Marathon World Record Pace — How Fast Is 2:00:35?
Quick Answer: The Records and Their Pace
All records are as of 2026. The table below covers every benchmark discussed in this article.
| Record | Athlete | Race | Time | Pace/mi | Pace/km |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men’s WR | Kelvin Kiptum | Chicago 2023 | 2:00:35 | 4:36 | 2:51 |
| Women’s WR | Ruth Chepngetich | Chicago 2024 | 2:09:56 | 4:58 | 3:05 |
| Women-only WR | Peres Jepchirchir | London 2024 | 2:16:16 | 5:12 | 3:14 |
| Sub-2 (unofficial) | Eliud Kipchoge | Vienna 2019 | 1:59:40 | 4:34 | 2:50 |
The official marathon world record pace for men is 4:36 per mile. For women it’s 4:58 per mile. These numbers become even more remarkable when you put them next to everyday running experience.
How Fast Is World Record Pace, Really?
Marathon world record pace—4:36 per mile for men—is a speed most recreational runners can’t sustain for a single minute, let alone 26.2 miles.
To put it in concrete terms:
- Twice the speed of a typical recreational finisher. A runner completing a marathon in 4:30 holds roughly 10:18 per mile. World record pace is more than 2.2 times faster.
- Faster than many people sprint. A 4:36/mi effort corresponds to running 100 meters in about 17 seconds. Elite sprinters run 100m in 10–12 seconds, so Kiptum’s marathon pace sits in the range many club runners can only hold for a few seconds of all-out effort.
- No meaningful fade. The frightening detail isn’t just the pace—it’s the consistency. The splits across marathon splits by mile for top WR efforts show almost metronomic evenness, with minor negative splits in the second half.
The women’s record pace of 4:58/mi is equally staggering. Ruth Chepngetich averaged just under five minutes per mile for the entire race.
The Men’s Record: Kelvin Kiptum’s 2:00:35
On October 8, 2023, Kelvin Kiptum of Kenya crossed the finish line at the Bank of America Chicago Marathon in 2:00:35, shattering Eliud Kipchoge’s previous record of 2:01:09 by 34 seconds.
Key details of Kiptum’s run:
- Pace: 4:36 per mile / 2:51 per kilometer
- Splits: Kiptum ran the first half in 59:47 and the second half in 1:00:48—a near-perfect even effort with only a 61-second positive split.
- Conditions: Cool autumn morning in Chicago, a notoriously fast course with minimal elevation change.
- Coaching: Coached by Gervais Hakizimana, Kiptum was only 23 years old at the time, making the performance even more extraordinary.
Tragically, Kiptum passed away in a road accident in February 2024. His record stands as of 2026 and remains the fastest marathon ever run under official World Athletics conditions.
If you want to see how your own target time translates to per-mile splits, the sub-3 marathon pace guide is a useful reference point for ambitious amateur runners.
The Women’s Records
Ruth Chepngetich — 2:09:56 (Women’s Outright WR)
On October 13, 2024, Ruth Chepngetich of Kenya set the women’s marathon world record at the same Chicago course that witnessed Kiptum’s breakthrough a year earlier. Her time of 2:09:56 was a stunning improvement of more than six minutes over the previous mark.
- Pace: 4:58 per mile / 3:05 per kilometer
- First half: Chepngetich went through halfway in approximately 1:04:52, an aggressive front-loading strategy that paid off.
- Significance: She became the first woman to break 2:10 in the marathon, a milestone that had seemed distant for years.
Peres Jepchirchir — 2:16:16 (Women-Only WR)
World Athletics maintains a separate “women-only” category for races where no male runners or male pacers are present. The women-only world record (as of 2026) belongs to Peres Jepchirchir of Kenya, who ran 2:16:16 at the London Marathon in 2024.
- Pace: 5:12 per mile / 3:14 per kilometer
- Context: Women-only records matter because mixed-sex races allow women to draft behind or be paced by male runners, which can provide a measurable aerobic advantage over a solo or women-only field.
Both records underline that women’s marathon running is in a golden era, with times improving dramatically in a short window.
The Sub-2 Barrier
The sub-2-hour marathon is the “four-minute mile” of the modern era—a barrier that captured the world’s imagination long before it fell.
Eliud Kipchoge ran 1:59:40 at the INEOS 1:59 Challenge in Vienna on October 12, 2019. His average pace was approximately 4:34 per mile (2:50/km)—slightly faster than Kiptum’s official world record.
Why It Doesn’t Count
Despite being a breathtaking athletic achievement, Kipchoge’s 1:59:40 is not recognized as an official world record by World Athletics. The reasons:
- Rotating pacers. A team of 41 elite runners took turns forming a precision aerodynamic formation around Kipchoge. World Athletics requires pacers to start the race and not be replaced mid-event.
