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How Long Does It Take To Run a Half Marathon?

by lifeofamissfit
How Long Does It Take To Run a Half Marathon

Thinking about doing a half? But how long does it take to run a half marathon? There is often a cut off time after about 4 hours. According to My Mottiv, it takes 1 hour, 50 minutes, 15 seconds on average across all genders, and ages to complete a half marathon.

What to expect:

  • What’s a half marathon distance? 13.1 miles
  • Average half marathon times (for women and men)
  • A half marathon training plan
  • Real life top tips for training for a half marathon

What’s a half marathon distance?

A half marathon is 13.1 miles, 21 kilometers.

What’s the average half marathon finish time?

Here’s 2 tables of the men and women’s average time it takes to complete a half marathon in America.  The average time is about 2 hours and 2 minutes for men, and 2 hours and 16 minutes for women.

Average half marathon times in the USA: Beginners to Elite Athletes

Runner Category
Half Marathon Time
Elite Men
Under 60 minutes
Elite Women
Around 65 minutes
Average Men
Around 2 hours and 2 minutes
Average Women
Around 2 hours and 16 minutes
Beginners
2 hours 25 minutes – 2 hours 43 minutes
Intermediate Runners Under 2 hours

This is based on data from Brooks Running.

USATF has published the men and women’s half marathon finish times in America; last updated 2023. Remember this level of runner are athletes who are eligible to enter the Olympic Trials.

Women’s half marathon times in the USA

According to the recent half marathon times in America, elite runners take about 1 hour 10 minutes to finish a half marathon.

Name Time Race Location Date
Fiona O’Keeffe 1:09:34 Raleigh Holiday Half Marathon Raleigh, NC 12/2/2023
Grayson Murphy 1:10:34 Mill Town Half Marathon Everett, WA 4/2/2023
Jenny Simpson 1:10:35 Aramco Houston Half Marathon Houston, TX 1/15/2023

 

Men’s half marathon times in the USA

We can see from this table that the average men’s half marathon time is 1 hour, 59 minutes, and 48 seconds for the above average men. Whereas elite male runners can do it at a 5 minutes per mile pace – that’s fast!

Experience of male runner
Half Marathon Time
Elite Men
4:30-5:00 min/mile pace
Above Average Men Under 1:59:48
Faster Than 50% of Men Under 2 hours
Fastest 10% of Men Under 1:40:35
Fastest 1% of Men Under 1:18:37

Half marathon training plans

Run your first half marathon in just over 3 months

Length: 14 weeks, 4 days on and 3 days rest or cross train

Sample Workout: 12-mile long run. Complete at an easy, conversational pace.

Recommended Experience: For a new runner who has been exercising regularly for at least a year, or someone who has completed a few 5Ks or 10Ks and can complete 6 miles in one workout. This plan peaks at 28 miles in a week with a 12-mile long run.

Week Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
1 Rest 4 miles easy 4 miles easy Rest 4 miles easy Rest 5 miles LSD
2 Rest 4 miles easy 4 miles easy Rest 4 miles easy Rest 7 miles LSD
3 Rest 4 miles easy 4 miles easy Rest 4 miles easy Rest 6 miles LSD
4 Rest 4 miles easy 5 miles easy Rest 4 miles easy Rest 8 miles LSD
5 Rest 4 miles easy 5 miles easy Rest 4 miles easy Rest 6 miles LSD
6 Rest 4 miles easy 6 miles easy Rest 4 miles easy Rest 8 miles LSD
7 Rest 4 miles easy 6 miles easy Rest 4 miles easy Rest 10 miles LSD
8 Rest 4 miles easy 6 miles easy Rest 5 miles easy Rest 8 miles LSD
9 Rest 3 miles easy 6 miles easy Rest 4 miles easy Rest 10-12 miles LSD
10 Rest 4 miles easy 6 miles easy Rest 6 miles easy Rest 8 miles LSD
11 Rest 4 miles easy 6 miles easy Rest 4 miles easy Rest 12 miles LSD
12 Rest 4 miles easy 6 miles easy Rest 4 miles easy Rest
6 miles or 5K Race
13 Rest 3 miles easy 5 miles easy Rest 5 miles easy Rest 8 miles easy
14 Rest Rest 3 miles easy 3 miles easy Rest 2 miles easy Race Day

Note:

  • LSD: Long Slow Distance run
  • Easy: A comfortable, conversational pace
  • Race Day: Your half marathon race

You can use this as a guide and adjust the mileage and intensity as needed based on your fitness level and experience. Always listen to your body and consult with a healthcare professional before starting any new workout routine.

