Aaerix

Sub 40 10K Pace Chart & Training Guide

Complete pace chart for running a sub 40 10K. Target pace: 4:00/km (6:26/mi). Includes km splits, training plan, and race-day strategy for experienced runners.

Target Time

40:00

Pace (min/km)

4:00

Pace (min/mi)

6:26

Speed

15.0 km/h

Pace Chart
Finish TimePace (min/km)Pace (min/mi)Speed (km/h)
39:003:546:1715.4
40:004:006:2615.0
41:004:066:3614.6

Training for a Sub 40 10K

Running a 10K in under 40 minutes requires a pace of 4:00 per kilometer (6:26 per mile). This is a realistic goal for experienced runners who commit to a structured training plan over 8-16 weeks. Your weekly mileage should be in the 55-70 km range, with three quality sessions per week: one interval workout, one tempo run, and one long run. The key interval session is 5×1600m @ 3:55/km with 90-second recovery jogs. Your tempo runs should be 25 min @ 4:05/km, building the lactate threshold endurance you need to hold race pace when fatigue sets in. Long runs should be 25-30% of your weekly volume, run at a comfortable pace 60-90 seconds slower than your target race pace. Consistency matters more than any single workout. Missing one session is fine, but missing a full week sets your aerobic base back by roughly two weeks. If you are coming off a break, add no more than 10% weekly mileage per week to avoid injury. For advanced runners, the key breakthrough comes from threshold training. Your lactate threshold pace is roughly 15-20 seconds per km faster than your target race pace. Progression long runs, where the final 3-5 km are at marathon pace, teach your body to run fast on tired legs. Strength training twice per week (squats, lunges, single-leg deadlifts) reduces injury risk by 50% and improves running economy by 2-4%. Track your resting heart rate each morning. A spike of 5+ bpm suggests incomplete recovery, and you should swap the day's quality session for an easy run. Sub-40 10K demands the endurance of a distance runner and the speed of a miler. At 4:00/km for 10 kilometers, you need both a high VO2max and excellent lactate clearance. The breakthrough workout for this target is cruise intervals: 5×2000m at 3:55/km with 60-second standing recovery. This is harder than standard intervals because the short rest forces your body to clear lactate while maintaining pace.