- No open competition. The event was a time trial, not an open race. Official records must be set in competition open to any eligible athlete.
- Controlled fluid delivery. Drinks were handed to Kipchoge by a cyclist riding alongside him, rather than from fixed aid stations as rules require.
The INEOS event was designed to answer a scientific question—can a human run 26.2 miles in under two hours?—rather than to set a record. On that question, Kipchoge delivered an unambiguous yes. The official men’s world record remains Kiptum’s 2:00:35.
World Record Pace vs Your Pace
Understanding where world-record pace sits relative to recreational runners gives context that raw numbers alone can’t provide.
| Finish Time | Pace/mi | vs. Men’s WR Pace |
|---|---|---|
| 2:00:35 (WR) | 4:36 | — |
| 2:30:00 | 5:43 | +1:07/mi |
| 3:00:00 | 6:52 | +2:16/mi |
| 3:30:00 | 8:01 | +3:25/mi |
| 4:00:00 | 9:09 | +4:33/mi |
| 4:30:00 | 10:18 | +5:42/mi |
| 5:00:00 | 11:27 | +6:51/mi |
A runner finishing in 4:30—roughly the median amateur result at major marathons—runs at nearly 2.24 times the world record pace. Even a very solid 3:00 finisher is running at 6:52/mi, 2:16 per mile slower than Kiptum.
For Boston Qualifying runners, the Boston qualifying pace guide breaks down the specific pace targets by age group and gender. You can also explore the full marathon pace chart hub for detailed time-to-pace conversions across every common finish goal.
To understand how long a marathon typically takes across different fitness levels, this marathon time calculator offers useful benchmarks. And if you’re building toward your first marathon, the first marathon training plan at AI Run Coach can help you build the base required to even approach these conversations.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the marathon world record pace?
The men’s marathon world record pace is 4:36 per mile (2:51 per km), set by Kelvin Kiptum with a time of 2:00:35 in Chicago in 2023. The women’s world record pace is 4:58 per mile (3:05 per km), set by Ruth Chepngetich in 2:09:56 in Chicago in 2024. Both records stand as of 2026.
Who holds the marathon world record?
As of 2026, Kelvin Kiptum of Kenya holds the men’s marathon world record with 2:00:35 (Chicago, 2023). Ruth Chepngetich of Kenya holds the women’s outright world record with 2:09:56 (Chicago, 2024). Peres Jepchirchir holds the women-only record with 2:16:16 (London, 2024).
What is the women’s marathon world record?
The women’s marathon world record (as of 2026) is 2:09:56, set by Ruth Chepngetich at the 2024 Chicago Marathon. That’s a pace of 4:58 per mile (3:05/km). The women-only world record—set in a race without male pacers—is 2:16:16, held by Peres Jepchirchir from the 2024 London Marathon.
Has anyone run a sub-2-hour marathon?
Yes—Eliud Kipchoge ran 1:59:40 at the INEOS 1:59 Challenge in Vienna in 2019, becoming the first human to cover the marathon distance in under two hours. However, the run does not count as an official world record because it used rotating pacers, controlled fluid delivery, and was not an open competition as required by World Athletics rules.
How fast is world record pace per mile?
The men’s marathon world record pace is 4:36 per mile. Eliud Kipchoge’s unofficial sub-2 run was marginally faster at approximately 4:34 per mile. The women’s record pace is 4:58 per mile. These figures are roughly equivalent to running each mile at a speed most club runners can only sustain for 200–400 meters.
Why doesn’t Kipchoge’s 1:59:40 count as a world record?
World Athletics disqualified the INEOS 1:59 Challenge result because it violated three key rules: (1) pacers rotated in shifts rather than starting and finishing the race, (2) the event was a closed time trial rather than open competition, and (3) drinks were delivered by a cyclist rather than from fixed aid stations. The run stands as a historic human achievement—but not an official world record.
Related Pacing Guides
- Sub-3 Marathon Pace — Splits and Strategy
- Marathon Splits by Mile — Every Finish Time
- Boston Qualifying Pace by Age Group
- Marathon Pace Chart Hub
- How Long Does It Take to Run a Marathon?
- First Marathon Training Plan
Find Your Goal Pace
World record pace is a reference point, not a target—but knowing where the ceiling is makes every personal best feel more meaningful. Whether you’re chasing a 4:00 finish or dreaming of qualifying for Boston, the key is training at paces that are calibrated to your current fitness and race goal.
WattRun’s AI run coach analyzes your training load, calculates your VDOT score, and maps out a personalized plan with the exact paces you should be hitting in every workout. Find your goal pace and start your free plan.
Last updated: May 2026. Sources: World Athletics record progression (records as of 2026).