Last updated: May 2026
Run-walk intervals are a structured method of alternating running and walking during a race or workout to manage effort, reduce injury risk, and in many cases finish faster than continuous running at the same perceived effort. The key variable is your work-rest ratio — how long you run versus how long you walk — and it should be set based on your current pace, not guessed arbitrarily.
How Run-Walk Intervals Work
The method works by breaking the run into repeating cycles: run for X seconds or minutes, walk for Y seconds, repeat throughout the race or workout. The physiological benefit is that short walk breaks reduce lactate buildup, allow partial cardiovascular recovery, and preserve muscular glycogen — meaning the running segments stay at a consistent quality for longer than continuous effort would allow.
Many recreational runners who switch from continuous running to a structured run-walk method find their overall finish times improve, particularly at half marathon and marathon distance, because pacing deteriorates less in the second half.
Calculating Net Pace
Net pace is the average pace across a full run-walk cycle. The formula:
Net pace = (Run minutes × Run pace + Walk minutes × Walk pace) ÷ Total minutes
Example: You run at 9:00/mile for 3 minutes, then walk at 15:00/mile for 1 minute.
- (3 × 9:00) + (1 × 15:00) = 27:00 + 15:00 = 42:00 total time
- 42:00 ÷ 4 minutes = 10:30/mile net pace
This is how run-walk calculators work — you input your run pace, walk pace, and interval lengths, and the calculator returns the net pace and predicted finish time for any race distance.
Jeff Galloway Recommended Run-Walk Ratios
Jeff Galloway, the American Olympic marathoner who popularised the run-walk-run method, developed the following ratio table based on target finish pace:
| Target Pace (per mile) | Run Interval | Walk Interval |
|---|---|---|
| 7:00 | 6 min | 30 sec |
| 7:30 | 5 min | 30 sec |
| 8:00 | 4 min | 30 sec |
| 8:30 | 3 min | 30 sec |
| 9:00 | 2 min | 30 sec |
| 9:30–10:45 | 90 sec | 30 sec |
| 10:45–12:15 | 60 sec | 30 sec |
| 12:15–14:30 | 30 sec | 30 sec |
| 14:30–17:00 | 15 sec | 30 sec |
These ratios are intended to produce a net finish pace close to the target pace listed, assuming the run segments are run at roughly the listed pace and walk segments are a genuine recovery walk (not a fast walk). Galloway’s method specifically recommends beginning walk breaks from the first mile — not waiting until fatigue sets in — so the walk becomes a recovery tool rather than a rescue.
How to Find Your Correct Ratio
The best starting point is the Magic Mile: run one mile at a hard but controlled effort (finish line feel, not sprint). Multiply that time by 1.3 to get your estimated marathon pace per mile. Then look up that pace in the ratio table above.
If your Magic Mile is 9:00, your estimated marathon pace is 9:00 × 1.3 = 11:42/mile. The 10:45–12:15 row applies: run 60 seconds, walk 30 seconds throughout the race.
Run-Walk for Interval Training
Run-walk ratios apply to structured interval workouts as well as races. For interval training specifically:
- Work-to-rest ratio of 1:1 (e.g., 60 sec run, 60 sec walk): moderate intensity, suitable for beginners building aerobic base
- Work-to-rest ratio of 2:1 (e.g., 60 sec run, 30 sec walk): higher aerobic demand, suitable for building lactate threshold
- Work-to-rest ratio of 1:2 (e.g., 30 sec run, 60 sec walk): allows maximum intensity during the run segment, suitable for speed work with full recovery
For track-based interval training (400m, 800m repeats with standing or jogging recovery), the rest interval is typically 2–3 minutes regardless of run segment length — structured for full neuromuscular recovery rather than cardiovascular pacing.
Calculate Your Interval Paces and Work-Rest Ratios
Enter a recent race result to get your recommended run-walk ratios, interval targets, and per-rep pace for any workout.
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