Top tips for training for a half marathon from experience

It will teach you to deal with self doubt and overcome it

You will think you can’t do something. You can’t do a certain mileage, is what the voice in the head will tell you. There was a moment when myself and a fellow runner were training for our half marathon. That day we were doing 6 miles. We were only yards from our training finish line of today’s route, when I had a thought. “So, I  could run through the fire of mile 6.. so could I manage 7? I doubt it”.. But I’d come to learn that that thought was a test.

We added an extra mile on to our route, just to see. Let’s just try the seventh mile.

10 minutes later, I found myself stopped at the finish line. I had ran the full 7 miles. “Look at that grin” my fellow runner told me. We stood together, half laughing, half trying to catch our breath. I used the next moment to take a selfie. And captioned it “we need a ‘I doubted whether I could do 6 and I did 7 instead” selfie.

Doubt kills dreams. It would have been so easy to stop at 6 miles. But actually, I remember reflecting later that day:

“I know what it feels like to stop, I wanted to know what it feels like if I don’t.” -Me.

You’ll learn you might have a competitive streak!

I remember training for my first half marathon with a fellow runner.  We exchanged an “I’ll race ya” glance, we both found a sprinkle of energy and worked together against our barriers. We pushed and pushed and pushed till we blew them down. It was a little like hell but the post-run feeling is a lot like heaven, in fact it’s out of this world.

They say running is like a series of battles between your brain wanting to stop and ‘The Runner You’ wanting to go the extra mile. They are right. You should go the extra mile, it’s never crowded.

If you’re waiting for me to tell you where that energy came from, I’m afraid I disappoint. Neither of us know where the final spark came from, but that’s the magic of running. It digs deep down inside you and, without you even knowing, whispers to you kind words of wisdom.

Your brain will tell ‘The Runner You’ to shut up and stop this pain. But if you can push that voice away and listen carefully, you’ll find that the smallest whisper can be the most powerful voice.

Running is hard! Running a half is even harder

Doing a half marathon is hard. Doing your second half marathon 6 months after your first teaches you lots. Firstly, your first didn’t scare you enough to quit. Secondly, you can still complete another half marathon. Thirdly, you know your strengths. I could go on.

There’s a saying by someone, somewhere and I agree.

“the hardest part about running a half marathon is training for a half marathon and that the best part about running a half marathon is running a half marathon”

This morning, I disagree. I understand that the training is hard and you can enjoy the day. But that doesn’t mean you can just sit back and walk it, enjoying the scenery and not give it everything. A half marathon is hard, whether it’s your first, second or 50th. Every single one is a test; it’s just how that changes.

Your first half marathon tests whether you are physically able to complete the route. My second one tested my mental capacity more than I thought it would. I mean, the sticky swamps of mud were pretty testing 10 miles in.

I spoke with a fellow runner afterwards. And they hit the nail on the head talking about the song: We’re going on a bear hunt’. I remember singing as part of a big camping group a few years ago. It goes something like this.

“We can’t go over it, we can’t go under it, we can’t go round it, oh no we’re gonna have to go through it”

 

What it’s like running a half marathon

In October 2016, I ran my first half marathon in Birmingham at a time of 2:22. March 16th 2017, I ran my second half marathon in IronBridge, with a time of 2:27:25. If you’d have told me during my training “your second will be slower”, I would have been heartbroken and gutted.

“What a waste of training” I would have sulked. But during the race and the moment I crossed the finish line with my (then) partner, I couldn’t have been happier. Let me tell you why.

Control your adrenaline at the start

I’ll be honest, when the klaxon boomed, I thought it would be easy. I was quite wrong because it was the hardest half marathon I have ever done and that’s what my fellow runner said too.

We forgot to pace ourselves because of the sheer adrenaline that rushes through you like electricity through a cable of runners. Naturally then, after 5 miles of a speedy start, consistency was a struggle.

Training taught us to be consistent in a 10 minutes per mile pace, but the race took us to 9 minutes per mile for the first 3 minutes and that taught me that this messes up your race. There’s no other way of putting it.

Hearing “we’re much faster than training” the first time was a confidence boost, but we needed to have been consistent. Don’t get me wrong, I’m chuffed we were almost 2 minutes faster on the first part of the half marathon than our training but it’s hard because the second half is then tough.

Of course, you might be wondering, “ok, can you run a half marathon without any training?”, and yeah I guess you could. But it would hurt! More thoughts over there!

The pace doesn’t matter all the time

Sometimes, the time just doesn’t matter. What matters is knowing you are raising money for incredible causes. What matters is not stopping, even if you have to walk. What matters is seeing those glorious faces of strangers you will probably never set eyes on again, but you still gladly accept their offer of sugary snacks in a bowl, and thank them if you can.

What matters is doing it together, whether that be running alongside a community of runners or dressing up in costume with him as superheroes. What matters is knowing that you will finish and it will feel incredible when your body passes through that arch inflated with so much more than just air, but success and completion.

