Calculate swimming time for any distance based on pace. Estimate split times, convert between swimming units, and compare paces across strokes and distances.
Knowing your swimming pace and predicted times is essential for training, racing, and improvement tracking. Whether you're training for a triathlon, preparing for a masters swim meet, or working toward open water events, understanding the relationship between pace, distance, and time allows you to set realistic goals and structure effective workouts.
Swimming pace is typically measured in minutes per 100 meters (or 100 yards), and even small pace differences compound dramatically over longer distances. A 5-second difference per 100m translates to nearly 2 minutes over a 1500m swim and almost 4 minutes over a mile. This sensitivity makes precise pace tracking essential for competitive swimmers.
This calculator converts between swimming paces and distances, generates split tables for any distance, and provides comparative pace analysis. It handles both metric and imperial units and supports common race distances from 50m sprints to marathon open-water swims. Check the example with realistic values before reporting.
Swimming pace calculations require precise time-distance math that's easy to get wrong, especially across different pool lengths and units. This calculator eliminates arithmetic errors and provides context for your pace through benchmarks and comparisons. Keep these notes focused on your operational context. Tie the context to the calculator’s intended domain. Use this clarification to avoid ambiguous interpretation.
Total Time = (Distance / 100) × Pace per 100m. Speed (m/s) = 100 / (Pace in seconds). Per-Lap Time = Pool Length / Speed. Yard-to-Meter conversion: pace/100yd × 1.1 ≈ pace/100m.
Result: Total: 26:15, Speed: 0.95 m/s
1:45 = 105 seconds per 100m. For 1500m: 15 × 105 = 1575 seconds = 26:15. Speed = 100/105 = 0.95 m/s = 3.43 km/h. In a 25m pool, this means 60 laps at ~26.25 seconds per lap.
Like running, swimming training uses pace zones. Zone 1 (recovery) is very easy — 130-140% of race pace. Zone 2 (endurance/base) is comfortable — 110-120% of race pace. Zone 3 (threshold/CSS) is comfortably hard — 100-105% of CSS. Zone 4 (VO2 max) is hard — 95-100% of 200m race pace. Zone 5 (sprint) is maximal effort — 50m/100m race pace. Most training should be in Zones 1-3, with targeted Zone 4-5 work for speed development.
Swimmers often switch between 25m (short course meters, SCM), 50m (long course meters, LCM), and 25y (short course yards, SCY) pools. Short course times are faster due to more wall push-offs. General conversion: LCM time × 0.89 ≈ SCY time. SCY time × 1.12 ≈ LCM time. SCM is between the two. For a 100m freestyle: if you swim 1:30 SCY, expect approximately 1:41 LCM. These conversions are approximate and vary by event distance.
Open water swimming has exploded in popularity with events ranging from 750m (triathlon sprint swim) to marathon swims (10km+). The key distances: Sprint triathlon 750m, Olympic tri 1500m, open water 5K, open water 10K (Olympic event), English Channel 34km, Catalina Channel 32.5km. For open water, pace calculations must factor in currents, navigation, and temperature — experienced open water swimmers add 15-20% to their pool pace for calm conditions and more for challenging conditions.
For adult recreational swimmers: 2:30-3:00 per 100m is typical. Club swimmers: 1:30-2:00. Competitive age-group: 1:10-1:30. Collegiate/elite: 0:55-1:10. World-class: under 0:55. These paces are for freestyle; other strokes are generally 10-30% slower.
Multiply pace per 100 yards by approximately 1.1 to get pace per 100 meters. For example, 1:30 per 100 yards ≈ 1:39 per 100 meters. Conversely, multiply meters pace by 0.9 to estimate yards pace.
Pool swimmers benefit from push-offs at each wall (adds speed every 25/50m), controlled water conditions, and lane lines that reduce waves. Open water adds navigation (sighting), currents, waves, and no wall assists. Open water times are typically 10-20% slower than pool times.
Typical pace slowdown: 50m to 200m adds about 5-8 seconds/100m. 200m to 1500m adds another 10-15 seconds/100m. 1500m to 5km adds 5-10 more seconds/100m. Sprint events are significantly faster than distance events.
Race pace training should be one component of a varied program. Most training volume should be at "base" or "endurance" pace (CSS + 5-10 seconds/100m). Threshold work is at CSS pace. Race-specific sets should comprise 15-25% of weekly volume.
CSS is your sustainable threshold pace, calculated from the difference between 400m and 200m time trials. CSS represents the pace you can maintain for about 30 minutes and is the foundation for structured swim training programs.