and converting your finish goal into a realistic pace for every section. It is the difference between a flat pace chart and a plan that respects the hills that decide Boston.

Goal finish time
Pace unit
Even-effort splits for a 4:00:00 Boston Marathon, paced to the course profile.
SegmentGradeTarget paceElapsed
Hopkinton plunge (Start–10K)-0.7%8:59 /mi0:55:47
Framingham & Natick (10–21K)-0.3%9:11 /mi1:58:30
Wellesley & the half (21–25K)-0.4%9:06 /mi2:21:08
Newton Hills (25–32.5K)+0.4%9:31 /mi3:05:29
Heartbreak Hill (~32.5–33.3K)+3.4%11:09 /mi3:11:02
Boston College descent (33.3–40K)-1.1%8:46 /mi3:47:33
Boylston finish (40–42.2K)-0.4%9:08 /mi4:00:00
Goal average pace9:09 /mi
Even-effort pace9:19 /mi
Fastest split (Boston College descent)8:46 /mi
Toughest split (Heartbreak Hill)11:09 /mi
Even-effort planHold ~9:19 /mi of effort the whole way: ease to 11:09 /mi on Heartbreak Hill (~32.5–33.3K), let it roll to 8:46 /mi on Boston College descent (33.3–40K), and you finish in 4:00:00.

4 · 0 · 0 · min/mi

The Boston Marathon course

140 m net downhill (145 m → 5 m).

Boston is a net-downhill, point-to-point course that flatters the first half and punishes the second. From Hopkinton the road plunges roughly 100 metres in the opening 10 km — gloriously fast, and the single biggest mistake on the course: hammer it and your quads are gone before the hills. Through Framingham and Natick the gentle descent is genuinely free speed, and Wellesley’s scream tunnel marks halfway with a sharp drop into Newton Lower Falls. Then the course turns. The four Newton Hills climb from 25 km to Heartbreak Hill at about 33 km — a ~3.4% pitch that tops out near mile 20.5, precisely where the marathon wall lives. The reward is a long, quad-shredding descent past Boston College that can hurt as much as the climbs if you let it run away. An even-effort plan slows your target pace on every rise and only lets it loose where the course gives it back. Cross-check your number against our grade-adjusted pace calculator, and if you are chasing a qualifier, the Boston qualifier calculator shows the time your age group needs.

Course segments

Race-day weather

The Boston Marathon is run in April. A typical race morning is around 53 °F with a dew point near 40 °F (a temperature-plus-dew-point sum of 93), so no heat penalty in a typical year. If the forecast is warmer than usual, slow your goal with the heat-adjusted pace calculator before race day — heat is the most common reason a goal pace falls apart.

Boston qualifying

Boston is the race the whole Boston-qualifier system is built around. To see the time your age group and gender need, use the Boston qualifier calculator . Meeting the standard does not guarantee entry in oversubscribed years, when a cut-off buffer applies.

How this plan is built

Splits come from an even-effort, grade-adjusted model: your goal time is spread across the course by each segment's energy cost, so you hold the same effort up the hills and down them instead of chasing one flat clock pace. See the generic marathon pace calculator for a course-blind even pace, or browse marathon pace calculators by course for other majors.

Sources

FAQ

Is the Boston Marathon course downhill or hard?

Both. Boston drops about 140 m from Hopkinton to Boylston Street, so it looks fast on paper, but the Newton Hills and Heartbreak Hill arrive at miles 16–21 when your legs are already tired, and the steep early and late descents pound your quads. It is a deceptively demanding course, not a fast one — which is why even-effort pacing matters here more than almost anywhere.

How should I pace the Newton Hills and Heartbreak Hill?

By effort, not by pace. Hold the same effort you held on the flat and accept that your per-mile pace will slow by 15–30 seconds on each climb — that is what the split table above does for you. Heartbreak Hill is only about a 27 m climb at ~3.4%, but it crests near mile 20.5, so the runners who survive it are the ones who banked effort, not seconds, on the downhill start.

Why is the first half of Boston so dangerous?

The Hopkinton downhill drops roughly 100 m in the first 10 km. It feels effortless, so most runners bank time well under goal pace — and arrive at the Newton Hills with quads that are already micro-damaged from the eccentric pounding of the descent. The even-effort plan deliberately holds your early splits slower than your average goal pace.

What is the weather usually like for the Boston Marathon?

Patriots’ Day (mid-to-late April) typically starts around 53 °F with a dew point near 40 °F — comfortable for racing in most years. But Boston has fat weather tails: 2012 and 2004 were brutally hot, 2018 was a cold Nor’easter, and the prevailing west-southwest wind can be a tailwind or, in a storm, a punishing headwind. In a warm year, slow your goal pace using the heat estimate on this page.

Does this calculator help me qualify for Boston (BQ)?

This page paces the Boston course itself. To find the time your age and gender need to qualify, use the linked Boston qualifier calculator — and remember that meeting the published standard does not guarantee entry in oversubscribed years, when a cutoff buffer applies.

Should I run even splits or negative splits at Boston?

Neither in clock terms — you want even effort, which on this course means slightly slower-than-average early (down the Hopkinton hill, to protect your quads), steady through the middle, slower again up the Newton Hills, then whatever your legs have left on the descent to Boylston. The split table here translates that effort into the actual pace for each section.

Estimates only. Segment elevations are approximate, drawn from public course profiles, and your real splits depend on fitness, fuelling, weather and pacing discipline on the day. Not medical or coaching advice.