What matters is that you did it. And what really matters at the end of the day, when you challenge yourself with a half marathon, is to keep it fun and atmospheric. Pull the funny faces, laugh lots and encourage others along the way. Happiness goes a long way.

Do it for the good cause

When you run for a charity, this is even more so. When my legs were pounding the hill at the 7 mile mark (and the 8, 9 and 10th come to think of it..), what ran through my mind you might ask?

  • Was it the intensity of the heat as we sweltered through Telford Town Centre in our tight costumes?
  • Panicking about the next hill
  • When’s the next water station?

All of the above applied. But the very next thought that popped into my head was of my late Great Nan. She taught me that life is short. That’s why I wanted to run the IronBridge Half Marathon because she’s right. That’s why I’m proud that we raised over £250 for people like her.

What it’s like running a half marathon

When I finished a 10k race year ago, my loving father signed me up for the Birmingham half marathon. A disappointing waste of £30. A mistake, I thought. But I did it! And I’m here to tell you exactly what it feels like to finish your first half marathon.
The morning of
It all started at 8:00am Sunday morning, when my alarm went off. Words cannot begin to describe how nervous I suddenly felt at that bleep. My Dad was running too and he seemed as cool as a cucumber. I, on the other hand, was, for want of a better phrase, totally freaking out. Was I going to be able to do this? Could I conquer this run or was I about to fall and flop in front of thousands of people, not to mention my amazingly supportive family? Pushing those doubts aside, I let my confidence take over and we began the drive. Having arrived almost too early, we sat it out in the car, where my mind started playing tricks on me.
The next thing I knew was that I had found myself lost in the excited crowds jumping to the beat of the main speakerphone. A man demonstrated to myself and a few other thousand ‘GREEN’ and ‘PINK’ runners how to star-jump.
This was going to prepare us for over 2 hours of running. After 15 minutes of jumping up and down and doing the ‘Jessica Ennis at the Olympics’ chant, the countdown began. In those 10 seconds, I pressed play on my shuffle, took a few deep breaths and tightened the laces of my Sketchers.
At the start line
Like a swarm of bees, we moved as one Birmingham crowd of runners through the ‘START’ arch, starting off our timers in the rubber beneath our number. In training, you can see nothing but road. Race day was different as I jogged through the floods of supporters. There was an odd sense of fame and importance, as we ran through our red carpet that was Broad Street. If I finished, I’d be a star.
My motivation for the first hour was that I should reach Cadbury World at the 60 minute mark. So when I reached the hill at the 6 mile point and saw the well-known building of chocolate, I did two things. First, I forced myself to keep running and not go in, and secondly, I glanced at my stopwatch. I had been running for 51 minutes, so the thought of spending the next 9 minutes inside Cadbury world was somewhat tempting.
The race is on
Now, I won’t take you through my 2hours of running step by step. But I will say this. Sunday’s half marathon was one of the biggest challenges I have overcome to this day. I knew I was capable of 10miles. But could I do 13.1? Yes, and I honestly believe I could one day do the 26.2. Running is of course a physical challenge.
  • But if you can battle through the mental barriers of your own mind fighting against you…
  • If you can feel the fire in your thighs like never before and still run up that hill..
  • If you can use the shout of a stranger clapping you on by the call of your name and turn it into power and energy..
  • If you can stay as strong as you start out and not lose focus on that end goal because you know it only takes a split millisecond for that ‘stop’ voice to cause you to fall..
  • If you can run through the stitch at 3 miles and relax your tense shoulders merely because of the sheer excitement of the whole experience…
  • If you can feel your feet slightly drag on the floor and not allow yourself to stop…
  • If you can look up the final hill and use the fact that, even though some are running, some are walking or have even stopped, to push yourself for the last and most important mile..
  • If you can do all that, then you are an amazing runner.
Because running is hard. There is no feeling like that before the klaxon goes off. Talk about mixed emotions. But if you can do that, then I now speak directly to you.
You completely and wholeheartedly deserve nothing more than the feeling of reaching the top of that hill and seeing your nearest and dearest amongst the ocean of cheering faces.
You deserve to absorb the awesomeness of opening your stride, swinging your arms and being overwhelmed by the inexplicable rush you will feel as you smash through the final 100 yards downhill. The feeling you get when you complete the challenge of a half marathon is out of this world.
Yes, there are other fantastic achievements and yes, training feels good. But there is absolutely nothing that compares to the joy that glows from and around you when you finish and are awarded with your medal by a stranger who proudly and respectfully smiles at you.
You deserve every ounce of the glory that running a half marathon brings. I only have two things left to say. Firstly, I congratulate you. Secondly, I ask you when your next race is.

 

ironbridge half marathon

me training for the ironbridge half marathon