How it works
pace = 60 ÷ speed; equivalent flat speed = speed × (1 + 4.5 × grade)
Pace is just the inverse of speed: at 6 mph you cover a mile in 60 ÷ 6 = 10 minutes. The incline adjustment comes from the ACSM running equation, which adds an oxygen cost for climbing: VO₂ = 0.2 × speed + 0.9 × speed × grade + 3.5 (speed in metres per minute). Setting the oxygen cost of running up a grade equal to running faster on the flat gives equivalent flat speed = speed × (1 + 4.5 × grade), so the equivalent flat pace is your treadmill pace divided by (1 + 4.5 × grade). That is the physiological basis for the popular advice to set the treadmill to 1% — at typical speeds it roughly offsets the lack of wind resistance and the belt’s assistance, making indoor effort match the road.
Sources
- ACSM running metabolic equation American College of Sports Medicine — VO₂ = 0.2·S + 0.9·S·grade + 3.5 (S in m/min); the basis for the incline-equivalent pace.
- The 1% treadmill adjustment Jones, A. M., & Doust, J. H. (1996). “A 1% treadmill grade most accurately reflects the energetic cost of outdoor running.” Journal of Sports Sciences 14(4), 321–327.
- Pace–speed relationship Pace is the reciprocal of speed; one mile is 1.609344 km, used to convert between mph/min-per-mile and km-h/min-per-km.
FAQ
How do I convert treadmill speed to pace?
Divide 60 by the speed in mph to get minutes per mile, or 60 by the speed in km/h to get minutes per kilometre. For example, 6 mph is 60 ÷ 6 = 10:00 per mile. The calculator does both and shows them side by side.
Why set the treadmill to 1% incline?
Indoors there is no air resistance and the belt helps pull your legs back, so the same belt speed is slightly easier than running outdoors. Research found that a 1% grade most closely matches the energy cost of outdoor running at typical training speeds, which is why many coaches recommend it.
How does incline change my equivalent pace?
Running uphill costs extra oxygen, so a given belt speed at incline is worth a faster flat pace. The calculator estimates the equivalent flat-ground pace as your treadmill pace divided by (1 + 4.5 × grade), based on the ACSM equation. At 6 mph, a 2% incline is worth about 9:11 per mile on the flat.
Is treadmill pace the same as outdoor pace?
Not exactly. On a flat belt the effort is a touch easier than outdoors; with incline it can be harder. Use the equivalent flat pace to compare indoor sessions with your outdoor running and race goals more fairly.
Does the equivalent pace account for downhill?
No. The adjustment models uphill grades, where the extra cost is well described by the ACSM equation. Downhill running has a more complex, less predictable energy cost, so this tool treats only level and uphill settings.
What speeds and inclines can I enter?
Any realistic treadmill setting — enter the belt speed in mph or km/h and the incline as a percentage. The calculator returns pace per mile and kilometre plus the incline-adjusted equivalent flat pace.
Equivalent-pace figures are estimates from the ACSM population equation, not exact measurements; individual economy and treadmill calibration vary. General information for training, not medical or coaching advice.