How to Use Swim Pace Calculator
This calculator serves as an essential tool for swimmers to compute their pace per 100 meters or yards based on a given distance and time. It breaks down complex calculations into simple, actionable insights, supporting both training adjustments and race strategy development.
What It Does
Use the calculator with intent
This calculator serves as an essential tool for swimmers to compute their pace per 100 meters or yards based on a given distance and time. It breaks down complex calculations into simple, actionable insights, supporting both training adjustments and race strategy development.
This tool is ideal for competitive swimmers aiming to refine race strategies, triathletes needing to predict swim splits, and fitness swimmers looking to monitor progress and maintain motivation. Coaches can also use it to tailor training plans for individual athletes.
Interpreting Results
The distance in meters and in yards are the same swim expressed in two units, so use whichever matches your pool. The pace per 100 m (or 100 yd) is the number to track session to session; the SWOLF estimate is a rough stroke-efficiency proxy, useful as a trend rather than an exact score.
Input Steps
Field by field
- 1
Enter inputs
Enter mode + distance value with realistic baseline assumptions before moving to sensitivity checks.
- 2
Enter inputs
Enter distance unit + time seconds with realistic baseline assumptions before moving to sensitivity checks.
- 3
Enter inputs
Enter target pace seconds + target pace unit with realistic baseline assumptions before moving to sensitivity checks.
- 4
Enter inputs
Enter laps + pool length with realistic baseline assumptions before moving to sensitivity checks.
- 5
Enter inputs
Enter pool length unit + stroke type with realistic baseline assumptions before moving to sensitivity checks.
- 6
Enter inputs
Choose whether you are solving for pace from a known distance and time, or for one of those from a target pace; the mode determines which field the calculator treats as the unknown.
Enter the same swim in meters and in yards; the per-100 pace shifts because 100 yd is shorter than 100 m, which is the usual source of confusion comparing pool and open-water times.
Common Scenarios
Use realistic starting points
Baseline assumptions
Mode
pace
Distance Value
1500
Distance Unit
m
Time Seconds
1800
A 1500 m swim in 1800 seconds (30 minutes) works out to a 120-second pace per 100 m; that is your reference before changing anything.
Same time, shorter swim
Mode
pace
Distance Value
1275
Distance Unit
m
Time Seconds
1800
Covering 1275 m instead of 1500 m in the same 30 minutes means a slower pace, about 141 seconds per 100 m, since you moved less distance per unit of time.
Same distance, faster time
Mode
pace
Distance Value
1500
Distance Unit
m
Time Seconds
1620
Swimming the same 1500 m in 1620 seconds (27 minutes) sharpens the pace to 108 seconds per 100 m, a clear improvement over the 120-second baseline.
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FAQ
Questions people ask next
The short answers readers usually want after the first pass.
Why is my open water swimming pace often slower than my pool swimming pace?
How often should I use the calculator to check my swim pace?
Can this calculator help me plan my interval training?
What is considered a good swim pace for a beginner swimmer?
Sources & References
- Swimming: Understanding Pace and How to Improve It — MySwimPro
- How to Use Swim Pace Zones — TrainingPeaks