Running Cadence Calculator

Cadence — how many steps you take per minute — and stride length together set your speed. This calculator works out your stride length from your pace and cadence, then shows how many steps you take per kilometre and mile and whether your cadence sits in the commonly recommended range. Use it to understand your form and to plan a smoother, quicker turnover. Pair it with your running pace or convert a day’s steps to distance. Mobile-first, mi/km toggle, nothing stored.

Your run
Stride length1.11 m
Steps per km900
Steps per mile1448
Speed12 km/h
Cadence 180 spmCadence is in the commonly recommended range

5 /km · 0 · 180

How it works

stride length = speed ÷ cadence

Your speed is simply how far each step carries you multiplied by how many steps you take, so stride length is speed divided by cadence. Working in metres and seconds, a 5:00/km pace is 3.33 m/s; at 180 steps per minute that is 3.33 × 60 ÷ 180 = 1.11 metres per step. From the stride length we get steps per kilometre (1000 ÷ stride) and per mile. Two runners at the same pace can have very different cadences and strides — a higher cadence means shorter, quicker steps, which many coaches favour for reducing overstriding and impact. The calculator lets you see exactly how your pace, cadence and stride relate.

Sources

FAQ

What is running cadence?

Cadence is the number of steps you take per minute, counting both feet. Along with stride length it determines your speed. It is easy to measure with most GPS watches or by counting steps for 30 seconds and doubling.

What is a good running cadence?

There is no single ideal, but many runners are encouraged toward roughly 170–185 steps per minute, especially if they tend to overstride. The best cadence is individual and rises with speed, so use the range as a guide, not a rule.

How do I calculate stride length?

Divide your speed by your cadence. This calculator does it for you from your pace and cadence: for example, 5:00/km at 180 spm gives a stride of about 1.11 metres per step.

Should I increase my cadence?

If your cadence is low and you tend to overstride or feel heavy impact, gradually nudging it up by 5–10% can smooth your form. Make changes slowly and let it settle; forcing a big jump can feel awkward and tire you out.

Why does cadence change with pace?

As you speed up, you lengthen your stride a little and step more frequently, so cadence rises. That is why it is fairest to compare cadence at similar paces rather than between an easy jog and a hard run.

How many steps are in a kilometre or mile?

It depends on your stride length. At a 1.11 m stride you take about 900 steps per kilometre and roughly 1,450 per mile. Enter your own pace and cadence to get your personal step counts.

Stride length and step counts are derived from the pace and cadence you enter and assume an even effort. Optimal cadence varies by runner; change form gradually. General information for training, not medical advice.

Embed this calculator

Add the running cadence calculator to your website or club page — free, no sign-up. Paste this snippet where you want the calculator to appear:

<script src="https://dialpace.com/embed/running-cadence-calculator.js" async></script>