How it works
first half = T/2 · (1 + p/2), second half = T/2 · (1 − p/2)
Split the goal time T into two halves around a chosen negative-split fraction p (your percentage ÷ 100). The opening half is run slightly slower — T/2 · (1 + p/2) — and the closing half exactly as much faster — T/2 · (1 − p/2) — so the two always add back to T with no drift. A 2% negative split over a 4:00:00 marathon, for example, means a 2:01:12 first half and a 1:58:48 second half. Each half’s pace is its time divided by half the distance, and we compute everything in metres and seconds and convert to your unit only at the edge, so the mile and kilometre splits never disagree by rounding.
Sources
- Negative-split pacing in endurance racing Even-to-negative pacing yields the best endurance outcomes; positive splits (fading) cost time. The split-distribution model used here keeps the two halves summing exactly to the goal time.
- Why even/negative beats going out fast Riegel, P. S. (1981). “Athletic Records and Human Endurance.” American Scientist 69(3), 285–290 — the endurance basis for steady, controlled pacing.
- Observed at the elite level Marathon world records are routinely run as even-to-negative splits, with the second half equal to or faster than the first.
FAQ
What is a negative split?
Running the second half of a race faster than the first. If you cover the opening half in 55:00 and the closing half in 53:00, you have run a negative split. It is widely regarded as the most efficient way to race distance events.
How big a negative split should I aim for?
For most runners a 1–3% negative split is realistic and safe — small enough to bank energy without going out too slow. Elite marathoners often run within a minute or two between halves. Start conservative; a controlled even or slightly negative split almost always beats fading.
Why are negative splits faster overall?
Starting too fast spikes fatigue and lactate early, forcing a costly slowdown later. A slightly slower, controlled first half preserves glycogen and form, so the time you "lose" early is more than repaid by holding or lifting the pace when others fade.
How do I actually run a negative split?
Use the first-half pace from this calculator as a ceiling for the opening miles, settle into rhythm, and only pick up the pace once you are past halfway and feeling strong. A GPS watch with per-lap pace alerts makes the plan easy to hold.
Does the split table assume the exact half-distance?
The per-mile and per-kilometre splits are built so the two halves of the race meet your chosen split, and the cumulative time of the final segment always lands exactly on your goal time. Partial final segments absorb any rounding so the table stays consistent.
Can I use this for any distance?
Yes — 5K, 10K, half marathon, marathon or any custom distance. Enter the distance, your goal time and the negative-split percentage, and the calculator builds the matching split table in miles or kilometres.
Split paces are a mathematical pacing plan, not a guarantee of fitness or finish time. Conditions, terrain and fuelling all affect the day. General information for training, not medical or coaching advice.